Workers find Civil War bullets in Gettysburg tree
<!--subtitle--><!--byline-->STAFF REPORT
<!--date-->Posted: 08/09/2011 11:41:00 AM EDT
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Workers at Gettysburg National Military Park just got a reminder that the past is still with us when a maintenance crew cutting through a fallen oak tree on Culp's Hill hit bullets with their chain saw.
"Culp's Hill is one of the areas on the Gettysburg battlefield that saw intense fighting in July 1863," said Bob Kirby, Superintendent of Gettysburg National Military Park. "One hundred years ago it was commonplace to find bullets in Gettysburg trees but this is a rarity today."
The discovery was made on Aug. 4, as maintenance employees cut a fallen oak tree that was resting on a boulder next to the Joshua Palmer marker on the east slope of Culp's Hill summit. Two sections of the tree trunk where the bullets were discovered have been moved to the park's museum collections storage facility
As a relic of the Battle of Gettysburg, the tree sections with bullets will be treated to remove insects and mold and then added to the museum collections at Gettysburg National Military Park.
Due to the steep slope, most of the fallen tree was left in place and will remain there, according to National Park Service officials. A number of witness trees on the Gettysburg battlefield have been well known and frequently pointed out for years during battlefield tours. In addition, National Park Service employees often identify previously unknown witness trees during preparatory work for battlefield rehabilitation efforts, a program where the park re-opens historic meadows and farm fields to restore the historic integrity of the 1863 battlefield and to improve the visitors' understanding of what happened during the fighting of the epic Civil War battle.
<!--subtitle--><!--byline-->STAFF REPORT
<!--date-->Posted: 08/09/2011 11:41:00 AM EDT
<!--secondary date-->
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Workers at Gettysburg National Military Park just got a reminder that the past is still with us when a maintenance crew cutting through a fallen oak tree on Culp's Hill hit bullets with their chain saw.
"Culp's Hill is one of the areas on the Gettysburg battlefield that saw intense fighting in July 1863," said Bob Kirby, Superintendent of Gettysburg National Military Park. "One hundred years ago it was commonplace to find bullets in Gettysburg trees but this is a rarity today."
The discovery was made on Aug. 4, as maintenance employees cut a fallen oak tree that was resting on a boulder next to the Joshua Palmer marker on the east slope of Culp's Hill summit. Two sections of the tree trunk where the bullets were discovered have been moved to the park's museum collections storage facility
As a relic of the Battle of Gettysburg, the tree sections with bullets will be treated to remove insects and mold and then added to the museum collections at Gettysburg National Military Park.
Due to the steep slope, most of the fallen tree was left in place and will remain there, according to National Park Service officials. A number of witness trees on the Gettysburg battlefield have been well known and frequently pointed out for years during battlefield tours. In addition, National Park Service employees often identify previously unknown witness trees during preparatory work for battlefield rehabilitation efforts, a program where the park re-opens historic meadows and farm fields to restore the historic integrity of the 1863 battlefield and to improve the visitors' understanding of what happened during the fighting of the epic Civil War battle.
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