by James Carter | Sep 15, 2020
Harrisonburg was Rockingham County’s seat of government and its largest town, an ideal site for a hospital. When the Civil War began in 1861, although the railroad had not yet extended to Harrisonburg, the town sat at the intersection of four turnpikes, including the...
by James Carter | Sep 15, 2020
The Trails sign for this Civil War Site is located on North Main Street between Franklin Street and Ash Tree Lane in Harrisonburg. This was the home of Edward T.H. Warren, a Harrisonburg attorney and descendant of Thomas Harrison, the founder of Harrisonburg. Warren...
by James Carter | Sep 15, 2020
This Civil War Trails sign is located at Court Square in historic downtown Harrisonburg at the corner of North Main Street. The courthouse grounds were used as a prison pen following the first battle of Winchester in 1862. Soldiers and townsfolk quenched their thirst...
by James Carter | Sep 15, 2020
Capt. John Hanson McNeill’s company of the 18th Virginia Cavalry became a Confederate partisan ranger unit on March 20, 1863. Nineteen days earlier, McNeill auctioned captured “horses and harness” at the courthouse in Harrisonburg for $36,000. On the morning of...
by James Carter | Sep 15, 2020
IN THE HEART OF HARRISONBURG’S HISTORIC COMMUNITY For over 165 years, we have humbly maintained our mission of creating a non-denominational, non-profit cemetery which acts as a symbol to the love, legacy, and character of the Harrisonburg Community, but also as...