2013 US National Parks Tour Overview

2013 US National Parks Tour Overview

Tuesday, July 9, 2013

Day 34: Shenandoah NP, VA to Chambersburg, PA

Stops
Shenandoah NP, VA
Gettysburg, PA
After a restful first day in Shenandoah, we were ready to go.  It's beautiful, but I have to admit that seeing so many parks in succession might make you more immune to some of the more subtle charms that Mother Nature has on offer.  We've remarked a number of times about how some folks rave about things that are just okay to us.  We wondered if these are people who live in urban centers and just don't get to see much of nature.  Rather than beating myself up as jaded, I just feel thankful for the constant beauty I'm exposed to in Oregon.  

But Shenandoah had a little something up her sleeve to surprise and delight us.  After a leasurely up-and-at-em, we hit the road intending to hike our planned trail and get on our way.  Not long into our remaining 50 miles of park, I spied something large and black on the side of the road...and yes, it had a face!  "A bear!" I'm sure I squeeled as A braked and turned us around in the nearby street.  He's shouting at me that there are more than one and to get the camera and I prove my usefulness by hyperventilating my delight as a tiny bear cub raised his head and took a peek at us.  As we were now blocking two lanes of traffic consisting of people for whom bears were like the scenery I found so-so, we moved on and pulled into the next parking lot where A got out his zoom lens and we circled back around for another look.  We watched until momma bear and her two cubs were beyond sight in the brush.  It was magical.

We also saw groundhogs on that drive and these were a little less magical, but still really fun, especially later when we saw signs for Puxatawny!  We wrapped up our day in Shenandoah with the highly recommended Dickey Ridge-Fox Hollow Trail.  The trail leads you down into Fox Hollow, named for a family that lived and died in the Hollow as evidences by many artifacts of their farming life and family cemetary just off the trail.  It was an interesting way to underscore that this was private land acquired to create the park as opposed to land that had been federal or protected for most of its history.  Even with my delight at seeing the bears off the road, I was a little nervous to meet them in the hollow along the trail.  For good or ill, we didn't meet any bear along the trail, though there was a point the brochure said was a common spot for bear sightings.  We did see many butterflies, insects, chipmunks and several birds, including a large bird with a distinctive call we later identified based on the call as an American Kestral. I don't know the other trails in Shenandoah well enough to say what trails I would recommend - I do know enough to say that this trail shouldn't be the only one you do in Shenandoah.  


So, after that, we headed north and had a whirlwind multi-state day traveling through Virginia, West Virgina, Maryland and into Pennsylvania, crossing the historic Mason-Dixon line.  At this point, we were still ahead of schedule and had some plans a few days hense that allowed us to slow down.  As we were journeying around through Civil War country, we'd seen several signs reading, "Civil War Trail," and A kept saying "Where's Gettysburg?"  Believe it or not, neither of us actually knew in the beginning so I had looked it up - it's in Pennsylvania.  We were in Pennsylvania so we decided to check out Gettyburg.  

So I already mentioned that we didn't even know which state Gettysburg is in, so that should prepare you for how uninformed A and I were going in, because uninformed we were and we got a GREAT education in Gettysburg.  First, there is Gettysburg the town, which existed during the civil war and continues to be a small city.  Then there is Gettysburg, the battlefiield, the site of the bloodiest battle in the civil war which is now preserved as the Gettysburg National Military Park.  And finally, there is the Gettysburg Address, the stirring two minute speech by Abraham Lincoln dedicating the National Cemetary at Gettysburg.  If you were as uneducated as I and are not interested in history, that might already give you enough information - feel free to look at the pictures and skip the rest, but if you like history, read on. 

I loved growing up in the midwest, but I have to say that as A and I did the auto-tour around the Gettysburg (GB) I envied the kids who live nearby and most certainly must "have to" visit GB several times during their schooling. We had popped into the Visitor's Center before we drove around the sites. I regret little on this trip, but I do regret not viewing the Cyclorama painting and the educational video at the Visitor Center and not purchasing the CD audio tours of the site.  You don't realize until you get out there how much is there.  As we learned, there are 1300+ monuments on the several acre battlefield.  The majority of the monuments were placed in 1880-1890's by returning Civil War veterans from both sides and represent where each brigade or corp was located at some point during the battle.  We learned later that the placement of some of the monuments is subject of debate with several southern states still debating who's forces advanced farther during the Picket's Charge.  Each monument has some of the story of that group written upon it and it would take days or weeks to read all of them.  Some are merely small squares of concrete with a few numbers and letter etched in them and others are incredibly ornate.  

Stop 3 of the auto tour is at the Eternal Light Peace Memorial dedicated by Civil War veterans from both sides in 1938.  We kept following the tour route and couldn't believe the size and scope of the battlefield and the monuments that just kept coming.  At some point, feeling a little overwhelmed, we stopped the auto tour and returned to do a walk and talk with a ranger.  We walked through a small part of the battlefield while the ranger gave us a talk focusing on the aftermath of the epic battle on the locals who's land was devestated by the deaths of 12,000 men and 40,000 horses, shooting of millions of rounds and heavy artillary shelling.  We heard the stories of a single mother who's home was used as Union headquarters; a free African-American who was able to look from his back yard into the south where slavery was still legal and who was displaced after the battle because his rich farmland was now a cemetary; and of the 6-month pregnant wife of the cemetary groundskeeper who single-handedly moved and burned many horses killed on her grounds.  
Everything is connected.  I feel like for the rest of our lives, we'll tell stories that link to this epic American road trip.  Pluck one string and the others start vibrating. As we toured the beautiful battlefields and read some of the memorial monuments, the battle and its aftermath were just starting to come off the page of a history text.  The ranger talk brought it a little more into reality - from 51,000 wounded, missing or killed Americans to the storeis of three individual civilians put through hell.  Our next stop was Gettysburg National Cemetary.

The cemetary was beautifully laid out and incredibly moving.  A monument to Abraham Lincoln greets you at the entrance with the entire text of the Gettysburg address.  I've since read a criticism of the address that suggested that it was the same sentiment addressed by the other speaker, but simply more consice.  That is the mark of a great speaker - concise, precise and memorable - reading the address in this setting was incredibly powerful.  This monument is not the actual location where the address was delivered - another monument put up by the state of Kentucky marks that spot.  
We were struck even more by the gravesites surrounding this monument than by the monument itself - set into the ground in rings around the large monument are graves marked with whatever information they could determine about each soldier - for some, this included name, regiment and more, but sadly, for others, this might have included only their home state or no information at all.  
We finshed the night on a much lighter note with perogi and local brews at Appalachian brewery and a stroll around the local fair for a funnel cake.

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