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145th Anniversary of the "Battle of Hunterstown" Walking Tour and Monument Dedication Wednesday, July 2, 2008 11:00 am The Historic Tate Farm
Pictures and Articles....
Did You Know... Hunterstown, formerly called Woodstock, is one of the oldest towns in the country. It was settled in 1741 by David Hunter, a Revolutionary War soldier, for whom the town was named.

To View the Historic Village of Hunterstown...
HUNTERSTOWN,
PENNSYLVANIA
“A small but significantly Historical Village”
Where is Hunterstown located?
On Route
394 one mile East of the HUNTERSTOWN interchange of Route 15 north of Gettysburg.
What makes this village so special?
Settled in 1741, it is the second oldest town in Adams County and once vied for becoming the County Seat of Adams.
Located on the once “Black’s Gap Road”,
the main east-west road in its day.
Location of the Historic Tate Farm and blacksmith shop, where President George Washington
stopped in 1794 to have his horse shod on his return from Pittsburgh at the time of the Whiskey Rebellion. Here
the Cavalry converged during the Civil War in July 1863.
Location of the Felty & Gilbert Farms where George Custer’s Cavalry met in battle
with J.E.B. Stuart’s Cavalry on July 2, 1863, now viewed as having a very significant bearing on the outcome of the
Battle of Gettysburg. Where Custer narrowly escaped losing his life.
Location of the Grass Hotel built in the 1700’s served as a temporary Union headquarters
of Brig. General Judson Kilpatrick during the battle at Hunterstown. Several generals died in this building.
The Great Conewago Presbyterian Church was organized
in 1740. The present fieldstone church built in 1787 is still in use today. It served as a hospital during the
Civil War. The adjacent cemetery contains gravesites of Revolutionary War soldiers and Civil War veterans along with
generations of local inhabitants. Location of The Reliance Mining and Milling Company in the late 1800’s
and early 1900’s. Not hugely successful but employed many locals during this period. Early paving of town streets
contained residue of its gold and copper. Through the 19th and 20th century this village had a two-room
country school, also a Methodist Church on the main street, both still existing but not in use.
Among the inhabitants was a doctor, undertaker,
watchmaker, shoemaker, carpenter, tailor, and wagon maker. Interestingly enough, during the 1830’s John C. Studebaker,
a blacksmith, and his skilled employees built conestoga-type wagons in a shop between Hunterstown and Heidlersburg.
His descendents later moved to Indiana to have the largest company for manufacturing wagons and carriages and
later the Studebaker automobile.
Over the years Hunterstown had many small country stores, a post office, creamery, fruit-packing house,
millinery store, gun club and horse racing track. As many as 10 families were chairmakers as early as 1816 into
the early 1900's. It once had a military guard unit and a baseball team. The village currently has two churches,
dog kennel and grooming establishment, horse boarding farm with lesson programs, child care center, tea room,
go-cart track, car body shop, and transmission shop.
Hunterstown, population 100, a village rich in history where
the desire of its people is to restore and preserve what it now has to share with others. Here you can’t
help but feel the heart beat of the past and imagine those who walked and rode these once dusty roads. You may
hear the distant toll of the school bell, the happy sounds of children at play or music from the old church pump organ. You may hear the hoof beats of the cavalry approaching and the sound of the artillery that echoed over the village.
Memories linger of the mournful groans of the injured and dying in the fields and makeshift hospitals and the prayers
of the faithful as they gave their last full measure here.
Hunterstown, Pennsylvania – A quaint little village with a story to tell!
Straban Historical Reflections Linda
K. Cleveland, Historian
To Contact Mrs. Cleveland...
HUNTERSTOWN...... on CWPT's "Top 10 Endangered Battlefield" List!!!
To Read More!
"Beyond those stirring images of flashing sabers and pounding hooves, are the men who
endured the struggle in the wake of incredible hardship. Men who had to rise above the exhaustion, numbness, and stupor
of hard campaigning and respond to the call to arms when it appeared that there was nothing more to give... In spite
of all the uncertainties of meeting the enemy, they went forward willingly and gave their all.... It was not only
a test of wills but a triumph of the human spirit, and above all else it is the spirit that endures."
"The Battle of Hunterstown" by Paul Shevchuk
North Cavalry Battlefield Giclees...
Hunterstown, Pennsylvania
July
2, 1863 Known by historians as "North Cavalry Field," Hunterstown was recently
recognized by the National Parks Service (Sept. '06) as part of the Gettysburg Campaign. Unfortunately,
the site is extremely vulnerable to development.
"And though Hunterstown is a new addition,
Lawhon said there is still work to do to help preserve the land within the boundaries of the Gettysburg National Military
Park." .....Evening Sun quote
Local and National Contacts...
Civil War Preservation Trust
Also, Jim Campi, CWPT
Gettysburg National Park Service, Superintendant
Senator Robert P. Casey
Congressman Todd Platts 717-334-3430
Senator Terry Punt 717-334-4169
State Representative Dan Maul 717-334-3010
Email Dan Moul
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