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Subject Item
n2:
rdfs:label
Pitzer Woods
rdfs:comment
Pitzer Woods was the site of July 1st & 2nd fighting during the 1863 Battle of Gettysburg. After the CCC camp closed, Fort Indiantown Gap used Pitzer Woods in 1941 and conducted aerial reconnaissance training using the battlefield. During 1943-4, Camp Sharpe used the Pitzer Woods camp ("in a muddy hollow at the bottom of a slanting road") to train soldiers for psychological operations in the European Theater of Operations. In 1946, agricultural laborers from the Bahamas (July 16)[1] and Jamaica were housed on Seminary Ridge. The Pitzer Woods amphitheater was constructed in the 1960s, and the July 3, 1998 James Longstreet memorial was erected at the Pitzer Woods site that had been dedicated in 1941.
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15.375
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forest area
n36:
1
n27:
United States
n45:
Pitzer Woods
n3:
30
n42:
39
n6:
20
n31:
1
n30:
1
n12:
GNMP structure Historic District
n44:
1000
n17:
77
n39:
1
n13:
n14: ID56
n4:
n5: n19:
n21:
Pennsylvania
n20:
W
n37:
n38:
n22:
n23: Rossville Diabase dike (50 feet thick)
n25:
''
n40:
N
n26:
48.279
n15:
n16:
n41:
"Pitzer Woods" marker
n28:abstract
Pitzer Woods was the site of July 1st & 2nd fighting during the 1863 Battle of Gettysburg. After the CCC camp closed, Fort Indiantown Gap used Pitzer Woods in 1941 and conducted aerial reconnaissance training using the battlefield. During 1943-4, Camp Sharpe used the Pitzer Woods camp ("in a muddy hollow at the bottom of a slanting road") to train soldiers for psychological operations in the European Theater of Operations. In 1946, agricultural laborers from the Bahamas (July 16)[1] and Jamaica were housed on Seminary Ridge. The Pitzer Woods amphitheater was constructed in the 1960s, and the July 3, 1998 James Longstreet memorial was erected at the Pitzer Woods site that had been dedicated in 1941.