Click here to return to Gettysburg.travel Home Page

New Ken Burns itinerary explores Civil War's 'Most Hallowed Ground'

New tour goes beyond the battlefields to explore conflict's causes, consequences and personal stories

(Gettysburg, Pennsylvania) - 4/28/2011

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE ...

CONTACT:
Tom Armstrong
Communications Manager
Tauck Tours
(203) 899-6814
[email protected]


A private viewing at the National Archives of our nation’s founding documents, which both established a new country and propelled it towards the war that almost destroyed it…  An exclusive visit to a Civil War-era farmhouse that was commandeered for use as a battlefield hospital, and today still shows evidence of the 750-plus soldiers who suffered there...  A special presentation on slavery and plantation life from a research historian for the Thomas Jefferson Foundation at Monticello…

These are just some of the exclusive experiences that guests will enjoy on Tauck’s new “Most Hallowed Ground” Civil War itinerary. Designed by Tauck and filmmaker Ken Burns, the all-inclusive, 11-day guided journey visits Civil War battlefields including Gettysburg, Antietam, Petersburg and Appomattox, as well as other historic sites in Virginia, Pennsylvania, Maryland and West Virginia. 

According to Burns, however, the itinerary goes deeper. 

“This journey, like my film on the Civil War, goes beyond the battlefields,” said Burns. “The battles are certainly central to the story of the Civil War, but they’re just one part of a much richer mosaic. A full understanding of the war also needs to explore its causes, its impacts on American society, and the incredibly compelling personal stories of those touched by the war.”

Guests will also learn about the war’s effects on civilians during an exclusive visit to the privately-owned Jacob Weikert farmhouse in Gettysburg, where the floorboards still bear bloodstains from the surgeries performed there, and at the home of Wilmer McLean in Appomattox, Virginia.  McLean fled the war and moved to Appomattox after the Battle of First Manassas (Bull Run) was contested on his property. Four years later, the war caught up with McLean in Appomattox when his parlor was the setting for Robert E. Lee’s formal surrender to Ulysses S. Grant.

The tour will also highlight the war’s impact on medical techniques and technology at the National Museum of Civil War Medicine in Frederick, Md., and prompt a contemplation of how post-war Reconstruction might have been different under Lincoln during a poignant visit to Ford’s Theatre in Washington, DC.

Throughout their journey, guests will benefit from Ken Burns’s personal insights as presented during a series of video vignettes that will air aboard the motorcoach while en route to various sites.  These exclusive short features will include all-new interview footage with Burns, as well as special highlights from his groundbreaking series “The Civil War.”

Tauck will offer departures of the “Most Hallowed Ground” in September and October of 2011.  The tour begins in Washington, DC, and concludes in Richmond, VA, and is priced from $3,980 per person, double occupancy, plus air.  Included in the price are all accommodations, most meals, admission to all sites and attractions, entertainment, airport transfers, luggage handling, and more.  Hotel accommodations include three nights at the Mayflower Renaissance in Washington, DC, overnights at the Wyndham Gettysburg and Big Meadows Lodge in Shenandoah National Park (VA), two nights at the Omni Charlottesville Hotel, and three nights at The Jefferson Hotel in Richmond.

Those interested in more information should visit Tauck online at www.tauck.com, or call (800) 468-2825.

Tauck's Website