Fox's Gap

White Flint Bill

Sergeant
Joined
Oct 9, 2017
Location
Southern Virginia
I visited the Fox's Gap battlefield on South Mountain last week. The setting is quiet, rural and peaceful. There was no one else there when I visited. Photos follow, for those interested.

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The monument honoring General Reno looks fine.

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But sadly, General Garland's monument has been badly vandalized.

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The interpretive marker regarding the 13th North Carolina Infantry appears to be undisturbed.

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Unlike the Georgia marker

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A wooded trail leads to the North Carolina monument.

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The monument was defaced last spring, but fortunately shows little evidence of it now.

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It's a beautiful place, well worth a visit if you're in the area.

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Ignorance knows no bounds or boundaries! We are seeing one person, not elected, make decisions for many which is insane but it is a sign of the times. The lack of respect and courtesy is not only accepted but often encouraged which is a sad statement of us as a society.

Thank you posting these photos which are very pretty.
Regards
David
 
Thanks for posting. Spent a day at Fox's Gap just recently.
On New Year's Day the State of Maryland had a number of guided hikes and I went on one from South Mountain Inn to this spot (about 2 miles of the Appalachian Trail). There were about 40 or 50 people who showed up and it was interesting. I told someone that in my 20's I don't think I would have been doing this on New Year's day :smug:
 
thank you @White Flint Bill for sharing your experience, me, though, i will never can visit a national battlefield park in US, except here in this forum through your photos !
anyway it's a good opportunity for a salvific visit in a well-mantained wood (cool see unnatural bird's nests on the trees, it means someone think about it) granished of history.
the North Carolina monument is very outstanding, i ask you the permission to post that monument's photo on my blog (not the vandalize version, obviously .. ahaha, it happens, worldwide where there's democracy, for sure ! ahaha .. )
 
thank you @White Flint Bill for sharing your experience, me, though, i will never can visit a national battlefield park in US, except here in this forum through your photos !
anyway it's a good opportunity for a salvific visit in a well-mantained wood (cool see unnatural bird's nests on the trees, it means someone think about it) granished of history.
the North Carolina monument is very outstanding, i ask you the permission to post that monument's photo on my blog (not the vandalize version, obviously .. ahaha, it happens, worldwide where there's democracy, for sure ! ahaha .. )

Yes, of course.
 
Looks that way to me too. It also has evidence of having been covered with red paint.
Yes, I saw that, too. Maybe it was done by the same intellectual giant who decorated the North Carolina monument.

The thought occurred to me: What if you, or someone like you, had been the first solitary visitor to discover the vandalism? It would be utterly shocking. I can't imagine the combination of feelings that I'd have.
 

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