Last updated: December 5, 2022
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Information Panel: Discover Harpers Ferry Camp Hill Kiosk
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Historical/Interpretive Information/Exhibits
Discover Harpers Ferry: Camp HIll - You are in the Camp Hill area of Harpers Ferry. Explore Camp HIll's history with exhibits in front of the Morrell, Brackett, and Lockwood Houses and Mather Training Center. Side trails in Harper Cemetery and in front of Mather Training Center connect to the world-famous Appalachian Trail (AT).
Photo caption: Early Settlement, 1700s. Town founder Robert Harper ran a ferry business and a gristmill in the Lower Town area. Harper and other notables are buried in Harper Cemetery at the end of Fillmore Street. The Camp Hill area takes its name from an encampment of US Army soldiers here in the late 1700s.
Photo caption: Armory, 1848-1861. The hilltop position of the armory paymaster's house (above) "made a statement about the presence and power of the paymaster and the armory." A stroll along Fillmore Street takes you by three of the original four armory mansions on Camp Hill which have been preserved by the National Park Service.
Photo caption: Civil War, 1861-1865. The armory and its Camp hill housing were abandoned at the war's outbreak. Camp Hill servied as an encampment for both Union and Confederate troops. The buildings on this street served as hospitals, prisons, bivouacs, or quarters.
Photo caption: Storer College, 1867-1955. An oasis of learning and freedom in the segregated south, Storer College was "open to all regardless of race or gender." Here in 1906 the civil rights leaders of the Niagara Movement--precursos to the NAACP--used the campus for their first conference in the United States.
Photo caption: Early Settlement, 1700s. Town founder Robert Harper ran a ferry business and a gristmill in the Lower Town area. Harper and other notables are buried in Harper Cemetery at the end of Fillmore Street. The Camp Hill area takes its name from an encampment of US Army soldiers here in the late 1700s.
Photo caption: Armory, 1848-1861. The hilltop position of the armory paymaster's house (above) "made a statement about the presence and power of the paymaster and the armory." A stroll along Fillmore Street takes you by three of the original four armory mansions on Camp Hill which have been preserved by the National Park Service.
Photo caption: Civil War, 1861-1865. The armory and its Camp hill housing were abandoned at the war's outbreak. Camp Hill servied as an encampment for both Union and Confederate troops. The buildings on this street served as hospitals, prisons, bivouacs, or quarters.
Photo caption: Storer College, 1867-1955. An oasis of learning and freedom in the segregated south, Storer College was "open to all regardless of race or gender." Here in 1906 the civil rights leaders of the Niagara Movement--precursos to the NAACP--used the campus for their first conference in the United States.