Area cemeteries included in Civil War Trust cleanup
Myrtle Hill and the Resaca Confederate Cemetery are among those getting spruced up.
Volunteers from across Georgia this spring will work with the Civil War Trust to help clean up battlefields and other historic sites in Georgia and several other states.
Rome’s Myrtle Hill Cemetery and the Resaca Confederate Cemetery in Gordon County are on the cleanup list.
The goal is to maintain and restore several sites as part of Park Day, a nationwide effort on April 1 that includes more than 130 historic sites in 30 states, The Athens Banner-Herald reported.
Volunteers will be doing mostly outdoor jobs.
At Kennesaw Mountain National Battlefield Park, for instance, they will assist with the improvement of a trail that leads to the historic 24 Gun Battery, built by Union forces in 1864.
In Andersonville, volunteers will work to build primitive shelters at the reconstructed prison
site as well as help with landscaping and trash removal at the Andersonville National Historic Site, the Athens newspaper reported.
At the Resaca Confederate Cemetery in Northwest Georgia, volunteers will help to repair grave site markers, rake leaves, weed, pick up trash and paint.
At the Nash Farm Battlefield Park and Museum in Hampton, south of Atlanta, volunteers will be weeding and planting in the herb garden, along with picking up trash and debris, building or repairing fences and installing markers and interpretive signs, officials said.
Volunteers will also be helping out at the Chickamauga and Chattanooga National Military Park in Fort Oglethorpe; Dalton Confederate Cemetery and Historic Prater’s Mill in Dalton; the Jefferson Davis Memorial Historic Site in Fitzgerald; and the Kettle Creek Battlefield in Washington, Georgia.
Volunteers interested in participating in Park Day are encouraged to contact the individual sites.
The Civil War Trust is mostly focused on protecting Civil War battlefields, but also seeks to save the battlefields connected to the Revolutionary War and War of 1812.