The Regional Review
Intro
Author
Subject
Volume
Volume/Title
NPS

JUNE 1940


VOL. IV - NO. 6

M. R. TILLOTSON, REGIONAL DIRECTOR

Hugh R. Awtrey, Editor

THIS   MONTH

COVER

National Parks and New World Idealism
     By Arno B. Cammerer ... page 3

SKISH: A By-Product of Fishing
     By Charles M. Graves ... page 13

Open-air Museums and Folk Art Centers
     By Hans Huth ... page 19

The Role of Artillery in the Atlanta Campgain
     By B. C. Yates ... page 25


Publications and Reports

Editorial Page

Miscellany

Cumulative Index

The Contributors

THE COVER

Assistant Inspector Ira B. Lykes' drawing shows a portion of Fort Jefferson on Garden Key of the Dry Tortugas Islands, in the Gulf of Mexico 70 miles west of Key West, Florida. Begun in 1846 as the key to America's defenses in the Gulf, the fortifications were garrisoned for the first time in January 1861. Federal troops held it during the War Between the States and used it as a hospital and military prison.

The alleged confederates of John Wilkes Booth in the assassination of President Lincoln were incarcerated in the great hexagonal fortress, and Dr. Samuel A. Mudd, the Maryland physician who set the broken leg of Booth, won widespread public sympathy for his labors there during a scourge of yellow fever in 1867. After members of the regular medical staff had succumbed to the disease, Dr. Mudd tended the sick and dying until he in turn was stricken. He was pardoned in 1869.

On January 4, 1935, Fort Jefferson became the 67th national monument.


THE UNITED STATES
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE

REGION ONE RICHMOND, VIRGINIA


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