THE EXHIBIT The exhibit's modular panels will cover a variety of topics, all told from a Western Pennsylvania perspective, including: On the Field of Battle -- Why They Fought: Although slavery was the root cause of the Civil War, most northern soldiers fought to preserve the Union, not to free the slaves. Energized by President Lincoln's patriotic rhetoric, early enlistees rallied around appeals such as "Crush the Rebellion," and "Do You Love Your Country?" in 1863, however, Lincoln's issued the Emancipation Proclamation transforming the conflict from a war to preserve the Union to a war committed to ending the institution of slavery. Following Lincoln's example, many Union soldiers also became convinced that the defeat of the Confederacy would also require an end to slavery.
Toiling on the Home Front: The Union Army required a vast support system to wage the war. Troops needed artillery, guns and ammunition, food, clothing, and medical supplies. On the home front, men worked in foundries making iron for armaments of every kind. Women and children manufactured solid shot, explosive shells, and shrapnel-filled case shot. Prominent businessmen and society women held fund raisers to finance medical care for soldiers. There was a place for nearly every citizen to support troops in the field.
Compassion On and Off the Field: The war touched nearly every individual and many women sought ways to connect more personally with soldiers. Traditionally feminine roles such as family care giver, cook, and comforter trained women to provide for needs that the government and industry simply could not supply. Women volunteered as nurses in hospitals and their own homes, provided food for soldiers on the march, and wrote letters of support to loved ones.
Battle of Gettysburg: In 1863, after the Confederate victory at Chancellorsville, Robert E. Lee planned his second invasion of the North. Moving his troops into Pennsylvania’s rich farmland would provide much needed supplies for his army, give battle ravaged Virginia the summer to recover, and draw Union forces away from Washington D.C. In late June, Lee’s men entered central Pennsylvania and marched through Chambersburg, Shippensburg, and Carlisle before turning south and encountering the Union Army at Gettysburg. The three-day battle that followed was the bloodiest of the Civil War. Pickett’s Charge, meant to be the beginning of a Confederate sweep toward Washington D.C., became a decisive defeat and ended Lee’s campaign in Pennsylvania. This northernmost battle of the War, fought on Pennsylvania soil, became a pivotal moment in the nation’s history.
The Civil War in Pennsylvania exhibit is grounded in the recent scholarship developed out of the statewide Pennsylvania Civil War 150 collaboration. Noted American historians, including Ed Ayres, William Blair, Judy Geisberg, James Horton, and Elizabeth Leonard, have participated in all phases of Pennsylvania Civil War 150.