Web Rangers Activity #3
Solve the Mystery of the Disappearing Trees
When you visit Petersburg National Battlefield today, trees and green grass provide an image
of a once beautiful place. This is not an accurate picture of the site where soldiers fought
in trenches for nine-and-a-half months. Soldiers learned to live off of the land for protection
and sometimes for food.
Print this page and complete the activities.

Soldiers had many uses for
trees during the siege of Petersburg. Use the pictionary and soldier life
pages to list and describe four uses of trees during the Civil War.
Example: Fraise - Soldiers cut down trees
and sharpened the ends to create fraise. They placed the fraise in front of their trenches
to offer better protection from approaching enemies.
Soldiers from both armies spent much of their
time behind walls of earth up to ten feet high. Which artillery weapon would be more effective in attacking men behind
the trenches? Refer to the pictionary and soldier life pages to define these weapons. Write down your
answer and an explanation.
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| Cannon |
Mortar |
Would trees be an obstacle for the
cannon or the mortars? Why or why not?

This photograph is an example of the trenches
where soldiers lived. Soldiers from both the Union and Confederate armies fought in trenches for almost ten
months. Imagine what the area of Petersburg looked like after seven months of fighting.
Now imagine what the landscape of
Petersburg looked like in April 1865, when the siege finally ended. Draw a sketch of what you think Petersburg
looked like during the siege.
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