Sunday, August 31, 2014

19 August 2014
 
We toured the Shriver house as this is a significant house to history. It was a primary house used by the confederates to sniper on the union troops during the battle but it is also significant that the owner George Shriver is related to Sargent and Maria Schriver connected to the Kennedys through marriage.

 The residence was built in 1860 as the family residence and business of George W. Schriver. George's father was a farmer in the area and owned one of the largest farms in the area. When George's father died he sold the farm and became a businessman. He built this residence as a family quarters but the basement was built and designed as a pub and bowling alley. Mrs. Schriver had an interesting time during the battle. As the battle raged the first day, she feared for the children (Saie, age 7, and Mollie, age 5) so they fled to a farm just south of town and low and behold this is where the main part of the battle of Gettysburg rolled through. It was a miracle they survived. In fact there was only one civilian casuality of the battle and it was a young woman baking bread. They surmise that a bullet had pierced the wall and killed her by accident. Both sides took great pains not to injure or kill civilians and non-combatants.
 All the flooring and stairwells are original floors, doors, and windows but all the furnishings were of the period added later. Here is the living room and the next picture is the master that doubled as the babys room.

 The significant history in this house as to its participation in the battle of Gettysburg is the fact that the house was used in battle. The next two pictures show the attic and the holes that were knocked out next to the big window to keep the profile of the soldiers down to a minimum as they shot at union troops on cemetery ridge just up the road.
 They did a luminol test and it showed blood traces on the floor not visible to the naked eye. This indicates that some soldiers were hit by return fire and most likely died in the process. The white things you see on the floor are the ball and powder loads that were used to load the muskets. These were left by the actors of the battle.
 This was the dining room used by the confederates as a hospital and eating place. YUCK!!!!!
 The basement kitchen which is unusual in homes of this era was used as a surgeons workspace. The kitchen was built here to support the pub and bowling alley which never got used as such. George joined the union army before the pub was to be opened.  The war ended 2 and 1/2 years later.  He survived the war but then died shortly thereafter from scurvy.
 

 This is a picture of the pub. The room is updated some as codes for the building required them. There are no pictures of the bowling alley as the alley was destroyed in later years to add new conveniences such as bathrooms.


 
 

Saturday, August 23, 2014

 15 August 2014 

We toured the Gettysburg battleground and town for a few days. There was no way we could see it all in one day. As this first slide indicates there were at least 51,000 casualties to this battle alone and what was it fought for. To preserve the union..............yes. To end slavery.................yes. The south succeeded because slavery was needed to maintain economical viability as the south was primarily agricultural and there were not enough whites to farm them profitably. Obviously on the wrong side of history it still doesn't change the fact that they needed slaves to survive. The North on the other hand was not necessarily that excited about war to end slavery but they knew that western expansion was happening and they did not want slavery to spread west. The north wanted an end to slavery but by other means, but that was not to be. The south succeeded and left the north with no other option but to fight to both save the union and end slavery. The tens of thousands of whites who died by the  to end slavery seems to be lost today and this seems ironic given todays tensions.



These are the battle flags of the two sides. Both of these flags saw the battle of Gettysburg on those fateful three days.
 









As the sign indicates the battle began the morning of July 1, 1863 in the fields north of Gettysburg.

The first shots rang out from Barlow Knoll the confederate army led by General Ewell arrived. The union army was driven from Oak ridge and McPherson ridge as they were severely outnumbered by the rebel force. These two ridges became the extreme left side of the confederate lines for the battle to come the next two days. So far the union army is not faring very well
 The two photos below are the ridges that felt the first sting of battle. This is Barlow Knoll looking southeast towards the north side of Gettysburg . The CSA drove the union army from Oak ridge in front of the first photo and McPherson ridge in the next photo into Gettysburg and ultimately through town to cemetery ridge on the south side of town. The first day of battle goes to the CSA. It must be noted that the union army was outnumbered and both sides were waiting on further troops. The reinforcements do arrive in time to stop further incursion but not enough to win the battle for the union. The numbers now favored the union army with ultimately a 93,000 union troops with a 70,000 CSA troops.


During the battle on the first day as the union was being pushed back they counterattacked and pushed the CSA back somewhat. Where this young lady is standing straight out near the end of the trees in the back round is the rail cut shown below. The union army captured several CSA troops in this cut. This is what it looked like back then and the picture below shows what it looks like today.

During the battle on the first day the Gettysburg College becomes involved in the fight as it pushes its way through the town to cemetery ridge.


 The battle on the extreme right faces little round top and big round top. General Longstreet, CSA, pushes forward into the line of union resistance in the peach orchard which is left of this photo and can't be seen here
 This is big round top which is situated to the right of little round top. This position was the very extreme left of the union lines. It was much more wooded and saw action but not as extreme as the line to the right of it which had less slope and was more open.
As a part of the battle of the second day was the battle for the devils den which is a rocky outcropping below little round top and slightly to the left looking down.
Myron is standing in the middle of the den. Behind him over the rocks is where the actual battle took place. It is an amazing place. An excellent place to defend as the rocks provide a fortress against not only bullets but also cannon fire. The rocks are granite and not easily affected. This is also called the slaughter pen as the union troops were able to easily dispatch the CSA as they tried to cross the rough terrain. They also had cannon fire covering this position from three sides from the lower right slope, and center of little round top. The fire from big round top covered the left side of the den.
The attack on the second day by the CSA ultimately was unsuccessful. It cost thousands of lives and did not achieve what Lee wanted. The union army held despite being outnumbered. The bloodiest day of the battle however was yet to come. The photo below is of General Lee facing the battlefield to the east directly opposite of General Meade.
 General Meade is on Cemetery Ridge about a mile across the battlefield facing west towards his opponent across the battle field.
 This is a zoom picture from Meade's view west looking at Lee who is represented by a memorial straight across the field.

The final day of battle begins on July 3 with a two hour cannon barrage by the CSA against the whole Union army line. A mistake the CSA makes is that it fires so many rounds so fast with little effect that is causes them to slow their firing to conserve ammo. The union fires back with more accuracy due to their vantage point on the high ground. General Longstreet of the CSA did not want to fight this battle this way as he felt his army would be decimated as it marched more than a mile across open fields. General Lee would not accept this and ordered him to march and the result was as Longstreet feared. He was decimated. Below are an artist conception of the battle now called Pickets Charge as Colonel Pickets troops in the center of the line charged the line and were decimated. It must be said that one of the things that helped the union army was the fencing. This slowed the CSA and made them to climb the fencing into direct and withering musket and cannon fire. However a few hundred managed to reach and penetrate the line but were beaten back in hand to hand combat.





The battle ends on the evening of July 3, 1863 with the CSA in retreat. Lee met his troops coming off the line and was apologizing to them telling them that it was his fault for the failure. His troops were willing to carry on with the battle but they were to decimated to continue. The cannons remained on the line to give the impression they were regrouping to give Meade the impression they would fight again. However, this was done to cover for a retreat of the army to Hagerstown. The artillery followed that night. Meade made a major military mistake. He should have attacked Lee immediately but instead he rested and consolidated his men allowing Lee time to escape. This mistake most likely caused the war to continue two more years. Had Lee been captured and his army captured or destroyed Lee would have never gone on to a few more victories in the south. The total casualties for this three day battle was 23,000 Union soldiers and as many as 28,000 CSA troops.

There is one more chapter to this story to come and it is a short story of how the civilians were affected. More to come.............



























Sunday, August 17, 2014

August 12, 2014
 
 
We arrived  in Gettysburg PA on the 11th and got settled in at the Gettysburg Farm RV resort. The next day it was raining so Marion and I went to York PA to the Harley Davidson Manufacturing Plant. We went to the tour center called Vehicle Operations Center and took the tour.
 This was the first showroom that had a few bikes you can climb on and the  area behind the bikes shows a brief example of the manufacturing process.
Below is my dream bike. Unfortunately it was on a display. It is the Heritage Classic. Yummy!!!!!!!!! This is the bike, if I ever get one, that I want. A sweet little touring ride. We took the tour which took about an hour. We saw the entire manufacturing process except the final assembly as they were assembling the 2015 models and even the dealers haven't seen them yet, so we were not allowed into that area. Bummer. I wish I had more pics but they wouldn't allow them due to proprietary manufacturing processes that may make the photo. Man this world is paranoid.


August 13, 2014

Today we went to Hershey PA to tour the Hershey factory. The property is a combination of visitor center, Theme park, and manufacturing plant. We visited only the visitor's center. The actual plant was not accessible and I surly did not want to ride a roller coaster. The Visitors center is called Chocolate World. An amazing amount of chocolate housed in this building. Anything from a regular Hershey bar to ones that are a pound or more. Hershey kisses from regular size to a couple of pounds that looked like a small soccer ball.




 Here we got onto these carts that transported you on a tour of a animated chocolate manufacturing experience.
 It was full of animatronic entertainment that I am sure the kids liked a lot.
 I tried to get pics of this process but most did not come out as the carts moved pretty quick and the pics were all blurry. But I did manage to get a few clear ones.

 They had a food court with, you guessed it, mostly a menu that had chocolate in it. There were sandwiches, and a few hot plates that did not feature chocolate but not many. In fact my sandwich was a ham and cheese but the chips were chocolate sprinkle. They were ok but nothing I would rush to the store and buy.
 Here Marion is fulfilling her life long dream. Hitting every gift shop in all 50 states. Not that she buys much, she just loves to look. It is everything against a mans ethos of..... get in, get what you want, and get out.... This is really painful for me. LOL!!!!!!!!!!!!


After leaving Hershey we went to this small town. We were having a argument on how to pronounce the name of this place.. We will leave it to your imagination as to the various pronunciations we came up with. It is a small town known for its quaintness and shops. Again the pain!!!!!!!!!!!!!!



This town is known to be the place that the pretzel was born in America, at least for commercial purposes. This was the original bakery where they were all hand made. 

 The young man at the head of the pretzel making line here was instructing us on the history of the pretzel and how to make, roll, and fold the pretzel. Pretzels were first made by Monks.  They would give to students as rewards. The crossing of the pretzel represents crossing your arms across your chest with your hands on your shoulders (as the young man is doing below).  The knot meant eternity....now we know where "tying the knot" when getting married came from!    We thought we were going to roll our own dough and make our own pretzel but at the end of the process he collected the dough and stuck it back in the bucket. Yuk...........that means every tour before us rolled the same nasty doe. Sure glad I cleaned my hands with the smelly alcohols the girls carry in their purse.  Actually, this dough was only flour and water, and they have to do this for sanitary reasons...I don't think anyone would have eaten their pretzel that was rolled out on this wooden board anyway.
 Despite everything we still rolled a pretty good looking soft pretzel even if it was contaminated with who knows what.
 The machine you see in the back is what they went to after they quit rolling them by hand. There were hundreds of these machines lined up and produced thousands of pretzels at a time.  Now they have a new factory with all the current automation required to make the millions of pretzels a day.