Master Armorer's House - Harpers Ferry, WV
Posted by: bluesnote
N 39° 19.356 W 077° 43.824
18S E 264629 N 4356131
A museum in downtown Harpers Ferry.
Waymark Code: WMZ7FF
Location: West Virginia, United States
Date Posted: 09/23/2018
Views: 1
Taken from the website, "The strategic location of the Master Armorer's House made it ideal for the headquarters of the commanding officer at Harpers Ferry. The Master Armorer's House is at the junction of Shenandoah and High Streets only one block from the Baltimore & Ohio (B&O) Railroad Bridge and the Potomac River pontoon crossing. The Master Armorer's House was easy to find and a nerve center for communications during the Civil War.
Completed just before the John Brown Raid in 1859, the Master Armorer's House was one of the newest buildings in Harpers Ferry at the outbreak of the Civil War.
The most famous general who stayed in the Master Armorer's House was Union Lt. Gen. Ulysses S. Grant. Grant only spent one night in the house, on September 16, 1864, when returning from a strategy meeting in Charles Town with his Shenandoah Valley commander, Maj. Gen. Philip H. Sheridan. During Grant's stay, the building was the headquarters of Union Brig. Gen. John D. Stevenson. Stevenson commanded the Military District of Harpers Ferry along with managing Sheridan's logistics operations during the 1864 Valley Campaign. Stevenson was known to control Harpers Ferry, and the surrounding region, with a "hard-hand" of martial law. Stevenson also combated Confederate guerillas; he even entrapped John Mobberly, his nemesis, and killed him just before the end of the war. Stevenson also displayed Mobberly's corpse at the Master Armorer's House, as a reminder of the war's ruthlessness.
Union commander Col. Dixon S. Miles, who opposed Stonewall Jackson during the Battle of Harpers Ferry on September 12-15, 1862, also used the Master Armorer's House as his headquarters. Miles would be mortally wounded during the battle, and he would die here on September 16."
Open all year: Yes
Related web-page: [Web Link]
Opening hours: Not listed
Wikipedia link:: Not listed
|
Visit Instructions:
Please supply proof of your visit such as a photo of the museum or a sign signifying same.
A "Visited" only remark will be deleted.