Welcome! Friday, March 29, 2024 | Login | Register
   
Civil War Weekend features reenactment train rides, Texas Locomotive

At the close of the Civil War, three days after Robert E. Lee's surrender at Appomattox Court House, Gen. George Stoneman marched into Salisbury, N.C. Unaware of Lee's surrender, Stoneman burned buildings, destroyed Confederate supplies, destroyed the former Confederate Prison, and tried to stop fleeing trains carrying Confederate supplies from the city under siege.
The N.C. Transportation Museum's Civil War Weekend: Stoneman's Raid Through Salisbury, will feature train ride reenactments of these events, historians, Civil War era music, living history, Friday night lantern tours, a Saturday night dinner and Civil War dance, and trolley tours to the Salisbury National Cemetery and Confederate Prison site and to the Fort York area where Confederate and Union forces clashed. Lantern tours take place Friday, Aug. 26, while all other events happen Saturday and Sunday, Aug. 27-28.
The event will truly be a trip back in time, with Civil War reenactors providing living history demonstrations, musket fire, and troop movements. Sutlers, named for the merchants that followed troops to sell their wares, will be set up with Civil-War merchandise.
Civil War Weekend will also feature a special guest. The Texas locomotive has been visiting the museum, undergoing cosmetic restoration in the Back Shop. This famed engine was a participant in the Great Locomotive Chase of the Civil War, helped to rebuild the city of Atlanta during Reconstruction, and is the pride of the Atlanta History Center. Experts will detail the Texas's place in history and the restoration progress.
Civil War historian Michael C. Hardy has written numerous books with a particular focus on North Carolina's role in the War Between the States. Chris J. Hartley wrote the definitive history of Stoneman's raid of Salisbury. Both will be featured with two presentations Saturday, Aug. 26 and one presentation Sunday, Aug 27.
Visitors will also witness a reenactment of Stoneman's troops raiding a train with Confederate military supplies and the sword, uniform, papers, and family of slain Confederate Lt. Gen. Leonidas Polk as it attempted an escape from Salisbury. Musket and cannon fire will be heard and seen at several different locations throughout the day.
Admission to Civil War Weekend: Stoneman's Raid Through Salisbury is $14 for children ages 3-12 and $18 for adults.
Those wishing to experience the full train ride reenactment, riding onboard as cavalry troops gallop alongside and gunfire is exchanged can purchase Admission Plus Train Ride tickets. The cost is $20 for children 3-12 and $25 for adults. Member discounts are available. State sales tax applies to all purchases.
The event also features several "upgrade" experiences.
Guests may start the event early, Friday night, Aug. 26, with Stoneman's Raid Lantern Tours. Tours feature a retelling of what it was like for local citizens and troops during the raid. Tours will last one hour and are $18 per person. Guests may arrive an hour before the scheduled start time to enjoy refreshments, live music from the Huckleberry Brothers, and living history demonstrations in the Bob Julian Roundhouse.
Saturday night, the Huckleberry Brothers will be the main attraction during the Dinner and Dance of the Civil War. Held in the Bob Julian Roundhouse following daytime activities, the Huckleberry Brothers will perform songs, ballads, and fiddle tunes from the era while guests dine. Tickets are $30 for individual adults, $50 per couple, and $20 for children ages 3-12.
Two off-site trolley tours will also be offered during Saturday and Sunday's events.
The Salisbury Historic National Cemetery and Salisbury Confederate Prison site will be viewed during a one-hour trolley tour. The site holds 18 trench graves bearing the mortal remains of some 11,700 Union soldiers, once prisoners in Salisbury. The liberation of the prison was a primary reason for Stoneman's raid of Salisbury, though virtually all prisoners had been moved to other locations by the time he arrived. Tours are $12/person and will be offered numerous times Saturday and Sunday.
Another trolley tour will take visitors to the Fort York site, the scene of a battle between Confederate and Union troops for the North Carolina Railroad Bridge. Guests should be advised that tours require walking approximately 500 yards uphill. Visitors may also choose to stay in the trolley. Tickets are $15/person, with $3 of each ticket going toward the Landtrust for Central NC to aid conservation of this historic site.
Tickets and all upgrades are available now at www.nctrans.org. All events are rain or shine, all purchases are final, and state sales tax applies to all purchases. Handling fees may also apply.
About the N.C. Transportation Museum
The N.C. Transportation Museum, located in historic Spencer Shops, the former Southern Railway repair facility is located just five minutes off I-85 at Exit 79 in Spencer, N.C., and about an hour from Charlotte, Greensboro or Winston-Salem. The museum is part of the Division of Historic Sites and the N.C. Department of Natural and Cultural Resources.
Submitted by Mark Brown


Printer-friendly format