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Ellwood tops readers' voting MORE ON ELLWOOD

September 1, 2008 12:15 am

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Inside and out, Ellwood appears much as it did during the Civil War. The property also hosts a cemetery.

by Clint Schemmer
by Clint Schemmer

A new spotlight is shining on one of The Wilderness's lesser-known gems.

Ellwood, a historic home slightly off the battlefield's beaten path, has been named "Favorite Virginia Civil War" site by the readers of Cooperative Living.

Subscribers overwhelmingly chose Ellwood in an informal survey sponsored this month by the magazine, which circulates to 390,000 households in Virginia, Maryland and Delaware, editor Bill Sherrod said Thursday. It was the fourth-annual Readers' Choice Awards contest sponsored by the periodical.

Published by a trade association for electrical utilities, including Rappahannock Electric Cooperative, Cooperative Living is distributed across Virginia, from Cumberland Gap to the Eastern Shore and Northern Virginia to North Carolina, Sherrod said.

"We're so pleased and happy that Ellwood has gotten this recognition," said Spotsylvania County resident Carolyn Elstner, chairwoman of the Historic Ellwood Project. " We hope it helps persuade more people to see what they've been missing, and to learn all about it."

Russ Smith, superintendent of Fredericksburg & Spotsylvania National Military Park, said the award honors the private group, Friends of Wilderness Battlefield, whose volunteers interpret the site off State Route 20 for visitors and are restoring the house.

"We're just thrilled for the Friends," he said. "They're the ones who deserve all the credit."

The only house at The Wilderness to survive from the war, Ellwood serves as a kind of gateway to the battlefield where Gens. Robert E. Lee and Ulysses S. Grant first clashed.

Union Gen. Gouverneur K. Warren, who commanded the Fifth Corps that fought along the Orange Turnpike (now Route 20), made his headquarters there.

The room that Warren occupied has just been returned to its 1864 appearance, complete with camp cot, officers' folding chairs and brass candlesticks. That effort is part of the Friends group's ambitious effort to restore the house, which the National Park Service acquired in 1971.

"I visited it two or three years ago, and it's a pretty amazing place," Sherrod said. "I understand a lot has been done there since, under a public-private partnership.

"When I was there, an army of people showed up to mow the grass and take care of the place. I thought it was really neat that people give of their own time to help do things like that."

The Friends have raised $291,000 toward restoring the first-floor interior. To match those funds, a federal initiative preparing for the Park Service's 2016 centennial will contribute another $240,500 to the restoration.

"Ellwood deserves a lot more attention," Smith said. "It's been in the shadows for too long."

Visitors say they enjoy the authenticity of the home, especially because it is set among quiet woods and farmland. They also enjoy the personal tours they receive from Ellwood's volunteers, Smith said.

"As soon as you step out of the car, you know you're in a different place. You're not assaulted by a lot of noises and modern visual intrusions."

The superintendent said he hopes the Favorite Virginia Civil War Site award helps more people recognize the significance of The Wilderness, scene of one of the conflict's largest battles.

"There's a tendency to take for granted the historic sites in your backyard," Smith said.

fowb.org tinyurl.com/coopliving nps.gov/frsp/ellwood.htm tinyurl.com/ellwood

Clint Schemmer: 540/368-5029
Email: cschemmer@freelancestar.com




Ellwood, built circa-1790 by William and Betty Jones, has witnessed several eras. The Marquis de Lafayette and his army camped there during the Revolutionary War; he later stopped by for breakfast in 1825. The home has also hosted "Light Horse Harry" Lee; his son, Robert E. Lee; and Union Gens. U.S. Grant, George Meade, Gouverneur K. Warren and Ambrose Burnside.

During the 1863 Battle of Chancellorsville, Confederates used the house as a field hospital. Lt. Gen. Thomas J. "Stonewall" Jackson's left arm, amputated at Wilderness Tavern when he was wounded by his own troops, is buried in the family cemetery.

During the Battle of the Wilderness in May 1864, Ellwood served as a Union Army headquarters.




Copyright 2009 The Free Lance-Star Publishing Company.