VA -- Winchester -- Museum of the Shenandoah Valley -- Rose Hill Park:
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Description of Pictures: Rose Hill Park
Just as the Glen Burnie House is the ancestral home of the Wood family, the house on the MSV's Rose Hill Farm is the ancestral home of the Glass family. It was also home to men, women, and children who were enslaved on the property. The Wood and Glass families became linked in 1832 with the marriage of Catherine Wood and Thomas S. Glass.
Located at 1871 Jones Road, Winchester, VA 22602—several miles from the MSV's Winchester campus—the Rose Hill landscape derives historic significance as the site of the Civil War's March 23, 1862 First Battle of Kernstown.
Rose Hill's historic landscape is now open as Rose Hill Park (See the Press Release). Opened on August 18, 2016, and operated in partnership with Frederick County Parks and Recreation Department (FCPRD), the park features a 1.25-mile walking trail with Civil War interpretive signage, restrooms, a new entrance, and a parking lot. A 60-person picnic shelter is available for private rentals by calling FCPRD at 540-665-5678.
A portion of the Rose Hill property operates as a working farm; that acreage is closed to the public as is the property's historic house, which is a private residence.
Rose Hill Park is open to visitors at no charge from 8 a.m. until dusk, 364 days a year (closed Christmas Day).
Nearby, the Pritchard-Grim Farm, owned by the Kernstown Battlefield Association, is open seasonally for tours. Early stages of the First Battle of Kernstown were fought on the Pritchard-Grim Farm. Rose Hill was the scene of the battle’s later phase and final conflict. The new walking trail at Rose Hill Park provides public access to the First Kernstown battlefield and includes interpretive signage that tells the story of the site's famous Civil War Battle.
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MSVRHP_210715_14.JPG: Glen Burnie
This site, known as Glen Burnie, is the homestead of Col. James Wood, who founded Winchester on a portion of his land in 1744. Wood's son, Robert, began the present house in 1793, but the estate was home to the Wood-Glass families from the 1730s to the 1990s.
During the Civil War, Winchester changed hands many times, as Union and Confederate forces occupied, fought over, and won or lost possession of the town. Each side occupied Glen Burnie several times. Its proximity of the North Western Turnpike (now U.S. Rte. 50) between Winchester, Virginia, and Romney, West Virginia, and to good water from springs here, attracted the troops. In June 1861, Southern-minded Marylanders camped here and formed the First Maryland Infantry, Confederate States of America (CSA). They later fought the First Maryland Infantry, United States of America (USA), at the Battle of Front Royal on May 23, 1862.
Tides of blue and gray swept across the hills and fields of Glen Burnie during all three major battles for Winchester in 1862, 1863, and 1864. Combat damage and occupation caused the farm's agricultural productivity and value to decline as livestock, farm buildings, fences and timber were taken or destroyed. After the war, family members went west to begin new lives, homes, and fortunes, and eventually left Glen Burnie as a legacy to the Winchester community.
The newly formed First Maryland Infantry (CSA) plays "foot-ball" at Glen Burnie before evening parade, from Harper's Weekly, Aug. 21, 1861
Glen Burnie looked much this way when, on Christmas Eve, 1862, Cornelia McDonald living across the road, saw a regiment of Federal Cavalry ‘take possession of Mr. Wood's yard and beautiful grounds, attracted no doubt by the grass which is still green in many places." Courtesy Winchester-Frederick County Historical Society
One of three springs on the original James Wood homestead, this spring, located on the north side of Amherst Street, supplied water to Winchester since its beginning and to many a soldier, blue and gray. -- Courtesy The Western Reserve Historical Society
MSVRHP_210716_013.JPG: Please do not feed or pet us
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MSVRHP_210716_038.JPG: Silo Skyline, 2020
Andrew White and Jack McAllister
MSVRHP_210716_049.JPG: Compa Rojo (My Friend Red), 2019
Alejandro Martin Moreno Alonso "Otto"
AAA "Gem": AAA considers this location to be a "must see" point of interest. To see pictures of other areas that AAA considers to be Gems, click here.
Wikipedia Description: Museum of the Shenandoah Valley
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Museum of the Shenandoah Valley is located at 901 Amherst Street, Winchester, Virginia. The Museum endeavours to preserve and enrich the cultural life and heritage of the Valley. Located on the largest green space in the city of Winchester, the MSV is a regional cultural center including a museum designed by Driehaus Prize winner Michael Graves, seven acres of formal gardens, and the Glen Burnie House dating to the 18th century.
The MSV complex consists of three main components:
House
The Glen Burnie Historic House traces its history to surveyor James Wood (?-1759), who settled this land in the early 18th century and donated portions of his land to establish the city of Winchester, Virginia in 1744. His son Robert Wood constructed the central portion of the Glen Burnie Historic House in the 1790s. The house’s ownership passed through several generations of Wood and then Glass families until Julian Wood Glass Jr. (1910–1992), acquired it in 1955. Julian Wood Glass Jr. was the last descendant of James Wood to own the Glen Burnie Historic House.
Beginning in 1959, and aided by his partner R. Lee Taylor, Glass transformed the house into a country estate, and the couple designed the Glen Burnie Gardens. Glass created the Glass-Glen Burnie Foundation prior to his death in 1992, and entrusted the Foundation to open the site to the public as a museum. The Glen Burnie Historic House & Gardens opened to the public in 1998.
Today, interpretive panels tell the story of those who lived in the house from 1796 to 1992 and exhibitions are presented annually in the Drawing Room.
The house is listed on the National Register of Historic Places and the Virginia Landmarks Register.
Gardens
The gardens surrounding the Glen Burnie Historic House were created beginning in 1956 and evolved over the latter half of the 20th century. Built for formal entertaining, the gardens include sculpture ...More...
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2021 photos: This year, which started with former child president's attempted coup and the continuation of the COVID-19 pandemic, gradually got better.
Trips this year:
(May, October) After getting fully vaccinated, I made two trips down to Asheville, NC to visit my dad and his wife Dixie, and
(mid-July) I made a quick trip up to Stockbridge, MA to see the Norman Rockwell Museum again as well as Daniel Chester French's place @ Chesterwood.
Equipment this year: I continued to use my Fuji XS-1 cameras but, depending on the event, I also used a Nikon D7000.
Number of photos taken this year: about 283,000, up slightly from 2020 levels but still really low.
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