ARCHAEOLOGY

A PATH TO FREEDOM

The only complete original building still standing at Camp Nelson inJessamine County, Kentucky, is a sizeable house built around 1850 for the just-married Oliver Perry and his bride, the former Fannie Scott, whose family owned the land on which the house sits. It is now called simply the White House. But between 1863 and 1865, at the height of the Civil War, it was just one of more than300 structures in the center of the camp’s 4,000 acres that housed all the required resources for an army at war. These included a supply depot, hospital, commissary, prison, ordnance storage facility, stables and corrals, a 50,000-gallon reservoir, woodworking shop, blacksmith shop, horseshoeing shop, harness shop, and a bakery that produced 10,000 rations of bread aday There was also a hotel and tavern called the Owens House, a post office, and a few small eating establishments. Camp Nelson had been built to support the Union Army’s advance into Tennessee, and over its years ofwartime service, tens of thousands of soldiers, both white and black, enlisted and were trained there. Camp Nelson was the largest of the eight U.S. Colored Troops (USCT) recruiting centers in Kentucky, and the third largest in the nation. All that remains aboveground, apart from the White House, though, are the remains of eight earthen and two stone forts, the earthen remains of a powder magazine, remnants of a few icehouses, and the stone foundations of two ovens.

A tintype photograph (far left) of Pvt. William Wright, an

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from ARCHAEOLOGY

ARCHAEOLOGY1 min read
Speaking In Golden Tongues
In the ancient city of Oxyrhynchus, just west of the Nile, a team led by archaeologists Esther Pons of Spain’s National Archaeological Museum and Maite Mascort of the University of Barcelona unearthed an underground tomb. It dates to between 332 and
ARCHAEOLOGY1 min read
Cleaning Out The Basement
Archaeologists in the Heddernheim section of the German city of Frankfurt have excavated and conserved an intact wooden cellar—including its five-step staircase—dating to the late first century A.D. At the time, this neighborhood was an administrativ
ARCHAEOLOGY1 min read
Turn Of The Millennium Falcon
The partial skeleton of a female gyrfalcon has been discovered near the top of a well in the citadel of Karabalgasun, the capital of the Uighur Empire (a.d. 745–840), in central Mongolia’s Orkhon Valley. Karabalgasun was destroyed and abandoned in A.

Related Books & Audiobooks