User:Smallbones/Ragged Edge trip
Appearance
planning for a photo trip
Ragged Edge (House) 39°56′13″N 77°35′21″W / 39.9369°N 77.5893°W, 1090 Ragged Edge Road, east of Chambersburg, Pennsylvania in Greene Township, Franklin County, Pennsylvania
Nearby NRHP sites
Current listings
[edit]26 N. Lime, Lancaster 40°02′21″N 76°18′06″W / 40.0391°N 76.3017°W
List of monuments of the Gettysburg Battlefield
Name | Image | Location/GPS Coordinates | Designer | Year | MN ID | LCS ID | Comments |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
6th Pennsylvania Cavalry Regiment Monument "Rush's Lancers" |
South Cavalry Field, Emmitsburg Road 39°46′46″N 77°15′38″W / 39.779537°N 77.26068°W |
Frank Furness, designer Gessler & Sons |
1888 | MN 369-B | 009910 | Furness, the monument's designer, had been a captain in the regiment. | |
Companies E & I, 6th Pennsylvania Cavalry Monument | Leister Farm, Taneytown Road 39°46′38″N 77°15′54″W / 39.777113°N 77.264928°W |
Unknown sculptor | 1891 | MN 277 | 009911 | A six-sided granite obelisk, with bronze plaques and crossed swords. | |
Major-General John Sedgwick's Headquarters Marker 6th Corps Headquarters Marker |
Sedgwick Avenue 39°47′50″N 77°14′04″W / 39.797200°N 77.234483°W |
||||||
Major-General Daniel E. Sickles's Headquarters Marker 3rd Corps Headquarters Marker |
Trostle Farm, United States Avenue 39°48′09″N 77°14′34″W / 39.802544°N 77.242773°W |
||||||
1st Massachusetts Infantry Marker | Sickles Avenue 39°48′34″N 77°14′45″W / 39.809535°N 77.245796°W |
1913 | |||||
2nd Pennsylvania Cavalry Monument | Leister Farm 39°48′52″N 77°14′01″W / 39.814338°N 77.233665°W |
Henry Jackson Ellicott, sculptor Bureau Brothers Foundry |
1889 | MN 242-A | 009907 | ||
88th Pennsylvania Infantry Marker | Ziegler's Grove 39°49′01″N 77°14′03″W / 39.81698°N 77.23414°W |
||||||
Brigadier-General Samuel W. Crawford Statue | Crawford Avenue 39°47′45″N 77°14′20″W / 39.795737°N 77.23881°W |
Ron Tunison, sculptor Tallix, foundry |
1988 | MN 803 | 080852 | ||
Reverend Horatio S. Howell Monument Chaplain of the 90th Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry Regiment |
Christ Evangelical Lutheran Church, Chambersburg Street 39°49′51″N 77°13′57″W / 39.830824°N 77.232592°W |
Unknown sculptor | 1889 | MN 399 | 009976 | The monument is a stone lectern holding a bronze book. Inscription: In Memoriam, Rev. Horatio Howell, Chaplain, 90th Penna Vols. was cruely shot dead on these church steps on the afternoon of July 1st 1863. "He delivereth me from mine enemies. Yea, thou liftest me up, above those that rise up against me." – 18th Psalms, 48th Verse. "He, being dead, yet speaketh." – Hebrews II, 4. | |
General Alexander Hays Statue 63rd Pennsylvania Infantry |
Ziegler's Grove, Hancock Avenue 39°49′01″N 77°14′04″W / 39.816829°N 77.234547°W |
J. Otto Schweizer, sculptor Gorham Manufacturing Company, foundry Van Amringe Granite Company |
circa 1914 | MN 207 | 009940 | ||
Civil War Women's Memorial[3] | Evergreen Cemetery 39°49′14″N 77°13′45″W / 39.820609°N 77.229231°W |
Ron Tunison | 2002 | ||||
Culp Brothers Memorial | Steinwehr Avenue 39°49.188′N 77°14.06′W / 39.819800°N 77.23433°W |
Gary Casteel, sculptor | 2013 | aka "Brother against Brother", confederate Pvt. John Wesley Culp Memorial and union Lt. William E. Culp. Near Gettysburg Heritage Center f/k/a the American Civil War Museum. |
- Sedgwick Headquarters (Sedgwick Ave)
- Sickles Headquarters (Trostle Farm)
- 1st MA inf marker (Sickles Ave)
- 6th PA cav (Leister Farm)
- 88th PA inf (Ziegler's Grove)
- Civil War Women (Evergreen Cem)****
- Culp Bros. (Steinwehr Ave)***
- Crawford statue
- Hayes statue
- Howell memorial
- ^ Numbers represent an alphabetical ordering by significant words. Various colorings, defined here, differentiate National Historic Landmarks and historic districts from other NRHP buildings, structures, sites or objects.
- ^ The eight-digit number below each date is the number assigned to each location in the National Register Information System database, which can be viewed by clicking the number.
- ^ Jorgensen, Kathryn (November 2002). "Gettysburg Civil War Women's Memorial Dedication Nov. 16". The Civil War News. Retrieved 2012-03-02.