Last updated: March 29, 2021
Thing to Do
Guilford Courthouse National Military Park's monuments
Guilford Courthouse National Military Park has 29 monuments and gravesites commemorating the Battle of Guilford Courthouse. The oldest monument was erected in 1887, and the newest was erected in 2016.
The American First Line Monuments
The following monuments are located surrounding the American First Line, where the British Army first encountered Greene's forces the North Carolina militia. However, the monuments tell the stories of two soldiers of this battle and other Revolutionary War figures. Some of these monuments hold the graves of soldiers who fought away from the First Line, such as James Tate, while other graves are to soldiers who fought in the Southern Campaign but not at this battle. The other commemorative monuments tell the stories of people involved in the Revolutionary War.
Commemorative Monuments
- Nathaniel Macon
- James Gillies
- Kerenhappuch Turner
- James Morehead
- No North-No South
- Washington's Visit
- Martha McFarlane McGee-Bell
Grave Sites of the First Line
- James Tate Monument and Grave
- Jethro Sumner Monument and Grave
- John Daves Grave
The American Second Line Monuments
The American Second Line Monuments surround the area of the Virginia Militia, and is located east of Old Battleground. The General Greene Monument is the main focal point of this area, and the monument stands just in front of the wooded area where the Virginia Militia waited for the oncoming British Army. Like at the American First Line area, you can see how David Schenck wanted to create a Revolutionary War commemorative landscape with the Signers Monument. The remains of William Hooper and John Penn were reintered under this monument. The Guilford Battleground Company later honored Schenck and Joseph Morehead, the second president of the Company.
Monuments to Participants
- Major General Nathanael Greene
- Henry "Hal" Dixon Monument
- George Reynolds
Commemorative Monuments
- The Signer's Monument and Grave to William Hooper and John Penn
- David Schenck
- Joseph Morehead
- David Caldwell
The American Third Line Monuments
If you were to read the inscription of the monuments that speak about the Third Line, you would think you were standing in the footsteps of the Continental Army. However, David Schenck was wrong about the placement of the Third Line, and it wasn't until research was completed in the late 1990s and early 2000s that the National Park Service discovered the true location of the Third Line. As you tour these monuments, be sure to read the accompanying wayside exhibits that explain why these monuments were placed and where the action actually took place.
Monuments to Participants
- Third Line Regulars
- Continental (Delaware) Soldiers and Graves
- Maryland
- James Stuart
- Cavalry, associated with William Washington's unit and Peter Francisco
- Griffin Fauntleroy
- Joseph Winston
Graves
- The graves of Joseph Winston and Jesse Franklin are located at Tour Stop 4 next to the parking lot.
- The graves of the Delaware soldiers are in the center of the battlefield, accessible on foot by the Historic New Garden Road.
Pets are allowed on the trails and tour road, but must be leashed on a 6ft leash.