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The Devil's Den at Gettysburg National Military Park in Gettysburg, PA |
Long before the likes of Lee and Meade ever walked the Gettysburg Battlefield, a Native American battle took place here in which many warriors were killed. Then in July of 1863 for three long days, the Confederate Army of the South met the Union Army of the North at this location as well as the surrounding hills in the bloodiest battle of the Civil War. There were approximately fifty thousand casualties suffered on both sides including over seven thousand killed. On the second day of battle, heavy fighting occurred at Devil's Den as the Union soldiers who held the hill defended against the attacking Confederates. The Union troops eventually lost control of the hill only to retake it again after many were killed on both sides. The valley which is home to Devil's Hill was nicknamed "Death Valley". The dead lay strewn around Devil's Den for weeks and some were thrown into the rocky crevices instead of being buried.
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The Devil's Den, Gettysburg, Pennsylvania as it appeared in the 1860s |
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The Devil's Den immediately after the Battle of Gettysburg during the American Civil War |
Throughout the early to mid 1800s, there have been reported stories from locals about hearing the sounds of Native American war cries coming from the Devil's Den. Some claimed to have even seen the apparitions of warriors as if they were in the last death throws of battle. After the Civil War battle at Gettysburg, reports started coming in of sightings of what many believe to be the ghost of a Confederate soldier roaming the Devil's Den. It is believed that he is from the Confederate Army because the apparition is usually dressed in the style that the Texas regiment wore at the time of the battle. He has been described as usually wearing buckskin clothes, and having long hair underneath a hat in the style that the southerners used to wear in that time period. Some say that the apparition appeared to be barefoot. Most of the Confederate soldiers had poor or no shoes and were raggedly dressed which matches the often rough or scraggly look of the ghost. Many have nicknamed the ghost at Devil's Den the "hippie" because of the way he looks.