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  • Format: ePub

Lewis B. Walter and Mary Trostle were children growing up near the quiet farming town of Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. On July 1-3, 1863, their lives and the history of the United States of America was forever changed. From a prosperous farming town, to a battlefield, to President Lincoln's address in November 1863, to a National Military Park, the name Gettysburg echoes through time.
Lewis and Mary's story is another rich fiber in the tapestry of the Gettysburg story. How they survived, how their family rebuilt the Trostle Farm, and how the Trostle Farm became a piece of the Military Park is fascinating American history.
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Produktbeschreibung
Lewis B. Walter and Mary Trostle were children growing up near the quiet farming town of Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. On July 1-3, 1863, their lives and the history of the United States of America was forever changed. From a prosperous farming town, to a battlefield, to President Lincoln's address in November 1863, to a National Military Park, the name Gettysburg echoes through time.

Lewis and Mary's story is another rich fiber in the tapestry of the Gettysburg story. How they survived, how their family rebuilt the Trostle Farm, and how the Trostle Farm became a piece of the Military Park is fascinating American history.

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Autorenporträt
Frederick Easton Walter was born in Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania, and lived at Eighteen East Locust Street for five years with his parents and his great-grandfather, Lewis B. Walter (Granpa Walter). This is where Granpa Walter retold the stories about the great battle at Gettysburg. When Lewis Walter died on March 31, 1950, the Walter Family (Roy Jr., Mary Jane, Fred, and Scott) soon moved to Arizona and then to El Segundo, California, and lived there until 1968. They moved back to the Village of La Anna, Pennsylvania, in the Pocono Mountains where they presently reside.