![]() ![]() Following site selection of the Union soldier’s new cemetery, state commissioners determined that a fitting ceremony must inaugurate the reburial process. That issue would have to await the end of the war. Considering that the war still raged, little thought was given to the Confederate dead in their temporary graves. ![]() Mortified, several Union states representatives banded together to create a soldier’s cemetery into which the Union dead could be reinterred with proper ceremony and respect. Within weeks of the battle, torrential rainstorms and foraging animals had opened the thousands of poorly dug, shallow and temporary battlefield graves. Gettysburg had been the costliest civil war battle to date with more than 53,000 casualties including 10,000 Union and Confederate soldiers killed and mortally wounded. The question remained, however, how could he do it. The nation’s hopes for a speedy end to the war had to be tempered and the president knew it and he wanted the country to know it. On JPresident Abraham Lincoln celebrated the nation’s birthday with double Union victories, one at Vicksburg, Mississippi and the other at Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. This is Michael Kelly, a Park Ranger at National Mall and Memorial Parks interpreting the Gettysburg Address. ![]()
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