Ghosties & Ghoulies @ the Trostle Farm - Gettysburg, PA
N 39° 48.131 W 077° 14.554
18S E 308014 N 4408207
Surprise, surprise...the place where scores of men and horses is reputed to be very haunted. Well, of course it is!
Waymark Code: WMH7Y6
Location: Pennsylvania, United States
Date Posted: 06/04/2013
Views: 3
I've heard from Park rangers this place has a lot of history and stories to go with it. Over the years, visitors and locals have reported seeing and hearing unexplained phenomenon. Sounds have been heard coming form the barn and the house at night which should just not be there. Because it is so far out of the way, it is not included on the Gettysburg Ghost Tours which is so hyped up and advertised by the locals. I did read an interesting article which can be found HERE.
Historical Background/Significance
The Trostle Farm is south of Gettysburg on what is now United States Avenue. The farm and barn are on the left or northeast side of the road if traveling southwest along the Avenue. Owned by Peter Trostle, it was occupied at the time of the battle by his son Abraham, Abraham's wife Catherine, and their nine children. The 134 acre farm included a new frame house, brick barn, corn crib, wagon shed, springhouse, and a brick smokeouse.
Major General Daniel Sickles used the farm as his headquarters after he advanced his Third Army Corps to the line of the Emmitsburg Road on July 2nd. He was wounded in the field to the west of the barn, where a monument now stands. The 9th Massachusetts Battery had fought a desperate last stand on their farm, with at least sixteen dead battery horses just in the front yard and over a hundred on the farm.
The Trostles were abruptly forced from their home during the fighting, leaving dinner on the table, which was enjoyed by Sickles' staff. Like many of their neighbors, the Trostles returned to find most of their belongings looted or destroyed. Damage to property and real estate was estimated a $2,500 in a claim filed fter the war, but it appears no compensation was ever paid. The farm was sold by the Trostle heirs to the Park Service in 1899. You can still see battle damage, including the famous shell hole in the brickwork of the barn. The shell hole I think makes this one of the most authentic Civil War battle sites at Gettysburg. SOURCE