5466 Harper House Road Four Oaks, NC 27524 Phone: (910) 594-0789 Fax: (910) 594-0070
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HOURS OF OPERATION:
The Harper House still stands at Bentonville Battlefield. The downstairs rooms are furnished to interpret a functioning Civil War field hospital, while the upstairs rooms have period domestic furnishings. A Confederate mass grave, the Harper family cemetery, and a tour trail leading to a section of Union XX Corps earthworks are also accessible to the public. Reminders of the battle are on exhibit in the visitor center along with an audiovisual program about the battle. Roads in the area are marked with highway historical markers highlighting events of the battle. Once a thriving marketplace for naval stores, the village of Bentonville survives today in name only.
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The fiber-optic exhibit covers the first and bloodiest day of action at BentonvilleMarch 19, 1865. At the press of a button, visitors can see all of the major battlefield maneuvers of both armies unfold before their eyes! The exhibit (a color topo base map, with red and blue lights for the opposing armies) is accompanied by spoken narration of the action, and dramatic sounds of battle! |
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Bentonville is slowly coming into its own as a nationally significant historic site. Important developments in the 1990s have propelled it into the national spotlight. Recent books have brought the history of the Carolinas Campaign and its culminating battle into the public eye as never before, and the battlefield's preservation needs have not gone unnoticed in Washington, D.C.
In 1993 the Civil War Sites Advisory Commission, appointed by Congress to evaluate the preservation needs of the nation's Civil War sites, visited Bentonville and was favorably impressed with the battlefield and its miles of extant earthworks. The commission's Report on the Nation's Civil War Battlefields (1993) classified Bentonville in: Priority 1: Battlefields With Critical Need for Coordinated Nationwide Action by the Year 2000. 1.1 Class A, good integrity, moderate threats, less than 20 percent of core area protected. (Class A is defined as "having a decisive influence on a campaign and a direct impact on the course of the war.") Bentonville was ranked sixth on the list of Priority One, Class A battlefields. Another major step forward was the battlefield's designation as a National Historic Landmark. The application for NHL status was submitted with the aid of the National Park Service, and approved in June 1996 by the United States Department of the Interior. This important new status will enable Bentonville Battlefield State Historic Site to apply for federal grants available for purchasing property and easements to protect historically significant land. The Bentonville Battlefield Historical Association (BBHA), in conjunction with state officials, has made significant strides in acquiring additional parcels of land critical to a proper interpretation of the battle. Other organizations which have helped in the effort to preserve the battlefield include: Association for the Preservation of Civil War Sites (APCWS), the Conservation Fund's Civil War Battlefield Campaign, and the American Battlefield Protection Program. The site is currently at work on a comprehensive preservation and resource protection plan for Bentonville. With the aid of the National Park Service, Bentonville historians, Archives and History staff members, local surveyors, and the Jaeger Company of Atlanta, Ga., the site has implemented a sophisticated GPS (Global Positioning Satellite) project to map resources within the study area. These include several miles of remaining earthworks (in various states of preservation), locations of principal wartime dwellings, monuments and highway markers, cemeteries, and certain late nineteenth-century and early twentieth-century structures.
5466 Harper House Road Four Oaks, NC 27524 Phone: (910) 594-0789
Last Stand in the Carolinas: The Battle of Bentonville
Moore's Historical Guide to the Battle of Bentonville
Bentonville: The Final Battle of Sherman and Johnston
"Johnston's Last StandBentonville,"
by Jay Luvaas, North Carolina Historical Review. 33, No. 3 (July 1956) pp. 332-358
Battle of Bentonville
Sherman's March through the Carolinas
The Civil War in North Carolina
The March to the Sea and Beyond:
Sherman's March through North Carolina: A Chronology
Sherman: A Soldier's Passion for Order
Joseph E. Johnston: A Civil War Biography
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