Chickamauga National Battlefield Park -- Ft. Oglethorpe GA
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member Benchmark Blasterz
N 34° 56.420 W 085° 15.598
16S E 658905 N 3867809
The Chickamauga National Battlefield Park is located in Ft. Oglethorpe GA along the US 27 -- the "Battlefield Route" split of the western division of The Dixie Highway
Waymark Code: WMWRCF
Location: Georgia, United States
Date Posted: 10/06/2017
Published By:Groundspeak Regular Member Team Farkle 7
Views: 8

The waymark coordinates are located at the visitor center for the Chickamauga National Battlefield Park at Ft. Oglethorpe GA.

The Chickamauga battlefield was created as a national military park in 1890, one of the first of the Civil War battlefields so designated. The battlefield was located on the Dixie Highway, which was renumbered to US 27 in 1926. Later the road was also named Lafayette Road.

Tourists motoring south on the Dixie Highway would have a great opportunity to stop here and explore the history of the Battle of Chickamauga and the larger Chattanooga Campaign.

From the Encyclopedia of Georgia: (visit link)

"The Dixie Highway, a network of roads connecting Canada to Florida in the early decades of the twentieth century, was an ambitious undertaking to build the nation's first north–south paved interstate highway. As the largest state in terms of area east of the Mississippi River, Georgia proved critical to the project's success, mainly because the state's size and location controlled access to Florida for anyone driving by car.

. . .

Launching of the Dixie Highway

On April 3, 1915, Georgia governor John M. Slaton and his counterparts (or their representatives) from five other states met in Chattanooga, Tennessee, for the inaugural meeting of the Dixie Highway Association (DHA). While the new highway generated enthusiasm, selecting its route became a highly politicized task. . . . Macon Telegraph editor and owner William T. Anderson proposed that the DHA approve western and eastern divisions of the Dixie Highway where dual routes were warranted. . .

As a result, the Dixie Highway became a network with Sault Ste. Marie on the Canadian border as the northern terminus. From there, the highway extended southward through upper Michigan and then via ferry to Mackinaw, where the highway split into a Western Division that included Chicago and an Eastern Division that included Detroit. Following roughly parallel paths southward, the two divisions reunited at Chattanooga.

Envisioning an influx of tourists, different cities and counties competed to be part of the Dixie Highway. In Georgia, rivalries became intense—especially between Rome and Dalton, each sending hundreds of supporters to the DHA's initial meeting to argue the merits for including their city on the route. Dalton not only offered the shortest route from Chattanooga to Atlanta but also boasted that it was the "Battlefield Route" associated with Union general William T. Sherman's Atlanta Campaign, which would attract Civil War tourism. Rome made a persuasive case that it had a larger population base and could build its portion more quickly than Dalton.

As a compromise, the DHA approved two routes south from Chattanooga—one through Dalton and one through Rome—with both routes converging near Cartersville, where they rejoined the Dixie Highway's Western Division. This division then followed a route south in Georgia to Atlanta, Macon, Americus, Albany, and then on to Tallahassee, Florida. In 1916 the DHA approved a new Eastern Division running southeast from Atlanta to Waynesboro to Savannah, before continuing on to Jacksonville, Florida. That same year, a new Central Dixie Highway was added linking the Georgia towns Perry, Waycross, and Folkston, and then heading southward to Jacksonville. . . .

Driving the Dixie Highway

The development of affordable automobiles and the Dixie Highway meant that anyone with a car could head south for a summer or winter vacation. . . .

The Dixie Highway ceased to exist by that name in 1926, when federal and state highway officials replaced named trails across America with numbered highways. Because the Dixie Highway was not a single highway, its various divisions became parts of the new U.S. numbered highway system (most notably U.S. 1, 17, 19, 25, 27, 41, and 129), plus a variety of state-numbered highways."
Americana: Roadside Attraction

Significant Interest: Museum

Milestone or Marker: Other

Web Site Address: [Web Link]

Physical Address:
Chickamauga National Battlefield Park
3700 US 27/Lafayette Road
Ft Oglethorpe, GA


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Recent Visits/Logs:
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frog1962 visited Chickamauga National Battlefield Park -- Ft. Oglethorpe GA 05/10/2022 frog1962 visited it
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AnthemRose visited Chickamauga National Battlefield Park -- Ft. Oglethorpe GA 10/06/2019 AnthemRose visited it
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Benchmark Blasterz visited Chickamauga National Battlefield Park -- Ft. Oglethorpe GA 08/02/2017 Benchmark Blasterz visited it
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