Maryland Monument. Turner's Gap looking east.
Antietam National Battlefield Site and
Cemetery
Antietam National Battlefield Site was established
August 30, 1890, to commemorate the significant events of September
17, 1862, and to preserve the important features of the
battlefield. Administered by the War Department until 1933, the site was
transferred that year to the U.S. Department of the Interior to be
administered by the National Park Service.
Turner's Gap looking east.
The Battle of Antietam was fought over an area of 12
square miles. The site today consists of 184 acres containing
approximately 5 miles of paved avenues. Located along the battlefield
avenues to mark battle positions of infantry, artillery, and cavalry are
many monuments, markers, and narrative tablets. Similar markers describe
the actions at Turner's Gap, Harpers Ferry, and Blackford's Ford.
Key artillery positions on the field of Antietam are
marked by cannon. And 10 large-scale field exhibits at important points
on the field indicate troop positions and battle action.
The War Correspondents' Memorial Arch and the 1st New
Jersey Regimental Monument are located at Crampton's Gap, and at Fox's
Gap is the memorial to Maj. Gen. Jesse Reno, who was killed while
leading the Federal attack there.
War Correspondents Memorial Arch at Crampton's Gap. |
Lee headquarters marker in the Oak Grove.
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Outstanding in the observance of battle anniversaries
at Antietam was the occasion of the 75th anniversary on September 17,
1937. Thirty-five thousand persons, including 50 veterans who fought at
Antietam, joined in the observance held on the battleground near the
Sunken Road.
The Robert E. Lee Memorial tablet, located in a plot
at the western limits of Sharpsburg, marks the headquarters
of General Lee. General McClellan's headquarters were in the Philip Pry
house, 2 miles east of Sharpsburg near the Boonsboro Pike.
The National Cemetery, located at the eastern limits
of Sharpsburg, is the burial place of Federal dead from the Battles of
Antietam, South Mountain, and minor engagements. The cemetery was
established by an act of the Maryland legislature in March 1865; the
dedication took place September 17, 1867, the fifth anniversary of the
battle. The cemetery plot of 11 acres was deeded by the State of
Maryland to the United States Government on March 13, 1878. Of
4,773 Civil War burials, 1,836 are listed as unidentified. The
total number of burials, including nearly 300 from recent wars is more
than 5,000.
The National Cemetery.
Administration
Antietam National Battlefield Site is a part of the
National Park System, owned by the people of the United States and
administered for them by the National Park Service, U.S.
Department of the Interior. Communications should be addressed to the
Superintendent, Antietam National Battlefield Site, Sharpsburg,
Md.
McClellan's headquarters, the Philip Pry House.
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