Showing posts with label soldiers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label soldiers. Show all posts

Friday, August 4, 2023

Camp Floyd field trip

I read that Camp Floyd, which is a historical site about an hour away, was having a "Johnston's Army encampment" day during our unit. Johnston's Army is the army that came out to Utah during the "Utah War," and we members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints have no warm feelings toward them, that's for sure! It was in 1857, a little before the Civil War, but the uniforms and weapons of the soldiers were similar to Civil War times. And Camp Floyd is the place they were stationed. So I decided we'd go out there for a field trip.

We'd seen Civil War reenactors before at Fort Douglas, which is right in Salt Lake City. But I'd never been to Camp Floyd. I was surprised how small the State Park is, and how little there is to do. Ha! I would never have gone there if there weren't this event being held, but even with the event I was glad we'd brought a picnic so it didn't feel like a total waste of a trip! And it got more fun after the re-enacting soldiers started showing us things like how to fire a musket and what was in their knapsacks. There were even some fun little old-fashioned games over in a nearby field. So we did have a good time.
Gus rolling hoops
Carrying water
Stick horses
Building a log cabin
There's a little museum inside this Inn, which was a stagecoach stop and a stop for the Pony Express. There are some interesting period artifacts and furniture inside.
This is a key from the telegraph machine that was here
The hugest lilac tree I've ever seen!
Our favorite part was when the soldiers showed us how to load and fire real muskets
This soldier also had an authentic army rucksack with the items a solider would have carried—comb, razor, tooth powder, sewing kit, etc.
Clementine had fun just running all around!
On the way home there was a cool storm that framed Mount Timpanogos perfectly!

Monday, April 24, 2023

Civil War Unit Study and Final Projects

After doing the Revolutionary War a couple years ago, it was time to study the Civil War again. I was excited because there are so many interesting and fun activities that go with the Civil War, I knew the children would like it. Here is our shelf of library books all ready to go! :)

(Click to enlarge either of these)
Here's a picture of our map of the battle of Gettysburg, for an idea of the level of impressiveness we're talking about in these activities. The eggs represent various regiments, and the pillows and books are various hills and landmarks. :) It did the job!
Ziggy's imagination was most caught, for some reason, by the description of Robert E. Lee riding to Appomatox to surrender. For awhile every paper on our house was made into a flag bearing the words "I srendr" and Ziggy rode around on his "horse," Traveler, to do the honors.
We made hardtack to try, and honestly, right out of the oven it was pretty edible. Kind of a like a dry, less-flavorful biscuit. The kids were saying how it didn't seem so bad to them, so I saved a piece and left it out on the counter for three days and THEN had them try it. It was awful, of course—rock-hard and almost impossible to chew. And we didn't even have to contend with maggots like the real soldiers did!

Another fun thing we did was get a telegraph key and learn Morse Code. Of course, the key doesn't make a noise or send a signal without anything to hook it up to, but it gives the general idea of what a telegraph operator during the war would have used. Daisy and Junie had a fun time writing and sending each other messages.
It was pretty hard to get the right letters, especially when the message was coming fast! You can see the "C"s for "correct" and the "W"s for "wrong" on Junie's paper. :)
For our end-of-unit celebration, each child chose a project to do. This was one of my favorite parts of the last time we did this unit, and this time it was the same. I love seeing the great ideas everyone comes up with! Daisy decided to do a presentation on the Battle of Gettysburg and the dedication of the cemetery afterward, where Lincoln gave his Gettysburg Address. She painted the hill where the cemetery is found, and made crosses and headstones for the hundreds of graves there.
She also made finger puppets of some of the people that were there for the cemetery dedication. The orator Edward Everett and his wife, a little girl in the crowd, and of course President Lincoln, Mary Todd Lincoln, and Tad Lincoln.
Above the puppets in this picture is the podium where President Lincoln stood to give his address.
Daisy put a teeeeeeny copy of the Gettysburg Address on the podium. Those are the real words! She printed it out on the computer. :) And as the finale to her presentation, she recited from memory the Gettysburg Address!
Teddy had the really cool idea to make a Civil War Musket. He was not content to just make a simple one like I suggested, but wanted to do every part like the trigger, the hammer, the cap, and so forth to make it accurate! I helped him find a piece of bamboo to be the ramrod and a wrapping-paper tube to be the barrel, but he constructed all the other parts himself using a box cutter and tape and cardboard. I was amazed at what he was able to do!
You can see some of the mechanism here. One white arrow points to the hammer, which is attached with a paper fastener within the barrel so you can actually cock it. The other white arrow shows the frizzen above the pan, where you set the little cartridge (or is it a cap…I've forgotten). It fits nearly onto the frizzen so it can be hit by the hammer, strike the flint, and light the charge inside the barrel.
Here is a side view. The bayonet is affixed by Velcro so it will stay on the barrel! :)
And here Teddy is dressed as a Union Soldier with his trusty musket!
Malachi stood during the program and gave an Impromptu presentation on "Civil War Babies." Very information. You can see Exhibit A in his arms.
Then Ziggy got up to do an impromptu presentation too, and Clementine joined him!
Goldie's project was about transportation and communication during the Civil War. She taught us about the telegraph, the railroad, and hot air balloons, which carried units of Civil War Spies! We read several interesting books about that. Goldie made the cutest little models to illustrate her information!
Junie's project was also amazing. She made a model of a Union Army encampment, and her attention to detail was just incredible. There were campfires, tents, cannons and cannonballs, rocks and logs painted to look like cannons and cannonballs (that was a funny little detail we read about in a book—a trick some regiments used to make their numbers and weapons appear more formidable), stray cats, and so forth. It was such a cute little scene!
Cats eating the solder's fish he cooked over the fire
A cannon, and a tiny cart full of hardtack for the soldiers
(This shows how tiny the hardtack and the barrel of coffee were)
A campfire with a roasted chicken roasting nearby (and a dog trying to steal it)
A soldier fishing in a stream outside the camp, and another hiding behind a tree
A solider bedding down for the night
I loved these projects and the good things the kids learned while working on them!

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