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Gettysburg National Military Park: Then & Now, Part 22: LBG Garry Adelman

Gettysburg National Military Park: Then & Now, Part 22: LBG Garry Adelman

Gettysburg National Military Park: Then & Now, Part 22: LBG Garry Adelman

Gettysburg Licensed Battlefield Guide, and Vice President of the Center for Civil War Photography, Garry Adelman, is at the 20th Maine monument trying to convince people he doesn’t hate the 20th Maine—he just wants to view them in a realistic light.  With Barry Martin and Tom Danninger, Garry created the CD, The Gettysburg Park Commission Photos: Then & Now. This image by Rob Shenk, was taken facing northeast in June, 2010.

Gettysburg Licensed Battlefield Guide Garry Adelman, along with colleagues Tom Danninger and Barry Martin, systematically located the camera positions of the 237 photographs included in the Annual Reports of the Gettysburg National Military Park Commission, 1893-1904. The trio arranged the photos into seventeen sections and present the images in a “then & now” format along with a history of the project and the Park Commission on their CD, The Gettysburg Park Commission Photos: Then & Now. We continue their series with a sampling from each of the seventeen sections.

The Gettysburg National Park Commission (GNPC) issued annual reports from its creation in 1893 until stewardship was transferred to the National Park Service in 1933. The reports, issued each November, covering that year through October, outlined the work of the GNPC for that year. Reports from 1893-1904 were bound into one volume with the photographs that accompanied each report (a practice started with the 1895 report) printed en masse after the text. Together, these images provide a comprehensive view of the battlefield and the Commission’s work available nowhere else. Comparing the images to the same sites today speaks to the important issues of preservation, commercialization, monumentation, and the growth of the GNMP. It’s also simply “cool” to look at then & now photos!

In our first post we looked at photgraphs taken on West McPherson’s Ridge.

In our second post we showed photographs taken on East McPherson’s Ridge.

In our third Then and Now post, we showed Howard Avenue and monuments for the Army of the Potomac’s Eleventh Corps.

In our fourth post we continued showing Then and Now photographs on Howard Avenue, this time on Barlow’s Knoll.

In our fifth post we show photographs taken for the Gettysburg National Park Commission along Oak Ridge/Seminary Ridge.

In our sixth Then and Now post we showed photographs of the July 1st battlefield along Forney’s Ridge, and where the east arm of McPherson’s Ridge ends near Oak Ridge.

In our seventh post of Gettysburg Then and Now photographs, Garry, Barry, and Tom presented photographs taken in Evergreen Cemetery and the Soldiers National Cemetery.

In the eighth Gettysburg Then and Now post, Garry Adelman, Barry Martin, and Tom Danninger presented photographs on East Cemetery Hill.

In our ninth Gettysburg Then and Now post Garry Adelman, Barry Martin, and Tom Danninger presented photographs taken on Seminary Ridge near the Lutheran Theological Seminary.

In the tenth Gettysburg Then and Now post, Garry Adelman, Barry Martin, and Tom Danninger present photographs taken on Seminary Ridge near Shultz’s Woods and McMillan Woods.

In the eleventh Gettysburg Then and Now post, Gettysburg Licensed Battlefield Guide Garry Adelman, along with Barry Martin and Tom Danninger show us photographs on Big Round Top.

In the twelfth Gettysburg Then and Now post, Garry Adelman, Barry Martin and Tom Danninger show us where they matched up other old photos on Big Round Top.

In the thirteenth Gettysburg Then and Now post, Garry Adelman, Barry Martin and Tom Danninger matched up photographs taken on Chamberlain Avenue, and the intersection of Wright Avenue, Warren Avenue, and Sykes Avenue.

In the fourteenth Gettysburg Then and Now post, Garry Adelman, Barry Martin, and Tom Danninger concentrate on photographs taken in the Valley of Death.

In the fifteenth Gettysburg Then and Now post, Garry Adelman, Barry Martin, and Tom Danninger focused on photographs taken in the area of Devil’s Den.

In the sixteenth post, Garry Adelman, Barry Martin, and Tom Danninger presented photographs taken on East Confederate Avenue and Spangler’s Spring.

In the seventeenth Gettysburg Then and Now post, Garry Adelman, Barry Martin, and Tom Danninger continued their presentation with photographs taken in the area of Spangler’s Spring and Geary Avenue.

In the eighteenth Gettysburg Then and Now post, Garry Adelman, Barry Martin, and Tom Danninger presented photographs taken in the Culp’s Hill area.

In the nineteenth Then and Now post, Garry Adelman, Barry Martin, and Tom Danninger presented photographs taken on and near the summit of Culp’s Hill.

In the twentieth Then and Now post, Garry Adelman, Barry Martin, and Tom Danninger present photographs taken in the Stevens’ Knoll area.

In the twenty-first Then and Now post, Garry Adelman, Barry Martin, and Tom Danninger presented photographs more taken in the Stevens’ Knoll/Baltimore Pike area.

In today’s Gettysburg Then and Now post, Garry Adelman, Barry Martin, and Tom Danninger introduce us to photographs taken in the area of the Wheatfield and the Peach Orchard.

This map, from the Gettysburg Park Commission Photos Then and Now CD, shows us the locations for the Then and Now photographs. In today’s post we show photographs taken in the area of Sickles Avenue.

View #5: Sickles Ave, woods west of Wheat Field. This view was taken facing northwest in 1896.

The Stony Hill is in the background. The monument to the 57th New York Infantry Regiment is visible on the right at the edge of the woods. This modern view of the previous photograph was taken facing northwest in 2007.

View #7: Wheatfield Road, connecting Sickles Avenue.  This view was taken facing northwest in 1899.

View looks west towards the area of the Peach Orchard. Sickles Avenue connects in the left foreground. This modern view of the previous photograph was taken facing northwest in 2003.

To see other posts by Gettysburg Licensed Battlefield Guides, click here.