Wednesday, August 28, 2013

SYMBOLS OF SACRIFICE


Come Honor
our Fallen Heroes!

Saturday, September 7-15, 2013
Fort Scott, Kansas

Fort Scott National Historic Site
(FSNHS)
is pleased to partner with the
Friends of FSNHS and
community members to present
Symbols of Sacrifice
a free series
of programs that highlight the 
sacrifice of Americans throughout much of the
19th, 20th, and 21st centures.

The main focus of the event will be a
Field of Honor on the historic
FSNHS Parada Ground,
where a US flag will fly for each service member
who has died while serving in
theater supporting US military operations
during the War on Terrorism

The purpose is to remember the fallen,
their sacrifice and their humanity,
not to glorify war.

JOIN US FOR THESE EVENTS:



:WEDNESDAY, SETPEMBER 11

On Wednesday, September 11, FSNHS will host a memorial service beginning at 12:00 noon to remember the victims of the 9/11 attachs.    The ceremony should conclude by 12:45 pm following the playing of Taps.    The public is invited to remember that day of uncertainty where average Americans exhibited selfless, uncommon valor, then walk the Field of Honor.

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 14

On Saturday, September 14, Symbols of Sacrifice programming begins at 10:00 a.m.    Students from Fort Scott High School will provide prelude music beginning at 11:30 am. 

At noon, the Colors will be presented, followed by brief remarks of welcome and remembrance by members of government, veterans and the American Gold Star Mothers.

Taps will conclude the remembrance ceremony and visitors will again be invited to walk the Field of Honor.

Programming continues at 1 p.m. with a presentation by the American Gold Star Mothers and concludes with a stirring rendition of the Gettysburg Address and the Battle Hymn of the Republic.



For additional information
contact
Anne Emerson
2091 145 Street, Fort Scott, Kansas
H:  620-829-5280
C:  620-249-4134
email:   awemerson5@gmail.com


Tuesday, August 13, 2013

Upcoming Evening Tour

“Everyone is carrying a gun” said one observer of the town of Fort Scott during the late 1850s.  During that era, known as Bleeding Kansas, people who held widely varied beliefs descended on Fort Scott.  From abolitionists to proslavery advocates, from Jayhawkers to Border Ruffians, each had their own point of view on what was right and wrong and their own concept of justice.  Those concepts often clashed violently at Fort Scott in the 1850s.

An evening tour at Fort Scott National Historic Site will take a look at many of the people who came to Fort Scott during that era.  Six different scenes will represent the buildings and people who brought about conflict in the 1850s. Conflict could be found in the courtroom, the land office, the sheriff’s office - there were even two competing hotels. From the attempted burning of one of these hotels to the tragic shooting of one of its leading citizens, Fort Scott was no stranger to violence and intrigue during this era.  

The tour will be offered on August 17 at 6:30 p.m. at the historic site. There is no charge for this tour which is the third in a series of evening tours this summer.  It will meet at the visitor center.

Fort Scott National Historic Site is open daily from 8:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. Entrance to the site is free of charge. For more information call 620-223-0310 or visit our website at www.nps.gov/fosc.

Monday, August 5, 2013

Quantrill's Raid and Order No. 11


Shared Stories
Stories written by those
Who lived through Quantrill's Raid
Who lived through Order No. 11

Saturday, the Fort Scott National Historic Site
shared those stories
And the attendees had lively questions for the moderator.


Bill Fischer
Fort Scott National Historic Site Historian

A panel of readers
shared those stories
One by one,
we watched the stories unfold.


Friends of Fort Scott National Historic Site President
Reed Hartford
one of the readers


Katie Wells, Matt Wells and Jim Scott were part of the panel


Reed Hartford and Cynthia McFarlin rounded out the panel.

Because the raid was not that far away in Lawrence, Kansas
And because Order No. 11 involved Vernon County (20 miles to the East)
there are stories of grandparents and great-grandparents
that were passed down.
And those were shared by the audience as well.

That is real living history.