I was saddened to find that for every soldier who perished from being shot two more died of disease. The reasons for this became clear when it was pointed out the the body wastes of 70,000 soldiers, thousands of horses and the shallow graves of thousands of dead soldiers polluted the shallow ground water they drank in the rather confined area they were forced to occupy...
As you walk up to the Corinth Interpretive Center you pass metal castings embedded in the sidewalk intended to give the impression of walking across a battlefield after the fight.
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The Corinth museum explains the various stages of the start of the Civil War in some detail |
Display of how to prepare for a seige |
This was interesting |
The movie about the events is not to be missed |
The Visitor Center at nearby Shiloh National Military Park also has a very well done movie about events |
Tours of the Battlefield are explained by color coded markers about the field |
Diorama showing the battle |
Histories of some select combatants are explained |
Just down the road from the Shiloh Visitors Center is a restaurant purported to be one of the 10 best in the country for fried catfish. The food was good and lived up to its reputation. |
Nice museum. I did not know that Lincoln's vice presidents first name was Hannibal.
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