Camp Grant State Historic Site [ND]
A small tablet mounted on a large boulder commemorates the July 23 campsite of the 1863 Sibley expedition.
The site is open to the public.
Website does not specify any interpretive services available at the site.
A small tablet mounted on a large boulder commemorates the July 23 campsite of the 1863 Sibley expedition.
The site is open to the public.
Website does not specify any interpretive services available at the site.
Built in 1930 with donations from the Kuser family of Trenton, the monument was built on the highest point in New Jersey and was erected in honor of the American servicemen who served in World War I.
The site is open to the public.
Website does not specify any historical interpretive services available at the site.
At Campbell's Island, located in the Mississippi River near present-day Rock Island, a day-long battle was fought in the War of 1812. On July 19, 1814, a pro-British band of Sauk Indians led by Black Hawk attacked a force of United States regulars and rangers under Lieutenant John Campbell. The Americans were defeated, with the loss of 16 American lives. Campbell's Island State Memorial consists of a North Carolina granite monument dedicated in 1908, in a mini-park overlooking the river.
Website offers no specifics about interpretative services offered at the site.
This 3,000-acre Eastern Montana rolling prairie park preserves the site of the June 17, 1876, battle between the Sioux and Cheyenne Indians and General Crook’s soldiers supported by the Crow and Shoshone Indians. Remote, quiet, and undeveloped, the park includes prehistoric sites and the homestead ranch of the Kobold family.
The site is open to the public.
Website does not specify any interpretive services available at the site beyond signage.
In 1863, the U.S. Navy attempted to invade Confederate Texas through the Sabine Pass to gain access to Houston, the rail center of Texas. Guarding the pass was Fort Griffin, where on Sept. 8, 1863, Lt. Dick Dowling and 46 of his men used six cannons to defeat four gunboats and halt the invasion. In honor of the Texas defenders, a bronze statue of Dowling overlooks the 57.5-acre park. An interpretive pavilion illustrates the story of the battle, while a walking trail features historical markers. Four World War II ammunition bunkers stand witness to the site’s use by the U.S. Army Coastal Artillery Division.
The site is open to the public.
Website does not specify any interpretive services, beyond signage, available at the site.
This site preserves remaining vestiges of a military post established in 1864 by General Alfred Sully to supply his campaign into western Dakota and to protect traffic on the Missouri River, a function the fort continued until replaced by Fort Yates in 1877. There is a marker on the site.
The site is open to the public.
Website does not specify any interpretive services available at the site.
This memorial commemorates Abraham Lincoln's 1832 service in the Black Hawk War. Sculpted by Leonard Crunelle, the statue was dedicated on September 24, 1930.
Website offers no information on specific interpretative services available at the site.
This site marks the approximate location of Camp Banks, an encampment used on August 2, 1863, by the Sibley expedition. Chaska, an Indian Scout, died at Camp Banks and was buried in the fortification ditch that surrounded the campsite.
The site is open to the public.
Website does not specify any interpretive services available at the site.
The Trenton battle monument commemorates the American victory at the first Battle of Trenton, NJ, which occurred on December 26, 1776. It is located in an area of the city known as "Five Points." It was here, at the intersection of North Broad Street, Warren Street and Brunswick, Pennington and Princeton Avenue, that the American artillery was placed. From this vantage point, the artillery dominated the streets of Trenton, preventing the Hessian troops from organizing an effective counter attack.
The site is open to the public.
Website does not specify any interpretive services available at the site.
The Memorial, located in a small park, marks the site of the birthplace of James Butler "Wild Bill" Hickok.
Website offers no specific information on interpretative services available at the site.