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Worldwide National Military Park

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Featured National Military Park in Worldwide

Guilford Courthouse National Military Park - Greensboro, North Carolina

The battle fought at the small North Carolina backcounty hamlet of Guilford Courthouse on March 15, 1781, was the largest, most hotly-contested action of the Revolutionary War's climactic Southern Campaign. read more...

Phone: 336-288-1776   Price Range: N/A   Open Season: N/A   Camping: No  
Nearest Popular City: Greensboro   Nearest Lake/River: N/A   Park Type: National Military Park   Activities: Birding, Biking / Bicycling, Wildlife Watching, Auto Touring, Interpretive Programs   Details Provided By: Guilford Courthouse National Military Park

Chickamauga and Chattanooga - Fort Oglethorpe, Georgia

Between 1890 and 1899 the Congress of the United States authorized the establishment of the first four national military parks: Chickamauga and Chattanooga, Shiloh, Gettysburg, and Vicksburg. read more...

Phone: 706-866-9241   Price Range: N/A   Open Season: N/A   Camping: No  
Nearest Popular City: Fort Oglethorpe   Nearest Lake/River: N/A   Park Type: National Military Park   Activities: Hiking, Horseback Riding, Auto Touring, Interpretive Programs   Details Provided By: Chickamauga and Chattanooga

Pea Ridge National Military Park - Garfield, Arizona

Pea Ridge National Military Park is a 4,300 acre Civil War Battlefield that preserves the site of the March 1862 battle that saved Missouri for the Union. On March 7 & 8, nearly 26,000 soldiers fought to determine whether Missouri would remain under Union control, and whether or not Federal armies could continue their offensive south through the Mississippi River Valley. Major General Earl Van Dorn led 16,000 Confederates against 10,250 Union soldiers, under the command of Brigadier General Samuel R. Curtis. Van Dorn's command consisted of regular Confederate troops commanded by Brigadier General Benjamin McCulloch, and Missouri State Guard Forces commanded by Major General Sterling Price. The Confederate force also included some 800 Cherokees fighting for the Confederacy. The Union army consisted of soldiers from Iowa, Indiana, Illinois, Missouri and Ohio. Half of the Federals were German immigrants. The park also includes a two and one half mile segment of the Trail of Tears. The Elkhorn Tavern, site of bitter fighting on both days, is a NPS reconstruction on the site of the original. The park is one of the most well preserved battlefields in the United States. read more...

Phone: 479-451-8122   Price Range: $0 - $3   Open Season: N/A   Camping: No  
Nearest Popular City: Garfield   Nearest Lake/River: N/A   Park Type: National Military Park   Activities: Hiking, Horseback Riding, Wildlife Watching, Auto Touring, Interpretive Programs   Details Provided By: Pea Ridge National Military Park