Hi
everyone! It is my third day here (9/24) at the museum and I’m already getting
to leave the museum to explore the area around Frederick by going to Antietam
today! I cannot believe my good luck because I will be going with Kyle and Lori
the curator to assist them in putting together a new exhibit in the Pry House
Field Hospital Museum. I have never been
to Antietam before so I am really excited to see the battlefield. Movies and books can only get you so far when
you read about troop formations or the lay of the land. This is the real deal!
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| Pry House Field Hospital Museum |
First
though Kyle, Lori and I put two big boxes filled with artifacts in her car and
large posters in Kyles
. Then there is a
half hour long car ride to the Pry House Field Hospital Museum but it does not
feel long or boring at all. I am constantly
looking at window enjoying the scenery because as we leave town I see rolling
hills and pastures with beautiful houses, big and small, all around. The foliage in trees is starting to change as
well so it looks beautiful. As we go
towards Antietam Kyle is telling me the history of the area and how places
received their names. I learn that
Braddock Heights is named for British General Edward Braddock and to a lesser
degree our own George Washington (then Lieutenant Colonel) who used the
mountain pass during the French and Indian War in 1755. Kyle also tells me that during the Civil War
there was a skirmish in this pass in 1862 involving J.E.B. Stuart, a
Confederate general.
I feel
like this ride could have been really ordinary and quiet but Kyle is telling me
how historical every inch of this road is.
I learn that even the route we have been on was historically an old road
that has just been paved over with more modern pavement but that this is the
road soldiers or people would use to travel to different towns. We pass through Boonsboro where the author
Nora Roberts lives and places some of her novels. I find out that the town was named after some
of Daniel Boones cousins. We pass
through Keedysville and soon find ourselves at the Pry House Field Hospital
Museum.
It is
an amazing house. Two stories, a
basement, attic and a barn. All the
rooms are large with enormous windows. When we arrive the ground is covered in
giant Walnut husks so I dodge those as we make our way to the unassuming
door. Lori and Kyle tell me that much
of the house is original still even though the war ended a 150 years ago. We eat lunch downstairs in the gift shop
which used to a dining room originally and then go upstairs to put the exhibits
together. While they prepare the bases
for the exhibits in one room I explore the other second floor room. It is set up to resemble a scene from when Major
General Israel Bush Richardson was lying injured there after the Battle of
Antietam. Mannequins and other bedroom
items like a crib, nightstand, and a water pitcher are around the room. I read the information on a sign and find out
that President Abraham Lincoln had been in this room to see Major General
Richardson! I could not believe it! Lincoln had been in this house! The house
that Kyle and Lori said was largely original! That meant the Pine floors (with
the exception of a few rooms) were Pine floors Lincoln had been on! That Major
General George McClellan had walked on! Sorry to nerd out but it was definitely
blowing my mind. I think it is because I
am from California so I read about where these battles were or these people
walked but I don’t see it with my own eyes so there is a degree of
separation. Kyle and Lori probably
laughed at me a little because I was like a kid in a candy shop with the
thought that Lincoln and McClellan had been on these floors and rooms and see
the views I had.
After I
stopped acting like a historic fangirl we got to business. We were setting up an exhibit about medicine
so we VERY carefully unwrapped bottles, needles and other items. Lori, with her white curator gloves,
unwrapped a Quinine canteen and a surgeon’s backpack chest and placed them
carefully on the tables. As I unwrapped
the bottles I tried to be as careful as possible. I placed each one gingerly on tables with the
occasional pause to watch what Kyle and Lori were doing as they handled the
more rare items. Once everything was
unwrapped they began to discuss what should
go on each respective table so that everything fit and looked
aesthetically pleasing. I stood back
behind them and sometimes spoke up if I thought something was a little crooked
or hard to view. After about a half hour
both tables were arranged and labeled.
We put the signs up, gave the room a final look and declared it
done.
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| One part of the exhibit nearly done, |
What
happened next was really neat. We went
up from the second floor the third into the attic. Pry House had the
roof redone recently so
there were nails sticking out every few inches so I walked with my head
VERY
low. We followed a path to the back
because everyone mentioned there was a hatch in the roof that could be
used. We took the hatch off then I climb
up a step ladder and stuck my upper body out.
I could see for miles around. Antietam
was all around me. I was getting a
fantastic view with green rolling hills, pastures, trees and animal
sounds. I could not believe it. A California girl is sticking out of a
roof
in a farmhouse that was used as a hospital and McClellan’s headquarters
during
the Battle of Antietam (where Lincoln had also visited) to get this
amazing view. After I got down both Lori and Kyle climbed
up to look around and we took some more pictures.
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| View from the roof of Pry House. |
Later
on we went downstairs where I learned that the cabinets and fireplace in the
kitchen were also original. That house
is in great shape. We left since our
business was done, waved goodbye to National Park Services. I imagined we would head back to the museum
but Kyle offered to give me a quick tour of the battlefield so of course I said
yes! We drove a few minutes while he drove around the perimeter explaining the
formations of the troops, setting the scene for the battle. He explained which troops stood on which
ridges and who commanded them. We
stopped at the Bloody Cornfield while he
explained more formations and what happened there. Then we traveled to the Bloody Lane. I could not believe I was standing
there. Whenever I’ve imagined Antietam
this is the place I’ve seen. It’s always
shown in pictures, it’s what people talk about to the point that this has
become representational of the entire place.
While I was there Kyle explained the battle some more and the
significance of this place. Then we
traveled onto Burnside’s Bridge where he pointed the Confederate sharpshooter
spaces and explained that portion of the battle. They used spaces near the
bridge where rock had been removed to position themselves. Antietam Creek is very pretty this time of
year though it was large enough I think it could be a river.
Then we
drove back the museum where I worked with Jenna downstairs in guest
services. She showed me some more of the
computer system and we spoke with visitors.
It was a quiet but happy ending to a very exciting day for me.






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