Gettysburg
National Cemetery is located on Cemetery Hill in Gettysburg,
Pennsylvania. Shortly after the Battle of Gettysburg, with
the support of Pennsylvania Governor Andrew Curtin, the
site was purchased and Union dead were moved from shallow
and inadequate burial sites on the battlefield to the cemetery.
Local attorney David Wills was the man primarily responsible
for acquiring the land, overseeing the construction of the
cemetery, and planning its dedication ceremony. The landscape
architect William Saunders, founder of the National Grange,
designed the cemetery. It was originally called Soldiers'
National Cemetery at Gettysburg.
The removal of Confederate dead from the field burial
plots was not undertaken until seven years after the battle. From
1870 to 1873, upon the initiative of the Ladies Memorial Associations
of Richmond, Raleigh, Savannah, and Charleston, 3,320 bodies were
disinterred and sent to cemeteries in those cities for reburial,
2,935 being interred in Hollywood Cemetery, Richmond. Seventy-three
bodies were reburied in home cemeteries.
Saunders's design had two facets: first, the Soldiers
National Monument was placed at the center, promoting the Union
victory and the valor of the fallen soldiers; second, the graves
were arranged in a series of semi-circles around the monument,
emphasizing the fundamental egalitarian nature of U.S. society,
with all the graves considered equal. The original plan was to
arrange the plots in essentially random order, but resistance
from the states caused this to be modified and the graves are
grouped by state, with one section for unknowns. (In later years,
additional graves were added outside the original section for
the dead of the Spanish-American War and World War I.) There are
numerous other monuments in the cemetery, including the New York
Monument, the first statue to Major General John F. Reynolds,
the "Friend to Friend Memorial" in the National Cemetery
Annex, and the monument to Lincoln's address.
The cemetery was dedicated on November 19, 1863.
The main speaker at the ceremony was Edward Everett, but it was
here that Abraham Lincoln delivered his most famous speech, the
Gettysburg Address. The night before, Lincoln slept in Wills's
house on the main square in Gettysburg, which is now a landmark
administered by the National Park Service. The cemetery was completed
in March of 1864 with the last of 3,512 Union dead were reburied.
It became a National Cemetery on May 1, 1872, when control was
transferred to the War Department. It is currently administered
by the National Park Service as part of Gettysburg National Military
Park and contains the remains of over 6,000 individuals who served
in a number of American wars, from the Mexican-American War to
the present day.
Wikipedia information about Gettysburg National
Cemetery
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