Antietam topography
There are many maps of this battle available to help the landscape gardener recreate the terrain and it really is a case of perhaps, where to start?
I have commenced with my Antietam’ voices of the Civil War excellent map and by using the same scale and tracing paper with an outline of my table have ascertained approximately what I can fit into the fighting area.
Apologies for the torn off by accident corner.
This then translates into distances. Everything of course is in yards and miles so a little converting is required. I am not overly concerned with exactitude as I want the end result to look right rather than be a mathematical presentation.
Once again inconsistencies abound but I found William A Frassanito’s camera diagrams to be a most useful tool when I did a rough layout.
As usual, the contradictions from the reference sources immediately appear. Whilst I am not recreating spot heights, I do want to sculpt the landscape to be an approximate recreation of the original.
The Library of Congress has excellent maps showing the contour lines, fence types, crops etc and is excellent.
To get a slightly more simplified overview I consulted Ted Ballard’s United States Military centre for military history’s 2008 staff ride with its excellent maps.
https://history.army.mil/html/books/035 ... 35-3-1.pdfLooking at the contour heights we see that he has the Nicodemus Heights on a 525 feet line whilst the LOC states 150 feet!
You really can not make this stuff up.
Wikipedia states that the town of Sharpsburg is at an elevation of 425 feet which suggests Mr Ballard is correct.
Nevertheless, a ‘feel’ of the landscape can be appreciated and this brilliant link from the Battlefield Trust is most useful too.
https://www.battlefields.org/visit/virt ... rtual-tourI also dug out David Greenspan’s wonderful picture map from my childhood.
It is not entirely accurate, but it does represent the ground fairly well.
My sketch map will give me a starting point for the basic building blocks.
The new garage door has been installed and it is time to get the bucket and spade out.
Progress at last.
Chris