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It's a scenario that, in various permutations, has repeated itself at many sites over the past decade or so. Bearss is well-armed to support the preservationist side of the fight. He remembers visiting Manassas in 1941, when it was a sleepy rural area; now, when he leads bus tours there, they often end up stalled in shopping center traffic. At Petersburg in the early 1960s, he saw where an 1864 fort was bulldozed to make way for a mall; now the mall itself is nearly derelict. "The development is advancing more irresistibly than Grant's army did on Richmond," Bearss grumbles.
"Ed's name carries a lot of weight," says Dean Shultz, a leader in the land-conservation movement at Gettysburg. Some years ago, a preservation group was debating whether to help purchase easements on the ground where Custer gathered his men for the East Cavalry Field assault. There was concern about whether the site was truly historic. "So finally I said I'd talked to Ed Bearss, and he said it had historic significance," he says. "And they said, 'Well, if Ed Bearss says it's worth saving, it's worth saving.'"
Like Custer's men, preservationists now face a do-or-die moment, Bearss says. "The battles are going to be played out in the next 10 to 20 years, because by then the battlefield parks will be islands in urban corridors of the United States, in a sea of sprawling shopping malls."
On East Cavalry Field, our tour draws toward a close beneath a granite column topped by a statue of a Union cavalryman. "The trumpets are playing," Bearss intones. "Thirteen hundred sabers are drawn. They flash in the sun. The Confederates are coming toward them: five regiments, riding boot to spur. Men of Michigan, are you ready? Charrrrrrrge!" And suddenly he's off, his swagger stick flailing—a hunched figure racing across the soybean field, charging fearlessly forward into the past.


Comments
spend a moment speaking with Ed on any historical subject and you will avail yourself of a national treasure.from Bent's old fort to fort Fisher there isn't anyone who makes history come more alive.if you have the chance to hear him by all means do it.ask him about his first visit to Centreville Va. and his fraternity's contribution to the devolpement of indoor football.great story..... thanks Ed from so many that you've touched. russ harbaugh harpers ferry west-by-God-virginia p.s.illegally formed from an illegally seceshed state a.lincoln b&o tell 'em Ed
Posted by russ harbaugh on August 24,2008 | 01:23PM
Sirs, A friend has found a civil war diary 1862-65. I seek Mr. Bearss,s advice on how best to make it available for public consumption.
Posted by Clark Gottschalk on September 10,2008 | 12:07PM
Excellent story on Ed Bearss and the East Cavalry field at Gettysburg. What was THE first cavalry vs cavalry battle at Gettysburg??? Hunterstown,Pa.(the north cavalry field) 5 miles N.E. of Gettysburg on July 2nd. see; http://www.worlds-wide-web.com/custermain.html for details
Posted by Joe Topinka ( George Custer historian/Reenactor ) on September 18,2008 | 08:42AM
I do not understand the Rock Star mentality surrounding this gentleman...While he may posses an unlimited respository of facts, his public speaking abilities are absolutely horrendous! He dramaticizes that which does not need to be dramaticized and takes 2 hours to say what could be easily said and understood in 30 minutes. His lecture style is that of a dramatic monologue of dry facts, punctuated by inapropriate and unnecessary verbal inflections.
Posted by Mike Rogers on November 20,2008 | 07:30PM
How would I locate Mr. Bearss's tour schedule ? Many thanks
Posted by Reuben Burton on March 18,2009 | 03:57PM
In response to Mr. Rogers' comment.
We have been enjoying Mr. Bearss' lectures and tours since 1991. We have found him to be truly a national treasure.
Earl and Sharon Clough
Chicago, IL (formerly Alpharetta, GA)
Posted by Earl and Sharon Clough on April 25,2009 | 06:17PM
how does that help
Posted by ladybug on April 28,2009 | 03:45PM
Re the November 08 comment by Mike Rogers. No one can please everyone, and I can imagine that Mr Bearss might not impress in an auditorium. Standing on the battlefield it isn't about dry facts, but about making the events come to life again.
In the '90s I went on many Smithsonian-sponsored battlefield tours led by Mr. Bearss. As we boarded the bus in DC he'd ask everyone to name the unit of any ancestor who fought there. Later, he'd stop where each of those units fought and recount what they did in the battle. Every detail contributed; all of the dramatization and vocal inflections made it real.
Posted by Bryan Hardin on September 6,2009 | 09:54AM