#8
The
Timbers Farm: Through the Thick of It
On
July 2nd,
1863 a number of important landmarks dotted the southern end of the
Gettysburg Battlefield that still stand to this day. Names like
Weikert, Sherfy, Rose, Klingel and Codori still remain today through
the edifices that withstood the hailstorm of shot and shell on that
horrific day nearly 150 years ago. In fact, the historic structures
of Gettysburg have in and of themselves become a sort of monument.
But
what about those places that have since been forgotten? Obviously
with the passing time and a need for bigger and better creature
comforts, some old shells have been completely overhauled, if not
obliterated, to create the needy homes of our modern era. There are
though still remnants of the past that are all but forgotten by those
individuals lucky enough to stumble across their humble remains.
One
such ruin is that of the Wentz House which still guards the east side
of the Emmitsburg Road just north of the Peach Orchard. All that
remains is the beautiful stone foundation, but it is truly amazing
how many visitors go to a place such as the famous Peach Orchard at
Gettysburg and probably don't even know that it exists. There is
also the even lesser known Tawney House across from Culps Hill on the
east side of Rock Creek. At the center of sharpshooting in the area
of the battlefield that saw the longest sustained combat of the
entire battle, those old foundation walls surely have some stories to
tell. Both of these old houses were most definitely used as field
hospitals for the maimed and dying throughout those horrible days in
July of 1863.
There
is another old farm that probably receives the least attention of all
the farms at Gettysburg while sitting in the shadow of July 2nd's
famous landmarks such as Devils Den, The Wheatfield, Big and Little
Round Top. That farm is more commonly known today as the Timbers
Farm. Truth be told, during the battle it was owned by George W.
Weikert and occupied a beautiful piece of ground just south of Rose
Run on a hillside that might remind one of the images of the Welsh
countryside. All that remains of the farm is the original stone
foundation of the house. On July 2nd
this farm was in the midst of a terrible inferno that was
Longstreet's famous attack towards the previously mentioned sites of
fame. Two, possibly three of the Confederate brigades that made that
fateful attack passed around and through the yard of this house. As
I finally stumbled across this site after a couple days of searching
last winter, I couldn't help but imagine the poor souls that rested
upon the dirt floor that I was now perusing. Anderson's Georgians
surely used the structure for their wounded and maybe even as cover
during their advance early on. Commanded by the guns of Smith's
Batteries on Houck's Ridge only a few hundred yards away, they
probably quickly headed for the ravine in their front until his guns
were silenced.
Through
all the terrible carnage that the farm witnessed, it survived the
battle although scarred like many of Gettysburg's dwellings. After
the war, the farm took new ownership in the form of an African
American man named John Timbers. When General Warren came back to
survey the field for creation of an accurate terrain map published in
1888, the farm took its new owners name. Curiously much of the
historical record after the change in ownership is scant. There is a
lot of lore that resides in the rest of the story. One thing that is
for certain is that John Timbers hung himself in the barn. The
legend that surrounds his downfall rests on stories of being haunted
by spirits of the men that fought for the ground on that steamy July
2nd,
1863.
Whatever
the story may be, it certainly is interesting to sit on the
foundation at that vantage, searching out the terrain details and
contemplating all that happened at such a hallowed place. There are
plenty of treasures still to be found, even on such trodden places as
the Gettysburg Battlefield.
Foundation of the "Timbers" (Weikert) Farm near Roses Woods |
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