tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6679713926179902683.post5438615883476956344..comments2023-05-16T07:15:08.080-06:00Comments on Battlefield Wanderings 2.0: Camp BraggNickhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03108569840442927455noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6679713926179902683.post-6893917964957114592012-10-25T12:58:37.876-06:002012-10-25T12:58:37.876-06:00Great story on the Camp Bragg Memorial! I have vi...Great story on the Camp Bragg Memorial! I have visited many times because my great-great grandfather served with the regiment. The memorial is on the northeast corner of where the camp was located. I'd like to hear more from Dave Powell and where he learned about Hobart (see previous posting). Thanks! Ted.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6679713926179902683.post-25559819889138841262009-03-27T16:47:00.000-06:002009-03-27T16:47:00.000-06:00Nick, Any chance you could send me a couple of pic...Nick, <br><br>Any chance you could send me a couple of pics just of the Chickamauga gun, something I could email the park? <br><br>Over the years we have come across a number of "Chickamauga" items - usually guns or iron-riddled stumps. I like to forward them on to the park to kind of tie in all this stuff as a kind of extended record.<br><br>Very cool. How much do you know about Harrison Hobart, the 21st's commander at Chickamauga? He was quite the humourist, fun at parties, and in great demand. He had a bit of an accent, and liked to pretend that Wisconsin was a foreign country and that he and the boys of the 21st were just down south helping the "Americans" win their war...<br><br>Dave PowellAnonymousnoreply@blogger.com