Blue and Gray Days 2009
Combined
schedule of events at the Carter House and Carnton Plantation
Friday November 27:
• 12:00 Camp set-up begins/ Organize re-enactors
• Business as usual
Saturday
November 28:
• Carnton hours: 9 am - 4 pm (B&G free with house
tour or $5 Grounds Admission)
• Carter House hours: 9 am - 4 pm
• 10 am - 2 pm Camps open to public (w/show and tell and
drills through out day)
• 2:30 pm - 3:30 pm - Battle/Skirmish at Carnton
• 4pm - 5 pm - City of Franklin Illumination Memorial
of 145th Anniversary of Battle of Franklin (FREE) – to
take place at the McGavock Cemetery
• 5pm - 6 pm - FREE walk-through of Carnton
Sunday
November 29:
• Carnton hours: 11 am - 5 pm (B&G free with house
tour or $5 Grounds Admission)
• Carter House hours: 1 - 4 pm
• 12 - 2 pm Camps open to public (w/show and tell and
drills through out day)
• 2:30 pm - 3:30 pm Battle/Skirmish at Carnton
Monday
November 30:
• Carnton hours: 1 pm - 5 pm (B&G free with house
tour or $5 Grounds Admission)
• Carter House hours: 9 - 4 pm
9 am - 1 pm Field Trips/school tours ONLY (Carnton)
• 4 pm - Re-enactors to march from Winstead Hill to Carter
house
• 5 pm - 6 pm - Memorial Ceremony at Carter House

Press Release
“Civil War Blue & Gray Days Return to Carnton Plantation
November 28th thru November 30th”
Franklin,
Tenn. - November 11, 2009 - Join Abe Lincoln along with other
living history re-enactors at the Carnton Plantation for Blue
& Gray Days November 28 - 30. This annual event is a prelude
to the 145th Anniversary of the Battle of Franklin. The pageantry
of Blue & Gray Days brings tourists and historians from
across the country to remember the soldiers who fought on this
land for their country.
Guests
will have the rare opportunity to go back in time to the 1860’s
and witness a Civil War battle re-enactment complete with cavalry
units and soldiers.
Guided house and cemetery tours make this a must for Civil War
buffs. Other program highlights throughout the Anniversary of
the Battle of Franklin weekend include artillery demonstrations,
period appropriate vendors, a tintype photo tent, and Civil
War medicine.
Although the November 30, 1864 Battle of Franklin was one of
the smallest battlefields of the war, only 2 miles long and
1 ½ mile wide, it is described by historians as the five
bloodiest hours of the Civil War because of the number of soldiers
injured, killed or missing, approximately 10,000 soldiers from
both Union and Confederate forces. The main battle began around
4:00 pm and wound down around 9:00 pm.
Carnton’s
role in the Civil War battle came when the home served as the
largest field hospital in the area of hundreds of wounded and
dying Confederate soldiers. It is adjacent to the McGavock Confederate
Cemetery which is home to the New York Times bestseller, The
Widow of The South, by Robert Hicks. Hick’s second novel,
A Separate Country, focuses on the life of John Bell Hood and
is already receiving rave reviews.
The Carnton
Plantation recently opened its $1.2 million dollar visitor center.
The Fleming Center is named after Sam Fleming, a Franklin native
and Middle Tennessee banker who was a lifelong supporter of
the museum. The 7,000 square foot facility houses an expansive
gift shop, Carnton offices and an exhibit space featuring “Hood’s
Legacy,” which focuses on the Confederate General John
Bell Hood, the commander of the Tennessee army who was defeated
at the Battle of Franklin. “This exhibit is believed to
be the largest collection of Hood artifacts gathered since his
death in 1879,” says Joanna Stephens, Carnton’s
curator. The Hood exhibit runs through December 6, 2009.
The Blue
& Gray Days begin Saturday, November 28 from 9:00 a.m. -
to 5 p.m. and Sunday, November 29 from 12 noon - 5 p.m. and
Monday, November 30 from 9 a.m. - 4 p.m. Please note that Monday,
November 30 from 9:00 am to 1:00 p.m. is reserved for school
field trips.
Tickets
include house tour and admission to the grounds where the re-enactors
and historic artisans will be located. Tickets are $12 for adults,
$10 for seniors over 65. Children ages 6-12 are $6. Children
under 6 are free. Ground Pass only is $5 and will allow guests
to enjoy the artisans and re-enactors. All proceeds fund historic
preservation activities for the Battle of Franklin Trust.
The Battle
of Franklin Trust is a 501 (c) (3) management corporation acting
on behalf of Franklin’s battlefield sites to contribute
to a greater understanding and enrich the visitor experience
of the November 30, 1864 battle. It’s organized for the
charitable and educational purposes of preserving, restoring,
maintaining and interpreting the properties, artifacts and documents
related to the battle so as to preserve an important part of
the nation’s history. Learn more at www.battleoffranklintrust.org
or call 615-786-1864. The e-mail address is info@battleoffranklintrust.org.