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・ Gettysburg Armory
・ Gettysburg Battlefield
・ Gettysburg Battlefield camps after the American Civil War
・ Gettysburg Battlefield Historic District
・ Gettysburg Battlefield Memorial Association
・ Gettysburg Campaign
・ Gettysburg College
・ Gettysburg Confederate order of battle
・ Gettysburg Cyclorama
・ Gettysburg Electric Railway
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・ Gettysburg furniture companies
・ Gettysburg Museum and Visitor Center
・ Gettysburg National Cemetery
・ Gettysburg National Military Park
Gettysburg National Museum
・ Gettysburg National Tower
・ Gettysburg Railroad
・ Gettysburg Railroad (1976–96)
・ Gettysburg Railroad (disambiguation)
・ Gettysburg Railroad Station
・ Gettysburg Railway
・ Gettysburg Regional Airport
・ Gettysburg Rostrum
・ Gettysburg Spring Railroad
・ Gettysburg Springs Hotel
・ Gettysburg Township, Graham County, Kansas
・ Gettysburg Union order of battle
・ Gettysburg, Ohio
・ Gettysburg, PA Micropolitan Statistical Area


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Gettysburg National Museum : ウィキペディア英語版
Gettysburg National Museum

The Gettysburg National Museum was a Gettysburg Battlefield visitor attraction on the south border of the Gettysburg borough. Established by George D. Rosensteel after working at his uncle's 1888 Round Top Museum, the facility had an interpretive Battle of Gettysburg map using incandescent lights and was acquired by the National Park Service for use as the 1974–2008 Gettysburg National Military Park museum and visitor center after the Cyclorama Building at Gettysburg and before the Gettysburg Museum and Visitor Center.
==History==
In 1929, Dr. William J. Chewning, having amassed over 100,000 Civil War artifacts, opened The National Battlefield Museum in Fredericksburg, Virginia. This private museum operated under his direction from 1929 until his death in 1937. In his final years, Chewning tried to find a local buyer for the collection, but neither the National Park Service nor the City of Fredericksburg opted to purchase the artifacts. With his passing, Chewning’s widow and son inherited the collection. They, however, did find a buyer. The April 30, 1938 edition of ''The Free Lance-Star'' carried an editorial entitled “Fredericksburg Loses.” The column announced the sale of the Chewning Collection to a buyer in Manassas, Virginia. The local paper lifted this editorial from ''The Suffolk News-Herald''. In announcing the sale, the editor mourned Fredericksburg’s loss of the collection.〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=https://npsfrsp.wordpress.com/2013/03/05/fredericksburg-to-gettysburg-the-dr-william-j-chewning-collection-part-2/ )
“The master collection belonged in Fredericksburg and there it should have remained. These relics will be of immense value historically and intrinsically no matter where they are but they will fit nowhere like in the place of their origin. We have no hesitancy in saying that this collection should be acquired by the Federal government and made more accessible to the public. It is in many respects educational. Fredericksburg has lost a rare chance to capitalize it along with its sacred shrines. But that city’s loss is Manassas’ gain. The place that gets it has something.”〔

Just as Dr. Chewning had not wanted to see the collection leave Fredericksburg, neither did his family. With no local buyers, however, keeping the collection in the community proved impossible. Julius T. Richards of Manassas, Virginia became the new owner of the massive collection. In announcing the transaction, ''The Fauquier Democrat'' described the disappointment the Chewnings felt in selling the artifacts out of Fredericksburg:
“In announcing the sale Mr. Chewning stated that both he and his mother, Mrs. Anne Page Chewning, regretted the necessity of depriving Fredericksburg of this rare collection. No prospective purchasers who would keep the museum in Fredericksburg could be located. Mr. Chewning added that Fredericksburg had made no attempt to acquire the collection and, in fact, ‘had evidenced little real interest in it.’ For these reasons, he said, he and Mrs. Chewning deemed it advisable to accept Mr. Richards’ ‘highly attractive proposition. Mrs. Chewning said that while she regrets the removal of the collection from Fredericksburg, she is ‘happy to know’ that it will be permanently in Virginia.”〔


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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