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Gettysburg Contested: 150 Years of Preserving America's Cherished Landscapes
Paperback

Gettysburg Contested: 150 Years of Preserving America’s Cherished Landscapes

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After the American Revolution, sites representing key events in American history were crucial to the young nation’s efforts to formalize its story. Following the Civil War, national history became a primary vehicle for patriotic and spiritual reconstruction, and sites such as historic battlefields served important roles in remembering the past during the nation’s subsequent challenging periods, including the Great Depression and the Vietnam War.

Gettysburg Contested traces patterns of commemoration back to the well-known field of battle of July 1 3, 1863, which earned a legacy as sacred ground that remains today, more than 150 years later. But the landscape history and record of preservation at Gettysburg are complicated, for Gettysburg has wrestled with large issues, ranging from public versus private development, to the role of local, state, and federal governments, to the actual implementation of memorialization on the battlefield.

Although the story of the battle is ingrained in the fabric of American memory, Brian Black’s account considerably broadens the scope. Never before has Gettysburg’s story been told so completely, offering layer upon layer, story upon story. Gettysburg thus becomes a springboard to understanding more fully the nation’s need for sacred sites and symbols of America’s past, including cherished landscapes such as Gettysburg. In Gettysburg Contested, America’s treasured battlefield becomes the great laboratory for how Americans preserve and honor the past.

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MORE INFO
Format
Paperback
Publisher
George F. Thompson
Country
United States
Date
10 April 2019
Pages
288
ISBN
9781938086489

After the American Revolution, sites representing key events in American history were crucial to the young nation’s efforts to formalize its story. Following the Civil War, national history became a primary vehicle for patriotic and spiritual reconstruction, and sites such as historic battlefields served important roles in remembering the past during the nation’s subsequent challenging periods, including the Great Depression and the Vietnam War.

Gettysburg Contested traces patterns of commemoration back to the well-known field of battle of July 1 3, 1863, which earned a legacy as sacred ground that remains today, more than 150 years later. But the landscape history and record of preservation at Gettysburg are complicated, for Gettysburg has wrestled with large issues, ranging from public versus private development, to the role of local, state, and federal governments, to the actual implementation of memorialization on the battlefield.

Although the story of the battle is ingrained in the fabric of American memory, Brian Black’s account considerably broadens the scope. Never before has Gettysburg’s story been told so completely, offering layer upon layer, story upon story. Gettysburg thus becomes a springboard to understanding more fully the nation’s need for sacred sites and symbols of America’s past, including cherished landscapes such as Gettysburg. In Gettysburg Contested, America’s treasured battlefield becomes the great laboratory for how Americans preserve and honor the past.

Read More
Format
Paperback
Publisher
George F. Thompson
Country
United States
Date
10 April 2019
Pages
288
ISBN
9781938086489