|
For immediate release
Contact: Beth E. Gerber, Director of Sales & Marketing
Telephone: 717-260-1861, Ext. 1201
Camp Curtin Comes to Life
The
Sights and Sounds of Civil War Training Camp to be
Re-created at The National Civil War Museum
Harrisburg, PA (May 10, 2005) - One
hundred forty-three years after Harper’s Weekly published an artist’s
rendering of the historic Civil War training camp in Harrisburg, The
National Civil War Museum will again recreate the patriotic fervor of the
Camp Curtin during the Civil War.
During two special days in May, the Museum will take a step back in time,
acquainting visitors with the men and women caught up in the nation’s
most cataclysmic event.
“May 14th and 15th will be an exciting weekend at
the Museum,” commented CEO George E. Hicks. “It is our hope to
recreate the spirit of Camp Curtin and bring the very best of Civil War
history to Harrisburg. With
encampments, demonstrations, music and food, we have designed the weekend
to be entertaining and educational - - with something for everyone.”
Camp Curtin served as the largest Civil War training camp from 1861 -
1865. Nearly 300,000 Union
troops passed through Harrisburg en route to assignments across the war
torn land. The local camp
served as a rallying spot and an instruction site for soldiers before
units deployed to other theatres of War.
Harrisburg was a wartime city.
The streets were teeming with soldiers and new recruits, as well as
the desirables and the undesirables who followed the path of opportunity.
The weekend event, Camp Curtin Civil War Days, an annual affair,
will feature soldiers at drill, work and play.
Activities will be held throughout both days and will include
musket-firing demonstrations by infantry; cannon firing by artillery and
heart charging mounted cavalrymen.
The National Civil War Museum Parade Grounds will serve as the recreated
Camp Curtin, high atop the City’s beautiful Reservoir Park.
Participants include the Mifflin Guard; Company K, 1st
Pennsylvania Reserve Volunteer Infantry; 1st Maine Cavalry;
Hampton’s Battery F; Jody Ellis, performing as Signora Bella; The Ladies
Union Relief Association (LURA); The Frederick Ladies Relief Society (FLRS);
The Victorian Dance Ensemble; The Federal City Brass Band; the Arcona Reel
Band and Calobe Jackson portraying T. Morris Chester.
A special presentation sponsored by HANGER Prosthetics, in association
with the Amputee Support Team will take place in the Grand Rotunda of the
Museum throughout the weekend. HANGER
Prosthetics had its start during the Civil War, when 18-year-old James
Edward Hanger, the second amputee of the Civil War was unhappy with his
Government Issue leg. James Hanger decided to make his own prosthesis, and
was in the prosthetic business in Richmond, VA, before the Civil War
ended, serving both Yankee and Rebel soldiers.
Camp Curtin Civil War
Days will take place on Saturday, May 14, from 10:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m.
and Sunday, May 15, from 12:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m.
The special event is free with admission to the Museum ($7.00
for adults, with reduced rates for children, seniors and families).
Wristbands may be purchased for $2.00 per person for those wishing
to take part in outdoor activities only.
Food and beverages will be available for purchase from The
Museum’s Blue & Gray Club, Camp Curtin BBQ Station and
Mazolli’s Ice Cream.
Camp Curtin Civil War Days is made possible, in part, thanks to the
support of the U.S. Department of Education and the Pennsylvania
Historical Museum Commission.
The National
Civil War Museum is the largest museum in the world dedicated to the
entire scope of the war that divided our nation.
Exhibits are factual, yet humanistic in presentation, without bias
to the Union or Confederate causes.
The Museum, which has an
on-site, full-service café and museum shop, is open Monday through
Saturday from 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., and Sunday, noon to 5:00 p.m.
For more information about
Camp Curtin Civil War Days or this unique attraction, please call
717.260.1861, or visit the Museum’s website at
www.nationalcivilwarmuseum.org.
#
# #
2005
|