Vermont Legislature Backs GBPA Letterman Preservation Drive

Camp Letterman
Vermont House formally adopts resolution

(May 17) – The Vermont House of Representatives and Senate have formally adopted a resolution (J.R.S.
59) supporting the Gettysburg Battlefield Preservation Association’s effort to preserve what remains of the Camp Letterman hospital site.

“We are thrilled, that a state government is backing a large part of our campaign to preserve a very
important portion of the remaining undeveloped ground that was vital to the Battle of Gettysburg and the
unprecedented effort to treat the thousands of wounded and dying solders after the battle,” said GBPA President Barb Mowery.

After the battle, thousands of wounded Confederate and Union troops were gathered from where
they were being treated in homes, barns, churches and other buildings throughout the Gettysburg area
into one massive tent hospital named for Dr. Jonathan Letterman, the medical Director of the Army of the
Potomac.

The responsibility for establishing this first hospital to treat Union and Confederate casualties
equally with the best resources available was in the hands of Dr. Henry Janes, a Waterbury, Vermont,
physician and U.S. Army surgeon.

Wounded troops treated at the hospital included those of the Second Vermont Brigade, which had
played a role in the desperate clash on the third day of the battle in repelling Pickett’s Charge.

Mowery said the GBPA is seeking to preserve 17 acres of Camp Letterman that are part of a
planned 191-acre townhouse development by S & A Homes of State College, Pennsylvania.

Camp Letterman

“We are not trying to stop the entire project, just preserve the 17 acres that were part of Camp
Letterman,” said Mowery. “S & A has been kind enough to meet with us on a few occasions, but there’s been no assurance that the Letterman ground won’t be plowed up and paved for roads and residences.”

The resolution from the Vermont Senate and House of Representatives, which received final
adoption on May 11, states that “the General Assembly supports the Gettysburg Battlefield Preservation
Association‘s effort to preserve the Camp Letterman hospital site and requests that S & A Homes
preserve these 17 acres of historic ground.”

The Vermont Senate will send a copy of the resolution to S & A headquarters.

“This action by Vermont was spurred by Vermont Historian, Howard Coffin, who went above and beyond in
working to get this legislation passed,” said Mowery.

Others who are very concerned about saving this hallowed and have been writing letters to S & A Homes
include people from 35 states, 3 foreign countries, preservation organizations, individual living historians and authors, civil war round tables, civil war organizations and other living history groups.

The full resolution can be found here: JRS059 J.R.S. 59 As adopted by the Senate Official.pdf