- Joined
- Jul 29, 2013
* The Waldschmidt House (Federal Commander's Headquarters).
Camp Dennison was a Federal Army training camp during the American Civil War. It was located in the town of Germany, Ohio, sixteen miles northeast of Cincinnati. George B. McClellan, a major general in the Ohio militia, chose Germany as the site for a camp. The camp was named for Ohio Governor William Dennison. Camp Dennison was strategically located near Cincinnati, the Ohio and Little Miami Rivers, and the Little Miami Railroad. The rivers and railroad provided quick transportation from various parts of Ohio and surrounding states. The presence of troops at Camp Dennison also provided Cincinnati with soldiers to protect this important manufacturing city from Confederate attack. Camp Dennison encompassed more than seven hundred acres of land.
The task of laying out the camp fell to Colonel William S. Rosecrans. Construction of barracks began in 1861. The barracks provided homes for the more than fifty thousand men who passed through the camp during the Civil War. They were located on both sides of the Little Miami Railroad. In 1862, military officials established a hospital on the western edge of the camp, just to the west of the railroad. It eventually held more than 2,300 sick or injured soldiers.
The soldiers at Camp Dennison usually remained in the area for only a short time. After receiving some training, military officials would send the men off to war. On July 14, 1863, men recovering at the hospital or undergoing training at Camp Dennison helped defend the camp, Little Miami Railroad, and Cincinnati from Confederate Brigadier General John Hunt Morgan and his Raiders. Morgan's men captured and destroyed a supply train but failed to destroy an important railroad bridge across the Little Miami River at nearby Miamiville.
Upon the Civil War's conclusion, Camp Dennison was closed. Local residents dismantled the barracks and hospital, scavenging building supplies to construct their own homes. Hoping to increase the community's population, Germany residents changed the town's name to Grand Valley, but the railroad continued to use Camp Dennison as the name of the local station.
* Vintage Map of Federal Camp Dennison in Germany, Ohio.
* Camp Dennison (Symmes Township), Ohio Marker.
* The John Hunt Morgan Heritage Trail Marker at Camp Dennison.
* The Old Federal Guardhouse to Camp Dennison (Civil War Museum).
* Camp Dennison Federal Soldier's Memorial.
* Ohio State Historical Marker at the Waldschmidt Cemetery.
* An Unknown Federal Soldier's Grave.
* The Little Miami River Bridge (Looking North from Camp Dennison - Morgan's Raider's Skirmish at Miamiville, Ohio).
* The John Hunt Morgan Heritage Trail Markers in Miamiville, Ohio (Just North of Camp Dennison).
Camp Dennison was a Federal Army training camp during the American Civil War. It was located in the town of Germany, Ohio, sixteen miles northeast of Cincinnati. George B. McClellan, a major general in the Ohio militia, chose Germany as the site for a camp. The camp was named for Ohio Governor William Dennison. Camp Dennison was strategically located near Cincinnati, the Ohio and Little Miami Rivers, and the Little Miami Railroad. The rivers and railroad provided quick transportation from various parts of Ohio and surrounding states. The presence of troops at Camp Dennison also provided Cincinnati with soldiers to protect this important manufacturing city from Confederate attack. Camp Dennison encompassed more than seven hundred acres of land.
The task of laying out the camp fell to Colonel William S. Rosecrans. Construction of barracks began in 1861. The barracks provided homes for the more than fifty thousand men who passed through the camp during the Civil War. They were located on both sides of the Little Miami Railroad. In 1862, military officials established a hospital on the western edge of the camp, just to the west of the railroad. It eventually held more than 2,300 sick or injured soldiers.
The soldiers at Camp Dennison usually remained in the area for only a short time. After receiving some training, military officials would send the men off to war. On July 14, 1863, men recovering at the hospital or undergoing training at Camp Dennison helped defend the camp, Little Miami Railroad, and Cincinnati from Confederate Brigadier General John Hunt Morgan and his Raiders. Morgan's men captured and destroyed a supply train but failed to destroy an important railroad bridge across the Little Miami River at nearby Miamiville.
Upon the Civil War's conclusion, Camp Dennison was closed. Local residents dismantled the barracks and hospital, scavenging building supplies to construct their own homes. Hoping to increase the community's population, Germany residents changed the town's name to Grand Valley, but the railroad continued to use Camp Dennison as the name of the local station.
* Vintage Map of Federal Camp Dennison in Germany, Ohio.
* Camp Dennison (Symmes Township), Ohio Marker.
* The John Hunt Morgan Heritage Trail Marker at Camp Dennison.
* The Old Federal Guardhouse to Camp Dennison (Civil War Museum).
* Camp Dennison Federal Soldier's Memorial.
* Ohio State Historical Marker at the Waldschmidt Cemetery.
* An Unknown Federal Soldier's Grave.
* The Little Miami River Bridge (Looking North from Camp Dennison - Morgan's Raider's Skirmish at Miamiville, Ohio).
* The John Hunt Morgan Heritage Trail Markers in Miamiville, Ohio (Just North of Camp Dennison).
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