The Battlefield Dispatch Resource Education Unveils Regularly Scheduled Programs for the Summer
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Park News National Park Service U.S. Department of the Interior The Battlefield Dispatch Resource Education Unveils Regularly Scheduled Programs for the Summer Park staff invites the public to join park rangers and volunteers for new and exciting tours, talks, walks, and living history demonstrations over the course of the summer. Summer Programs for 2012 Chickamauga Battlefield Where’s the Ranger? – Join a park ranger at Tour Stop #4, Brotherton Cabin, or Tour Stop #6, Wilder Brigade Monument, in order to learn about the significant occurrences that took place at these locations on the battlefield. The ranger will be located at the designated tour stop between 12:30 p.m. and 4:00 p.m. on the days listed. (Program Times: Tour Stop #4, Mon. – Visitors to Point Park, on Lookout Mountain, are assisted by a park Thurs.; Tour Stop #6, Fri. – Sun. ) ranger during programs in 2011 Ranger-Guided Tours – (1 hr. 45 mins.) Follow a A Soldier’s Life – (30-45 mins.) Learn about the Cravens House Tour – (30 mins.) Join a park park ranger on a car caravan tour to various daily lives of the soldiers in the Civil War. This ranger as you explore the Cravens House and locations on Chickamauga Battlefield. Learn program will include a firing demonstration of a surrounding grounds. This area is where some of about the two days of fighting that led to the reproduction rifle. the harshest fighting took place during the Battle second bloodiest battle of the American Civil (Fri. - Sun.: 9:30 a.m., 10:30 a.m., 2:30 p.m. & 3:30 of Lookout Mountain. The program begins on War. This tour begins at the battlefield visitor p.m.) the Cravens House porch. Please inquire at the center. (Location – living history area adjacent to visitor information desk for directions to the house. (Tour Times: Daily at 10 a.m. & 2 p.m.) center) (House Open: Sat. & Sun. between 1 p.m. & 5 p.m.) LIVING HISTORY PROGRAMS & Lookout Mountain Battlefield DEMONSTRATIONS LIVING HISTORY PROGRAMS & Ranger-Guided Tours – (30 mins.) Walk with DEMONSTRATIONS Artillery Demonstrations – (20 mins.) Hear the a park ranger as you stroll through Point Park, a roar and smell the smoke as a Civil War cannon part of the Lookout Mountain Battlefield. Here Artillery Demonstrations – (20 mins.) Hear the is fired! Watch a cannon crew load and fire a you will learn about the desperate fighting that roar and smell the smoke as a Civil War cannon reproduction nineteenth century artillery piece. took place on the slopes of the mountain on the is fired! Watch a cannon crew load and fire a (Sat., June 9 at 10:30 a.m., 11:30 a.m., 1:30 p.m., 2:30 foggy, drizzly day of November 24, 1863. This reproduction nineteenth century artillery piece. p.m. & 3:30 p.m. & Sat., August 4 at 10:30 a.m., tour begins inside the Point Park entrance gate. (Sat., July 7 at 10:30 a.m., 11:30 a.m., 1:30 p.m., 2:30 11:30 a.m., 1:30 p.m., 2:30 p.m. & 3:30 p.m.) (Tour Times: Daily at 11 a.m., 1 p.m., & 3 p.m.) p.m. & 3:30 p.m.) (Location – living history area (Location – living history area adjacent to visitor inside Point Park) center) The Official Newsletter of Chickamauga and Chattanooga National Military Park • Spring 2012 Volume 2 Issue 2 Superintendent’s Sidebar Moccasin Bend – Connecting Remembrance & Restoration Today’s Youth to Tomorrow’s Park As we prepare for the 150th Anniversary of the battles of Chickamauga and Chattanooga in On April 18, 2012, students from the development center, students ate lunch, 2013, you will notice a variety of projects underway and programs being offered Chattanooga, Tennessee, enrolled in Youth then headed over to Outdoor Chattanooga throughout the national military park. Join us Leadership Chattanooga via the YMCA, to learn about various outdoor programs this summer in remembering and reflecting on the causes and effects of the battles by attending spent a day with a park ranger, city offered through the city. It is the hope of one or more of these educational programs. planners, and Outdoor Chattanooga staff the National Park Service (NPS) that these Ride a bike, take a cell phone tour, join a guided members learning about the vast natural students will provide important data walk, view a historic weapon’s demonstration, meet a civil war soldier, see the park film, learn and cultural resources associated with concerning interests of youth today and about Moccasin Bend, relax and reflect. Moccasin Bend National Archeological how the NPS can help meet their needs. District. After spending half an hour at the In honor of all who gave their lives on these battlefields, please remember to contain future home of Moccasin Bend’s Moccasin Bend recreational activities such as kite flying, ball and Interpretive Center, students boarded a bus Special Programs frisbee throwing to the Recreation Field in the for a trip to Chattanooga’s Development for 2012 Chickamauga Battlefield that has been designated for that purpose. Picnicking is Resource Center. Here, Sarah Weeks, allowed in designated picnic areas only. senior planner at the Chattanooga- Thursday, June 14: 6 p.m. Hamilton County Regional Planning “Biking the Bend” – Bike Ride of During your visit you will notice crews from the National Park Service’s Historic Preservation Agency, allowed students to brainstorm Moccasin Bend Training Center (HPTC) conducting about the things that might encourage conservation work on eight of the largest youth their ages to come back to Moccasin Thursday, July 12 & August 9: 6 p.m. monuments. The military park has 20 big monuments and the work this spring and Bend multiple times, especially for the “Navigating the Past” – Canoeing South summer combined with the work over the past youth living in the greater Chattanooga Chickamuaga Creek two years will take care of restoration work on 19 monuments. Next year, the HPTC crew is to area. Once students discussed their ideas, work on the last of the park’s major assets, the they put them on paper maps and made Thursday, September 6: 6 p.m. New York Peace Monument at Point Park. That presentations to the group. After meeting at “The Passage West” – Ross’ Landing monument situated on Lookout Mountain is visible from the valley below and the cost to Hike restore it is estimated at about $500,000. All the work is in part to counter decades of deferred Thursday, October 4: 6 p.m. maintenance and ready the park for 2013. Please do your part to ensure that all of our “The Gateway to the Deep South” – monuments, markers and tablets are preserved Downtown Chattanooga Walk (River for generations to come so they can also Rocks) remember and reflect on this nationally significant landscape. Please stop by a visitor center to learn more about the Monument Saturday, November 3: 4 p.m. Preservation effort. “Mashing Our Opponents Into the 2012 list of monuments undergoing restoration: Earth” – Stringer’s Ridge Hike Missionary Ridge Iowa Monument – foot of Missionary Ridge in Rossville Minnesota Monument – DeLong Reservation Iowa Monument – Sherman Reservation Ohio Monument – Ohio Reservation. Chickamauga Battlefield Florida Monument Georgia Monument Kentucky Monument South Carolina Monument (Top) Park Ranger Christopher Young discusses the natural and cultural importances of Moccasin Bend; (Lower Left) Students create and discuss aspects of the future visitor center site on Moccasin Bend; (Lower Right) Students present -Cathy Cook their design ideas concerning what would encourage students their ages to return Superintendent to Moccasin Bend. 2 The Battlefield Dispatch Volunteers and Volunteering Opportunities at the Park in 2012 drinks and both the Friends of the Park and The first half of the park fiscal year ended the Friends of Moccasin Bend joined in to with a bang for the volunteer program as support the park and volunteers. volunteers joined park staff for Civil War Trust Park Day 2012! Sixty-eight volunteers Thanks to all who came out to help! If you contributed nearly 250 hours at Moccasin would like to volunteer at one of our Bend, Cravens House on Lookout upcoming volunteer days or to help out Mountain, and three different locations at regularly around the park, please contact Chickamauga Battlefield. the park volunteer coordinator at 423-752- 5213x137 or visit our website: At Chickamauga Battlefield, staff and www.nps.gov/chch/supportyourpark. volunteers helped guide other volunteers through parking and registration, then headed out on the battlefield. One group headed for Alexander’s Bridge, removing undergrowth and invasive species to improve the viewshed and the interpretive experience around the bridge. The other overgrowth from Civil War earthworks on two groups washed historic cast iron tablets Stringer’s Ridge. A small crew of volunteers on Poe Road, at Snodgrass Hill and also joined the park curator at Cravens Horseshoe Ridge, and along Brotherton House on Lookout Mountain, conducting Road. Camera crews from local channels spring cleaning in order to prepare the WRCB and WTVC took video footage and house and the artifacts for the summer a reporter from the Catoosa County News season. covered the event. In the afternoon, fifteen people returned for a tour of Chickamauga Battlefield. The On Moccasin Bend, students and faculty weather was great, and the rain waited from the University of Tennessee at until after the project was complete. Coca- A volunteer washes dirt off a Union plaque in Chattanooga and Covenant College joined Cola once again generously donated the Chickamauga Battlefield during the Civil War other community volunteers to clear Trust’s 2012 Park Day A Call to Arms: A Year of Conflict National Park Service U.S.