Friday, September 17, 2021

Awesome History In The Great Valley Of Maryland

 

Today we remember the Battle of Antietam, a one-day Civil War clash that occurred on this day in in 1862 in the Great Valley of Maryland near the town of Sharpsburg. A marginal victory at best for the Union, it marked an end of Confederate success on the battlefield in the first year of the war. Furthermore, it provided President Abraham Lincoln an opportunity to issue his Emancipation Proclamation freeing slaves in all the states that had seceded from the Union. The outcome and opportunity at Antietam came at a huge cost as it remains the bloodiest one-day battle in American history. In little more than twelve hours almost 23,000 participants were dead, wounded or missing.

By thwarting a Confederate invasion at Antietam, Union forces achieved a significant but limited strategic victory. In two years Union armies would take Atlanta, begin the march to Savannah, then look forward to victory in their march north toward Richmond.



Bloody Lane, Antietam National Battlefield Walking Tour




Bloody Lane following the battle on September 17, 1862



We have much to remember at this sacred place. Some call the battle a turning point leading to Union victory in the war. Without question it was monumental step in the evolution of human rights in the United States. Sometimes the memories are far more personal. For me, Antietam remains very close to my heart and soul. I was at most six years old when my mother and father first took me there to walk among the fields and forests, along the old Sharpsburg Pike and Bloody Lane, and over Burnside Bridge. The old monuments loomed large and in time a childhood full of memories at other Civil War sites and historical parks began to call out to me. In time I accepted that call and spent a career preserving them and other scared sites and helping visitors remember, understand and appreciate the American experience. If I had to do it all over I'd do so without hesitation. 






Photo Credits:

Walking Tour photo: National Park Service

Historic photo: Alexander Gardner, in The Photographic History of the Civil War in Ten Volumes: Volume Two, Two Years of Grim War, The Review of Reviews Co., New York. 1911. p. 74.

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