Category: Mississippi

Shiloh National Military Park

Shiloh National Military Park

Hey Guys! When we first started this whole quest to see America, we knew we wanted to visit a few National Parks…but National Battlefields/National Military Parks weren’t even on our radar. Back in 2015, as we were passing through Montana, some people at the RV park we were staying at talked us into going to visit Little Bighorn Battlefield National Monument. We went, but didn’t think we’d enjoy it. Well, long story short…we loved it. We all learned so much that we now seek out the historical/battlefields/military park/fort National Park Units.

We enjoy touring and learning about our Country’s history so much that we spent a month earlier this year touring some of Tennessee’s battlefields. We started our Tennessee battlefield tour on March 20 (2021) with Shiloh NMP. Our tour was fast and furious as we jumped to a new location every Saturday. Our weeks were a combination of work/school and trying to squeeze every minute we could out of the nearby National Park Units.

Shiloh National Military Park preserves the history of one of the first major battles in the western theater of the Civil War. Two days…nearly 110,000 American soldiers…23,746 casualties. The two day battle didn’t end in a decisive winner for either side, but was just the beginning of a six month struggle to control this vital area.

Shiloh NMP is considered to be one of the best preserved battlefields in our Country with 156 monuments and 650 interpretive markers. The interpretive markers are especially interesting here since many of the surviving soldiers were still alive when this particular National Military Park was being built. There are many first-hand accounts you can read. It makes the battle feel more personal…more real…not just words on a page.

At the end of the first two days, nearly 8,000 wounded and dying Confederate soldiers made their way to the nearby town of Corinth, MS. Corinth was a small town of around 1,500 people that sat on the crossroads of the Memphis & Charleston and the Mobile & Ohio Railroads. The black and white pictures are all pictures I took of pictures we found in the various Shiloh NMP visitor centers.

You can imagine what 8,000 wounded soldiers would do to a town the size of Corinth. The town’s people tried their best to help the soldiers, but in the end…the town suffered greatly. Eventually, the water supply ran out, food ran out and people left as the battle for the area took over the little town. By the end of the Battle of Shiloh, the Union captured Corinth and controlled the vital railroad junction.

During the Civil War a Contraband Camp was a place that freed men, women, and children would gather together to make a life for themselves. Some of the residents freed themselves by escaping the plantations they were being kept on. The Corinth Contraband Camp had over 110 buildings that included homes, a school, a church, a commissary, a hospital, blacksmith, seamstress, shoemaker and offices. It became the model town for other townsites. By May of 1863, the residents had 300 acres that they were cultivating and making a profit of $4,000 to $5,000 a month. The population varied greatly and tended to fluctuate between 1,500 to 6,000. You can go walk a small portion of the land that the Corinth Contraband Camp sat on. There are some statues that show what parts of their daily lives might have been like. The Contraband Camps were a part of our Country’s history I didn’t know about. It was eye-opening and we learned a lot.

Meet “Billy Yank” and “Johnny Reb”. They were bitter enemies during the battles, but would often times help one another by the end of the war. They would swap stories of home, trade supplies, and offer what little help they could.

While you’re at Shiloh NMP you should make sure to visit the Shiloh Indian Mounds National Historic Landmark to learn about the first people who called this area of our Country home.

The sheer number of casualties of the Shiloh/Corinth battles shocked the Country and had both economic and psychologic impacts on civilians for both sides of the war. The lessons learned during these battles resulted in better standards and procedures of care implemented by both sides.

During our time in this area, the redbud trees came to life! They were everywhere!

We were only in this area for one week but we, of course, found a few foodies. It was a smaller town so we were pleasantly surprised by the foodies we found.

We also celebrated Alex’s birthday…I can’t believe he’s 18! He asked me to make a Pecan Cobbler for his bday this year. He graduates this year and he’s ready to get his life started!

Well, that’s it for this location…

See y’all down the road!

#NationalParkTour

Vicksburg National Military Park

Vicksburg National Military Park

Abraham Lincoln thought that Vicksburg was “the key” to winning the Civil War. The Vicksburg National Military Park has a 16 mile road that winds through some of the major battlegrounds of the Siege of Vicksburg.

One of the cool things that the NPS offers at these battlefields is an audio tour of the park. There are usually a few different ones to choose from. We always get the longest, most detailed one. This time the longest one was two and a half hours. It took us over five hours to complete the whole driving tour. We get out at each stop and look around. Talk about it. One of the times we stopped and got out to look around we found some hidden canons.

Along with the audio tour we got this great little booklet. In the picture above you can see one of the stops. At this stop we learned about the Shirley House. This house was caught in the middle of a siege. The army dug a “honeycomb” of shelters all around the house during the battle. The house is still there today and so is the “honeycomb”. The shelters have all fallen down and been cleared away, but the land is still scarred from the battle.

The Illinois Memorial was the biggest memorial we saw. So much thought goes into each Memorial. On the Illinois Memorial there are 47 steps that lead up to the entrance. One for each of the 47 days of the Siege of Vicksburg. Inside the Illinois Memorial was this gorgeous seal.

We’ve been to several different battlefields, but this was the first time we found a tunnel!

We learned about the different types of artillery. You can see in the pic above that the opening isn’t smooth. It has notches. These notches are super important! They allow the artillery to go farther and with more accuracy.

I think, perhaps, our favorite stop on the tour was at the USS Cairo Museum where we learned about the Ironclad River Gunboats. On December 12, 1862, the USS Cairo became the very first armed warship to be sunk by a mine. They weren’t called mines at that point. They were called “torpedos” or “infernal machines”.

 The NPS has restored bits of the Ironclad and installed walkways that allow you to really get inside and see the guts of the boat. The USS Cairo came equipped with 13 guns, including 3 large 64 pounder Navy smoothbores. Two and a half inch plate armor made of charcoal iron is what covered the mid section of the boat in order to protect the vital guts of the boat.

There was a model in the museum to show what the USS Cairo looked like. The USS Cairo sank in 12 minutes, but no lives were lost.

I did find a few pretties. I don’t know what tree this was, but it had pretties all over it.

We really enjoy the battlefields. We learn so much and it’s such a great way for the boys to really get an idea of what took place there. Instead of just reading about it in a book while sitting in a classroom, they get to walk around the grounds it took place. I didn’t go into extreme detail about each stop, but hopefully I’ve intrigued y’all enough to go visit the Vicksburg National Military Park!

See y’all down the road!

Pizza Roundup Pizza Inn

Pizza Roundup Pizza Inn

To my fellow pizza lovers, I bring to you a post from Pizza Inn in Vicksburg, MS.

Pizza Inn is a mediocre pizza place with a pizza buffet.

The desserts are pretty good and the decor was ok and the bathrooms were clean.

When you order a pizza with no cheese you get lots and lots of sauce on it.

With all of that I think Pizza Inn gets a 3.5 star review.

See y’all next time on…

Pizza Street!!