Looking at the Battle of Gettysburg Through Robert E. Lee’s Eyes
Anne Kelly Knowles, the winner of Smithsonian American Ingenuity Awards, uses GIS technology to change our view of history
- By Tony Horwitz
- Smithsonian magazine, December 2012, Subscribe
Anne Kelly Knowles loves places where history happened. She traces this passion to family trips she took as a girl in the 1960s, when her father would pile his wife and four children into a rented RV for odysseys from their home in Kalamazoo, Michigan, to iconic sites from America’s past.
“We’d study the road atlas and plot trips around places like the Little Bighorn and Mount Rushmore,” Knowles recalls. “Historical landmarks were our pins in the map.” Between scheduled stops, she and her father would leap out of the RV to take pictures of historical markers. “I was the only one of the kids who was really jazzed about history. It was my strongest connection with my dad.”
Decades later, Knowles’ childhood journeys have translated into a pathbreaking career in historical geography. Using innovative cartographic tools, she has cast fresh light on hoary historical debates—What was Robert E. Lee thinking at Gettysburg?—and navigated new and difficult terrain, such as mapping the mass shootings of Jews in Eastern Europe by Nazi death squads during World War II.
Knowles’ research, and her strong advocacy of new geographic approaches, have also helped revitalize a discipline that declined in the late 20th century as many leading universities closed their geography departments. “She’s a pioneer,” says Edward Muller, a histor- ical geographer at the University of Pittsburgh. “There’s an ingenuity in the way she uses spatial imagination to see things and ask questions that others haven’t.” Adds Peter Bol, a historian at Harvard and director of its Center for Geographic Analysis: “Anne thinks not just about new technology but how mapping can be applied across disciplines, to all aspects of human society.”
My own introduction to Knowles’ work occurred in August, when Smithsonian asked me to profile a recipient of the magazine’s award for ingenuity. Since the prizewinners weren’t yet public, I was initially told nothing other than the recipient’s field. This made me apprehensive. My formal education in geography ended with fifth-grade social studies class, during which a teacher traced the path of the Amazon on a Mercator projection map that made Greenland loom larger than South America. I knew, vaguely, that new technology had transformed this once-musty discipline, and I expected the innovator I’d been asked to profile would be a NASA scientist or an engineering nerd closeted in a climate-controlled computer lab in Silicon Valley.
No part of this proved true, beginning with the setting. Knowles, 55, is a professor at Middlebury College, which is close to the Platonic ideal of a New England campus. Its rolling lawns and handsome buildings, mostly hewn from Vermont marble, perch on a rise with sweeping views of the Green Mountains and Adirondacks. Knowles fits her liberal arts surrounds, despite belonging to a specialty she calls “fairly macho and geeky.” A trim woman with short hair and cornflower-blue eyes, she wears a white tunic, loose linen trousers and clogs, and seems very at home amid the Yankee/organic quaintness of Middlebury.
But the biggest surprise, for me, was Knowles’ book-lined office in the geography department. Where I’d imagined her crunching data before a vast bank of blinking screens, I instead found her tapping at a humble Dell laptop.
“The technology is just a tool, and what really matters is how you use it,” she says. “Historical geography means putting place at the center of history. No supercomputers are required.” When I asked about her math and computing skills, she replied: “I add, subtract, multiply, divide.”
Her principal tool is geographic information systems, or GIS, a name for computer programs that incorporate such data as satellite imagery, paper maps and statistics. Knowles makes GIS sound simple: “It’s a computer software that allows you to map and analyze any information that has a location attached.” But watching her navigate GIS and other applications, it quickly becomes obvious that this isn’t your father’s geography.
First, a modern topographical map of Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, appears on her screen. “Not enough detail,” she says, going next to a contour map of the same landscape made in 1874, which she has traced and scanned. “Here’s where the carto-geek in me comes out,” she says, running her finger lovingly across the map and noting how it distinguishes between hardwood forest, pine woods and orchards—the kind of fine-grained detail that is crucial to her work.
Then, deploying software used in the defense industry, she taps functions such as “triangulated irregular network” and “viewshed analysis” and something that “determines the raster surface locations visible to a set of observer features.” I’m simplifying here. Imagine pixels and grids swimming across the screen in response to keystroke commands that are about as easy to follow as the badly translated instructions that came with your last electronic device. “There’s a steep learning curve to GIS,” Knowles acknowledges.
What emerges, in the end, is a “map” that’s not just color-coded and crammed with data, but dynamic rather than static—a layered re-creation that Knowles likens to looking at the past through 3-D glasses. The image shifts, changing with a few keystrokes to answer the questions Knowles asks. In this instance, she wants to know what commanders could see of the battlefield on the second day at Gettysburg. A red dot denotes General Lee’s vantage point from the top of the Lutheran Seminary. His field of vision shows as clear ground, with blind spots shaded in deep indigo. Knowles has even factored in the extra inches of sightline afforded by Lee’s boots. “We can’t account for the haze and smoke of battle in GIS, though in theory you could with gaming software,” she says.
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Comments (13)
Fascinating work by Professor Knowles...history and geography with 'place' at the center. Good job, Middlebury, for hiring her!
Posted by Lyons Filmer (Middlebury '74) on January 13,2013 | 06:18 PM
I have had my own questions about the lack of discussion of Stuart's attack on 7/3. I have always thought that it was ignored because it failed. One source I read even said that it was nothing more than a side show. Yet, viewing a map even without GIS, one can see the folly of sending a frontal attack across a mile of open fields against a dug in enemy. Without Stuart, Pickett's Charge, indeed, makes no sense.
Posted by Karl Strohschein on December 29,2012 | 06:01 PM
Gee, I was taught how to use a topographic map and a ruler to construct visibility diagrams as a 2nd Lt at Ft Sill back in the '70s. Now that was hard work; GIS make this a lot easier. But the concept of understanding visibility as part of terrain analysis is by no means New Technology.
Posted by David Emery on December 17,2012 | 11:05 AM
I also taught world history and tried to coordinate it with geography, but this was just with paper maps. I hope to have an opportunity to sit in on one of your classes or presentations. As the kids say, "This is awesome"!
Posted by Ruth R. Wendell (Middlebury '46) on December 11,2012 | 04:09 PM
Why is she sitting in a stripped out electric motor?
Posted by geman on December 7,2012 | 08:49 PM
Very interesting article. I was just in Gettyburg painting fences at the Trosler and Klingel Farms and following my 11th PA assistant surgeon great granddad's story. Amazing to be on the battlefield. I have always used maps to interpret history (even with kids) and recently have been looking at GIS to understand about earlier settlements or beginnings. I uncovered an early engraving of Whatcom in 1858. What was exciting, is that it showed the Pickett House, built in 1856 for Captain George E Pickett when he was at Fort Bellingham. It also showed the shell of the first brick building in Washington Territory. Both buildings are still here. To make sure everything was what I thought it was, a friend with a GIS program that matches old Sandborn maps, sounding charts and sketches done by the boundary survey with buildings standing today or existing only in photos. Everything is in place. This tool is definitely helpful for figuring things out. By the way, I'm a Kalamazoo College grad.
Posted by JL Oakley on December 6,2012 | 01:06 AM
It seems that several controversies about Gettysburg are muddled here. The 7/2 attack, on Little Round Top, isn't the one that mystifies historians; that was Pickett's charge on 7/3. I believe it's been generally understood for quite some time that Hood (who led the attack on the 2nd) and others told Longstreet about problems to come if Little Round Top were approached directly, and Longstreet sent to Lee at LEAST once asking for latitude to change direction, and was refused. So trying to explain Lee's orders on the 2nd based on his not having known there were issues is problematic. Also: the description of Union forces massing to repel an attack better describes 7/3 than 7/2. Famously, Little Round Top was undefended @ start of 7/2, and it was only a 'chance' observation of this by the North's Warren, who pulled forces out of line to rush to the top a hair's breadth ahead of Hood's men, that caused it to be defended at ALL; no Southern commander could've observed massing defenders because they weren't THERE. If one wishes to consider causes for the ordering of Pickett's Charge (the TRULY 'mystifying' command of Gettysburg) the idea has been proposed that Pickett was only HALF the intended attack; Stuart & the South's cavalry arrived the night of 7/2, late at the scene; Lee ordered him to swing round behind the Union line & attack the center from the side opposite Pickett, creating a pincer that might've sown confusion sufficient to allow Pickett to break through. But Stuart's attack was broken by Union cavalry, which proved more than a match for Stuart for the first time in the war. sincerely, Tom Wheeler
Posted by Tom Wheeler on December 6,2012 | 11:19 PM
Insightful read. I was especially interested in the use of GIS to track the Holocaust and how it can be used to identify future threats of genocide. I agree with other comments related to the strong impact that can be made on students when being taught with innovative and dynamic teaching methods. Clearly a professor who takes pride in their work provides an excellent environment for learning. Well done Professor Knowles.
Posted by Ameen Shallal on December 6,2012 | 05:18 PM
About this 'text that told U.S. history through maps', could you be more specific? I'd like to read it.
Posted by Ahmed Fasih on December 1,2012 | 05:24 PM
My history teacher, back in the 50's kept telling us that in the past, history and geography were taught together. Of course, he couldn't dream of GIS and similar methods.
Posted by Ardon Gador on November 30,2012 | 02:27 AM
My history teacher, back in the 50's kept telling us that in the past, history and geography were taught together. Of course, he couldn't dream of GIS and similar methods.
Posted by Ardon Gador on November 30,2012 | 02:27 AM
A retired History teacher of 36 years, where were you when I was teaching AP US History!? I find the GIS a fascinating addition to what we already know in history. It would have made for more interesting motivation for students when I taught! I find this very interesting and hope I see more in the future!
Posted by Bernard Factor on November 30,2012 | 10:27 AM
The article overlooks another vital point of history: how much Lee observed at the battle is open to dispute. He was suffering from dysentery and also may have had a recurrence of malaria during much of the battle so he may have been away from any useful observation point during parts of it. If you're at the latrine relieving your bowels or shivering in your tent under a blanket you're not going to see very much about what's going on on a battlefield. Maps may be important but one must integrate other knowledge about events, too.
Posted by Steven A. King, M.D. on November 25,2012 | 04:02 PM