Author Topic: where is a favorite place of yours to visit?  (Read 1242 times)

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Offline Foxxtrot

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where is a favorite place of yours to visit?
« on: December 04, 2009, 05:07:58 PM »
I used to walk the grounds during college. Very peaceful and uplifting. Do you have a favorite place.

http://www.higginsvillechamber.org/memorial.aspx

http://www.flickr.com/photos/10264053@N02/857582830/

The Confederate Memorial at Higginsville, MO (Lafayette County, south of the Missouri River) is the closest Confederate Memorial to the Northwest Missouri region.

The origins of today's Confederate memorial date back more than 100 years.

In 1889, an annual reunion of Missouri Confederate veterans was held at Higginsville in Lafayette County. At the encampment, as it was called, a movement began that reflected similar benevolent projects in our other Southern states - to establish a Confederate veterans' home.

Almost 30 years after the Civil War's start, even the youngest of the veterans were moving well into middle age. The more prosperous of these aging men recognized the need to help impoverished veterans who never fully recovered from crippling wounds or diseases contracted during their years of service. Ex-veterans and interested parties joined forces and, with private funding, founded the Confederate Home Association.

Within a year, the association raised enough money to purchase 365 acres of prime farmland just north of Higginsville in West-central Missouri. Newly formed Southern patriotic women's organizations such as the St. Louis-based Daughters of the Confederacy (forerunner to the national United Daughters of the Confederacy) and the local Ladies of Lafayette County also lent their talents and influence to raising funds for the construction and outfitting of dwellings. In April 1891, a Missouri veteran named Julius Bamberg became the first Confederate veteran in the state to receive admission as a resident of the new Confederate Home of Missouri.

During the Civil War, Bamberg had served as a Confederate soldier in Capt. Henry Guibor's Missouri Battery in Gen. Sterling Price's division. He later served as a special agent to Gen. Price and was captured by Union troops, tried as a spy and sent away to military prison for the duration of the war. Upon his parole at age 52, Bamberg was among the oldest men to have served in the Civil War. In 1891 at the age of 79, this St. Louis tailor and dressmaker became the first of more than 1,600 Confederate veterans, their wives and widows who eventually sought shelter at the home in their declining years.

By the mid 1890s, the Confederate Home faced serious financial crisis. Insufficient funding, due in part to a nationwide economic depression forced the Home Board to appeal to the state legislature to assume financial control, which it did in 1897. At the time, the state agreed that the home would not be closed until the last veteran or veteran's widow died or left of his or her own accord.


As the years passed, the home continued to grow along with the aging veteran population in Missouri. At the height of its use, the home provided care for more than 300 veterans and their families. Eventually the property consisted of more than 30 buildings, a thriving farm and dairy and a memorial park that served both as an arboretum and a favorite fishing place for the veterans. They generated their own electricity, and the Missouri and Pacific train line even made a scheduled stop here. It was a community unto itself.

The home was conceived as a place of refuge for honorable and deserving ex-soldiers. Many application rules existed to keep out undeserving or undesirable applicants - such as men who may have deserted during the war. The first of these rules required Missouri residency for one, and later, two years, as well as proof of honorable service with the Confederacy in any state. This effectively excluded many applicants. Even so, the home cemetery records show that soldiers from Missouri, and the other border states of Kentucky and West Virginia, as well as soldiers from every state in the Confederacy except Florida lived and died here.

Unlike many other Southern veterans' institutions, Missouri allowed the admittance of women and children from its inception. First wives were always allowed into the home with their husbands; however, admittance of second and third wives was subject to Home Board approval. Only children under the age of 14 could be admitted.

Another rule required the applicant to prove his (or the deceased spouse's) military record by writing to the Adjutant General's office in Washington, D.C., for official verification. Lacking such official records, the applicant also could obtain written affidavits from fellow veterans with whom they served. Sometimes the Home Board required further explanations. For instance, applicant John Way had to explain why his service record included duty with both the Union and Confederate armies. After being captured, Way was given some uninviting choices - continued imprisonment, Union service against fellow Confederates or fighting Indians in the West. Way chose the latter and served out his time with the federal army in Colorado. The board accepted his explanation and allowed both his wife and him entrance to the home.

Two other hurdles the applicants were required to pass also were considered the most demeaning: poverty and sanity. To receive entry, the applicant could have no assets, no relatives willing to take them in, nor any means of earning a livelihood; even the meager $10 military service pension provided by the state had to be forfeited. A doctor's examination also was required to prove the applicant still possessed a sound mind and had no "infectious" diseases.

All veterans listed their rank and branch of service in their home applications. Most of them were infantry, artillery and cavalry privates; but there also were men who served as officers, sharpshooters, partisan guerrillas, musicians, paid conscription substitutes, gunboat engineers and sailors on the first ironclads. The most unusual included a member of the Cherokee Mounted Rifles, a spy and an Alabama drillmaster. The veterans served in every theater of war and in every major battle from the first shot fired at Fort Sumter to the last at Appomattox.

The "comrades," as they commonly referred to one another, were minor celebrities in Missouri, and often were displayed alongside those seeking political office. Senator Harry Truman once visited the home, as did the perennial presidential hopeful and silver standard advocate William Jennings Bryan.

The United Daughters of the Confederate lavished the men and women at the home with attention by holding holiday celebrations, dances, memorial services and other events regularly. They also awarded medals of honor to the veterans, gave them appropriately dyed suits of gray, and provided the women with new dresses.

Local school children, now adults still living in the area, remember visiting the home, as well as Southern veterans throughout Missouri, was Decoration Day. Held annually on June 3, it was the Southern equivalent of Memorial Day and was traditionally held on the anniversary of the birth of the Confederate president, Jefferson Davis. They celebrated the day with picnics, speeches by former Confederate officers and, most significantly, the decoration of the graves in the home cemetery.

The last veteran buried in that cemetery was Johnny Graves, a private in Gen. Joseph Shelby's army. On May 8,1950, Graves, the last surviving Missouri Confederate veteran, passed away at the Missouri Confederate Home at the grand age of 108. He was buried alongside 803 veterans, wives and children, a full 53 years after the passing of the first resident. A handful of widows, the majority of whom were born after the Civil War ended, were transferred to a nursing home in Columbia, despite the agreement made 53 years earlier.

Because many of the home structures were dilapidated, the decision was made to demolish them. The structurally sound buildings and most of the acreage were then transferred to the Missouri Department of Mental Health. In 1952, the remaining property, consisting of the 90-acre Confederate Memorial Park, the cemetery, and a cottage were delivered into the care of the Missouri State Park Board, which administered the state park system before it was turned over to the Missouri Department of Natural Resources in 1974.


Today, Confederate Memorial State Historic Site consists of 192 acres and now also includes the original chapel, an old farmhouse and the last building erected at the home - the 1922-era hospital building. Visitors to the site today can enjoy the memorial park with its many small lakes, fine old trees and beautifully kept lawns. Here they can take part in fishing, picnicking and other outdoor activities. They also can venture to the site of the former home buildings, where they can walk through the 106-year-old chapel and the historic graveyard where the veterans and their families rest. Three other buildings, the farmhouse, hospital and cottage, are open to viewing from outside. Exhibits and displays throughout the park and historic area tell the story of the Confederate Home of Missouri.


From St. Louis
Confederate Memorial State Historic Site is approximately three and one-half hours from St. Louis. Travel west on I-70 for approximately 200 miles to Exit 49 (Hwy. 13). Turn right/north onto Hwy. 13 then take Business 13 through the town of Higginsville. The entrance to the historic site is approximately one mile outside of Higginsville at the junction of Business 13/Hwy. 213/Hwy. 20.

From Kansas City
Confederate Memorial State Historic Site is approximately one hour from Kansas City. Travel east on I-70 for about 50 miles to Exit 49 (Hwy. 13). Turn left/north onto Hwy. 13 and continue to Business 13. Follow Business 13 through the town of Higginsville. The entrance to the historic site is approximately one mile outside of Higginsville at the junction of Business 13/Hwy. 213/Hwy. 20.

From Springfield
Confederate Memorial State Historic Site is approximately three hours from Springfield. Travel north on Hwy. 13 for about 135 miles to Business 13 in Higginsville. Follow Business 13 through the town of Higginsville. The entrance to the historic site is approximately one mile outside of town at the junction of Business 13/Hwy. 213/Hwy. 20.

From Jefferson City
Confederate Memorial State Historic Site is approximately two hours from Jefferson City. Travel north on U.S. Hwy. 63 to Columbia. Take I-70 west for approximately 80 miles to Exit 49 (Hwy. 13). Turn right/north onto Hwy. 13 then take Business 13 through the town of Higginsville. The entrance to the historic site is approximately one mile outside of town at the junction of Business 13/Hwy. 213/ Hwy. 20.
“A fear of weapons is a sign of retarded sexual and emotional maturity.” Sigmund Freud

Offline BBF

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Re: where is a favorite place of yours to visit?
« Reply #1 on: December 05, 2009, 09:11:22 AM »
any tropical isle that has palms,sandy beach, bikini girls and they speak English :D :D
What is the point of Life if you can't have fun.

Offline ms

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Re: where is a favorite place of yours to visit?
« Reply #2 on: December 05, 2009, 09:25:00 AM »
The woods for me.

Offline Casull

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Re: where is a favorite place of yours to visit?
« Reply #3 on: December 05, 2009, 11:17:28 AM »
Either of the last two work for me.   ;)
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Offline slim rem 7

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Re: where is a favorite place of yours to visit?
« Reply #4 on: December 05, 2009, 12:19:38 PM »
 just turn me loose in some well populated woods with or without a gun.. i ll feel as close to god then as i ever can be on this earth..slim
 

Offline ms

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Re: where is a favorite place of yours to visit?
« Reply #5 on: December 05, 2009, 01:29:53 PM »
just turn me loose in some well populated woods with or without a gun.. i ll feel as close to god then as i ever can be on this earth..slim
 
YEP!  ;)

Offline SM Bob

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Re: where is a favorite place of yours to visit?
« Reply #6 on: December 05, 2009, 02:30:54 PM »
Put me on San Diego Bay very early in the morning when there is no wind and the surface of the water is like a mirror all morning. It is stone silent with no boat traffic and the fish (big monster spotted bay bass, halibut, shortfin corvina, bonita, barracuda, and who knows what else) are on a absolute wide full on open bite!

                                                 Robert

Offline puma4440

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Re: where is a favorite place of yours to visit?
« Reply #7 on: December 05, 2009, 04:42:24 PM »
     Anywhere thats interesting in the woods, I like to research my area, find local lore and legends and take a walk to them. I mostly find old house foundations which I like to metel detect around. Sometimes I find neat old "junk", once while detecting behind an old house, I got a hit, I started digging, but hit a flat stone, I dug around the stone, and when I flipped it, it was a headstone :o I couldn't make any words out, but I replaced everything as it was. I think I still have it in the gps.

Offline Dee

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Re: where is a favorite place of yours to visit?
« Reply #8 on: December 05, 2009, 04:53:01 PM »
A creek bottom in the woods, with a small fire, a canvas tarp, a good cup of coffee, and a good Winchester. And on some days, my Jack Russell "Huff" sniffing every hole in the creek bank lookin for critters.
You may all go to hell, I will go to Texas. Davy Crockett

Offline nw_hunter

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Re: where is a favorite place of yours to visit?
« Reply #9 on: December 05, 2009, 05:54:40 PM »
Somewhere in this area!
Cascade mt. range SW Oregon

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Offline Hodr

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Re: where is a favorite place of yours to visit?
« Reply #10 on: December 05, 2009, 07:30:55 PM »
Arlington,
A walk by the Wall

blindhari
TANSTAAFL

Offline williamlayton

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Re: where is a favorite place of yours to visit?
« Reply #11 on: December 06, 2009, 12:30:31 AM »
I have been lucky, I have been able to see a lot of this nation and some of Mexico.
I have enjoyed the great national parks, the drive up the coast of California. I like the S/W, the desert of AZ and NM. The mountains of Colorado and NM. The 4 Corners is beautiful. The beaches of Fla and the charm of the South, Savannah is beautiful.
Being an old Texas Boy---we have some of the best in the world here--bar none, but I see this so often.
Honestly, the most peaceful and the place that, for some strange reason, becons me the most is the North East. I loved the Coast of Maine--LOVED it. The Mountains of Maine, New Hampshire and Vermont. I want to go again.
I would be remiss if I didn't mention W. V.----the one place that startled me with its beauty---I was not expecting it.
I guess I am a just a bigamist. ;)
Blessings
TEXAS, by GOD

Offline Oldshooter

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Re: where is a favorite place of yours to visit?
« Reply #12 on: December 06, 2009, 12:44:28 AM »
Like William I've seen a lot of this Country but not yet enough!

One of my favorite places in the world is the Napali coast of Kauai, Hawaii at 0600 when the wind has not come up and the Dolphins are flying!

When Safe air travel is invented I'd like to see Normandy and the resting place of some of the Great Generation !
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Offline Dee

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Re: where is a favorite place of yours to visit?
« Reply #13 on: December 06, 2009, 01:53:38 AM »
After being in all the lower 48 multiple times, I still like that creek bottom. But that's to say, ANY creek bottom with lots of timber.
You may all go to hell, I will go to Texas. Davy Crockett

Offline williamlayton

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Re: where is a favorite place of yours to visit?
« Reply #14 on: December 06, 2009, 03:40:36 AM »
In a way DEE is luckier than many---he got too see it all and get paid for doing it.
Home is the prettiest---if you get right down too it. I wish I could live in all or most of the places I mentioned.
Blessings
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Offline highwayman

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Re: where is a favorite place of yours to visit?
« Reply #15 on: December 06, 2009, 04:29:25 AM »
a resort with a dive boat and a reef.

Offline slim rem 7

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Re: where is a favorite place of yours to visit?
« Reply #16 on: December 06, 2009, 06:46:24 AM »
 dang dee.. sometimes i think we must be related.. both strong willed ... that bit about the creek bottum ..
  a good cup o coffee.. man it just won t get much better than that..slim
  didn t mean to insult you about the being related part..  :Dslim
 whats wrong with my icons..ive hit the wrong button again. ::)

Offline Dee

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Re: where is a favorite place of yours to visit?
« Reply #17 on: December 06, 2009, 02:24:06 PM »
dang dee.. sometimes i think we must be related.. both strong willed ... that bit about the creek bottum ..
  a good cup o coffee.. man it just won t get much better than that..slim
  didn t mean to insult you about the being related part..  :Dslim
 whats wrong with my icons..ive hit the wrong button again. ::)

None taken slim, in fact, I think your the smarter of the two if we were kinfolk. As I get older, I just don't need as much, and think about the time and money I wasted over the last 50 years on the "I want, but don't need" stuff.
A good cup of coffee, a little wood smoke, and a good feelin Winchester just comfort me, for no apparent reason. I just seems like enough. I've loved it since I was old enough to sneak off to the woods.
You may all go to hell, I will go to Texas. Davy Crockett

Offline Squib

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Re: where is a favorite place of yours to visit?
« Reply #18 on: December 06, 2009, 03:37:00 PM »
tm7 I disagree, it's the sitting down on the pack and laying lethargically after slowly slumping off that is good, hiking sucks  :-\

Offline weasel

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Re: where is a favorite place of yours to visit?
« Reply #19 on: December 06, 2009, 03:49:32 PM »
Southwest Colorado, Silverton. Lots of old mining ruins, lakes and 4 wheeler roads. Western Wyoming, too.

Offline ironglow

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Re: where is a favorite place of yours to visit?
« Reply #20 on: December 06, 2009, 03:54:29 PM »
dang dee.. sometimes i think we must be related.. both strong willed ... that bit about the creek bottum ..
  a good cup o coffee.. man it just won t get much better than that..slim
  didn t mean to insult you about the being related part..  :Dslim
 whats wrong with my icons..ive hit the wrong button again. ::)

None taken slim, in fact, I think your the smarter of the two if we were kinfolk. As I get older, I just don't need as much, and think about the time and money I wasted over the last 50 years on the "I want, but don't need" stuff.
A good cup of coffee, a little wood smoke, and a good feelin Winchester just comfort me, for no apparent reason. I just seems like enough. I've loved it since I was old enough to sneak off to the woods.

  Dee;
     The "I want but don't need" stuff...I really think as we get older, we begin to realize that the "wanting" is often times more exciting than the "getting"... :D
If you don't want the truth, don't ask me.  If you want something sugar coated...go eat a donut !  (anon)

Offline Squib

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Re: where is a favorite place of yours to visit?
« Reply #21 on: December 06, 2009, 04:02:52 PM »
no, I realized it when I was a teenager.  it's the self-restraint to actually STOP that comes with age (if ever, I don't know yet???)



if you got the dough, don't buy lots of guns, buy more ammo!  or go to africa and shoot bigger game?

Offline 45-70.gov

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Re: where is a favorite place of yours to visit?
« Reply #22 on: December 06, 2009, 04:17:52 PM »
GBO   .........a  most  obvious  choice

any tropical isle that has palms,sandy beach, bikini girls and they speak English :D :D

that  is  where  i  live    LOL


-------------------------------------
favorite  places.....its  a  tie

ishtucknee springs ....  i  don't  tube  the  river  i  snorkel  it
                           lots  of  good   swim  suit  fillerd  there   too
                            a  date  there  is..........always  productive

my  moms  house  in  the smokeys.........i  lived  there  once and ahve  many friends up  there  to
when drugs are outlawed only out laws will have drugs
DO WHAT EVER IT TAKES TO STOP A DEMOCRAT
OBAMACARE....the biggest tax hike in the  history of mankind
free choice and equality  can't co-exist
AFTER THE LIBYAN COVER-UP... remind any  democrat voters ''they sat and  watched them die''...they  told help to ''stand down''

many statements made here are fiction and are for entertainment purposes only and are in no way to be construed as a description of actual events.
no one is encouraged to do anything dangerous or break any laws.

Offline Squib

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Re: where is a favorite place of yours to visit?
« Reply #23 on: December 06, 2009, 04:42:08 PM »
grand canyon- great view for sure

mojave desert dry lake beds are cool, so is joshua tree national park

buffalo river  ponca, arkansas-- really good hiking trails/goat trail (the hikes suck, the nature seeing is cool though)

Offline The Hermit

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Re: where is a favorite place of yours to visit?
« Reply #24 on: December 06, 2009, 05:19:56 PM »
My little cabin in the woods. Its the last one I built. Donna and I used to go there together and spend the night. We would have a camp fire and later in bed talk in whispers as we listened to the night. A small fire crackling in the stove and a single candle for light. On a moon lit night, go for a walk in the woods. Geese would fly so low you could hear the wind swoosh in their wings.
I went back there today and swept the floor and had a meal. Its not the same anymore without her, but I think she is fixing up a camp site somewhere in heaven thats just as nice. I'd give anything... for one more time...


    The Hermit

Offline Squib

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Re: where is a favorite place of yours to visit?
« Reply #25 on: December 06, 2009, 05:27:46 PM »
that's sad hermit.  I'm glad that you have good memories though.  it'd be a good place to scatter ashes if that's an option for you (personally I plan on being put into ammo and sprinkled on a few good spots)

Offline Yankee1

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Re: where is a favorite place of yours to visit?
« Reply #26 on: December 06, 2009, 06:15:07 PM »
NW_Hunter
   Thats where I live.  My favorite place is up in the mountains in the woods preferably on a quad with my rifle and some binoculars just
looking for game.  I live in the mountains of Southern Oregon in the woods on a few acres with plenty of game here. It beautiful country.
                                    Yankee1

Offline nw_hunter

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Re: where is a favorite place of yours to visit?
« Reply #27 on: December 06, 2009, 07:04:31 PM »
NW_Hunter
   Thats where I live.  My favorite place is up in the mountains in the woods preferably on a quad with my rifle and some binoculars just
looking for game.  I live in the mountains of Southern Oregon in the woods on a few acres with plenty of game here. It beautiful country.
                                    Yankee1

Me too! I took this shot about 20 miles east of my home town of Sutherlin.
I've been blessed to have so many beautiful places like this to hunt and roam in. :)

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Offline Yankee1

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Re: where is a favorite place of yours to visit?
« Reply #28 on: December 06, 2009, 07:44:00 PM »
Hi NW_Hunter
    Your up above Roseburg I'm up in the mountains above Merlin.
Yes we do live in beautiful country. It sure is a small world.
                                               Yankee1

Offline Sourdough

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Re: where is a favorite place of yours to visit?
« Reply #29 on: December 06, 2009, 09:31:11 PM »
The first twelve years Michelle and I were married, no kids, and good income.  We went everywhere we wanted to go, and did everything we wanted to do.  We rode mules down into the Grand Canyon, we sailed the Caribbean, and Hawaii, we hiked in the mountains, and in the dessert.  We hunted Whitetail in Virginia, Tennessee, Maryland, and Texas.  We hunted Mulies, Antalope, and Javalina, in New Mexico, and Arizona.  We trailered horses up through Canada, stopping to see what was on the other side of that mountain when the mood hit.

I've traveled Europe and the Middle East extensively, as well as Mexico and Canada.

Now I like to go out to one of the cabins and just sit and enjoy watching the days go by.

My second favorite place is Key West Florida.  Just sitting on Duvall street and watching the tourist go by.   
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