Ginnie Wade Monument, location of platform for Gettysburg Address and Soldiers National Monument (L to R) are marked on the horizon. The oldest section (A) of the cemetery appears behind the Parrott rifled cannon.
The cemetery played a strategic role in the July 1 to 3, 1863 Battle of Gettysburg. Four months after the battle, at the dedication of the immediately-adjacent National Cemetery, President Abraham Lincoln delivered his "Gettysburg Address" from a platform in Evergreen Cemetery.[5][6]
History
Founding
The Ever Green Cemetery Association of Gettysburg was established at a November 29, 1853 meeting.[7] The association managed the property and oversaw selection of its caretakers. By April 3, 1854, 118 lots had been sold, and the association members' first payments were due.[8] The first interment took place on October 29.[9] Opening ceremonies were held on November 7, 1854,[9] and in his dedication address Reverend John H. C. Dosh asked, "Could a more lovely spot have been chosen?"[10]
Evergreen Cemetery is eponymous with Cemetery Hill,[12] the landform noted as the keystone of the Union position during the Battle of Gettysburg.[13] Major-General Oliver Otis Howard lined the cemetery's high ground with cannons, turning it into an "artillery platform,"[14] and made its gatehouse into XI Corps (Union Army) headquarters.[15]
At dusk on July 2, 5 Louisiana regiments under Brigadier-General Harry T. Hays and 3 North Carolina regiments under Colonel Isaac E. Avery commenced the Battle of East Cemetery Hill, charging Howard's artillery batteries from the east. "Federal soldiers in the Cemetery laid many of the tombstones on the ground" to limit damage,[16] and some of the XI Corps batteries and infantry used the grave monuments "for shelter from the enemy's fire".[17] Historian Frederick Hawthorne wrote of Howard's successful defense: “Lying in reserve in the Evergreen Cemetery, they (73rd Pennsylvania Infantry) rushed out through the cemetery gateway to help drive the Confederates away from Rickett’s and Weidrich’s batteries.”[18]
Evergreen experienced three days as battlefield, and its resulting condition inspired a Union officer to lament: "A beautiful cemetery it was, but now is trodden down, laid a waste, desecrated. The fences are all down, the many graves have been run over, beautiful lots with iron fences and splendid monuments have been destroyed or soiled, and our infantry and artillery occupy those sacred grounds where the dead are sleeping. It is enough to make one mourn."[19]
Two Confederate soldiers mortally wounded during the battle were buried in Evergreen Cemetery.[20]
Post-battle
The Consecration of the National Cemetery at Gettysburg took place on November 19, 1863. The speaker's platform used by orator Edward Everett, and then by President Abraham Lincoln to deliver his Gettysburg Address, was located just east of the National Cemetery, on the grounds of Evergreen Cemetery.[21]
The only published photographic analysis places the site of the platform for the Gettysburg Address at the graves of George Kitzmiller, Israel Yount and John Koch.[26]
Ginnie Wade, lone civilian casualty of the Battle of Gettysburg
John L. Burns, geriatric civilian combatant at the Battle of Gettysburg
McPherson's obelisk was laid over by Union troops.
Smyser's obelisk was laid over by Union troops.
Some 69 Union battle casualties remain permanently.
Confederate casualty cenotaphs. Due to local outrage, the remains were re-located to unmarked locations.
At six months pregnant, Elizabeth Thorn acted as caretaker in her husband's absence and buried more than 100 casualties. Peter Thorn served in the 138th PA Volunteers.
David Wills organized and executed the adjacent National Cemetery.
Stewart's Battery straddled the Baltimore Pike, just north of the Gatehouse.
^Skelly, Daniel Alexander (1999) [1932 booklet]. A Boy's Experiences During the Battle of Gettysburg. Archived from the original on December 22, 2010. Reaching the Citizens Cemetery we found a battery of artillery posted there… The soldiers stopped us and would not let us pass.
^Pfanz, Harry (1993). Gettysburg-Culp's Hill & Cemetery Hill. Chapel Hill, North Carolina: The University of North Carolina Press. p. 263. ISBN978-0-8078-2118-3.
^Haskell, Frank A. (2006) [1910]. The Battle of Gettysburg(Google books) (reprint ed.). Kessinger Publishing. p. 22. ISBN978-1-4286-6012-0. Retrieved March 8, 2012. The Eleventh Corps…was posted at the Cemetery, some of its batteries and troops, actually among the graves and monuments, which they used for shelter from the enemy's fire … rifled guns in the Cemetery, at the left of the Eleventh Corps, opened fire—almost the first shots of any kind this morning…at a Rebel line of skirmishers
^Hawthorne, Frederick W., Gettysburg: Stories of Men and Monuments, Hanover, Pennsylvania: The Association of Licensed Battlefield Guides, 1988, p. 107.
^Pfanz, Harry (1993). Gettysburg-Culp's Hill & Cemetery Hill. Chapel Hill, North Carolina: The University of North Carolina Press. pp. 263–283. ISBN978-0-8078-2118-3.
^Bartlett, Joanne (June 10, 1995). "Remains from 16 old graves on Ice House Property reburied". Gettysburg Times. Retrieved February 25, 2012. The remains included six adults, nine children [only a finger bone of one] and one adult. …discovered in the spring of 1992 when at the former church site.
^Frassanito, William A. (1995). Early Photography at Gettysburg. Gettysburg, PA: Thomas Publications. pp. 160–167. ISBN0939631865.
Further reading
Brian A. Kennell (2000). Beyond the Gatehouse: Gettysburg's Evergreen Cemetery. ISBN978-0-9664772-0-7.
External links
Evergreen Cemetery Tour is a seventeen-part, comprehensive, audio-visual introduction to this subject by Debra A. Novotny, who has served both as a Licensed Battlefield Guide and as a boardmember of the Evergreen Cemetery Association.