Seventy-fifth
Anniversary of the Battle of Antietam, September 17, 1937
The Last Great
Reunion at Antietam
Memories of what it was like during
the Battle of Antietam at Sharpsburg Maryland were still vivid to some of the
participants who gathered for this historic reunion in 1937. Approximately fifty Civil War
veterans and a crowd of thirty-five thousand gathered at the battlefield to
hear the President of the United States, Franklin D. Roosevelt, give a stirring speech and to view a
re-enactment of the battle. From
the grandstand erected overlooking the famous Bloody Lane, visitors were able
to view one thousand National Guardsmen simulate combat. Units came from Maryland, Pennsylvania,
the District of Columbia, as well as active army soldiers from Fort Belvoir,
Virginia. Major General Milton A. Reckord, Commander of the Twenty-ninth
Division was overall commander of the program. Union solders were dressed in barrack caps, O.D.
shirts and blue denim; Confederates appeared in campaign hats and khaki. Action started with the "Confederates" waiting in
the road for the "Union" attack. Upon being attacked, the "Confederates" retreated and then counterattacked. The narrator, Major Joseph W. Byron, Retired, described the
action which in turn was broadcasted on a local radio station in Hagerstown.
Major Byron planned the entire military program for the Antietam Celebration
Commission. The Commission was
represented by Senators Tydings and Radcliffe of Maryland, Senator Harry Flood
Byrd, of Virginia, Representative David J. Lewis of Maryland, and
Representative Charles A. Plumly of Vermont.
Regular Army engineers simulated
the noise of battle. Smoke bombs
burst in the sky, and two wooden farm buildings erected on the battlefield were
put on fire and burned to the ground.
One interesting scene was a replica of a wooden Confederate battery that
blew up from a charge of explosive planted underneath it as though it had been
struck by a Union shell.
Colonel John Oehmann, District Building Inspector and Head of
the District of Columbia National Guard portrayed General Robert E. Lee. Colonel John D. Markey of Frederick
Maryland, Commander of the 1st Maryland Regiment, portrayed General George B. McClellan. Twenty-two spectators were treated for
injuries; most of whom had fainted from fatigue or perhaps from
excitement. They were treated by
the 104th Medical Regiment of Baltimore.
Following the battle, the assembled
crowd stood for the playing of the National Anthem as Boy Scouts marched in
front of the grandstand with the
flags of 30 states representing
the homes of the soldiers who were in the battle. The President received a memento of the fighting; a
brightly polished wood with a bullet imbedded in it chopped from a tree near
Burnside's Bridge.
Civil War veterans from Maryland and Pennsylvania in attendance
included George Leighty, from Hancock, Maryland, one of two remaining
veterans of Washington County.
He served with the 3rd
Regiment, Maryland Infantry.
Other area veterans in attendance were F.L. Mullinix from Westminster, Maryland who served with 7th
Maryland Regiment, and Edward Flickinger, Dry Run, Pennsylvania from the 11th Pennsylvania Regiment. Flickinger was the last survivor of the Civil War from
Franklin County.
` The day before the program, September
16, twenty-one veterans toured the battlefield and observed that the corn was
"more mature" than what they remembered seventy-five years ago. Veterans were also part of a special
dinner held in their honor at the Hotel Alexander Ballroom in Hagerstown,
Maryland. Twenty-four veterans,
the Governors of two states and representatives of governors were guests.
In addition to the program on
September 17, a huge
exposition had been held at the Washington County Fairgrounds beginning on
September 4. "On the Wings of
Time" was a pageant that
featured a cast of two thousand.
Episodes of history over the past 200 years were depicted twice a
night. The oldest and the newest
railway equipment were brought in on a special spur of track. Airplane and blimp demonstrations
appeared overhead. An estimated sixty thousand spectators viewed the pageant
during its fourteen-day run.
All of the programs were well
publicized through the Associated Press Wire Service and people from throughout
the United States became aware of the rich historical heritage found in the
surrounding tri-state area. Coming
on the heels of the great depression, it is worthy to note the pride that
residents had in celebrating these historical events.
President Roosevelt closed his
speech that day with words that placed focus on the importance of a united
country. His words bear wisdom
today as they did in 1937. He stated "In the presence of the spirits of
those who fell on this field--Union soldiers and Confederate soldiers--we can
believe that they rejoice with us in the unity of understanding which is so
increasingly ours today. They urge
us on in all we do to foster that unity in the spirit of tolerance, of
willingness to help our neighbor, and of faith in the destiny of the United
States.”