BEGIN:VCALENDAR
VERSION:2.0
PRODID:-//Crazy Crow Trading Post - ECPv6.16.5//NONSGML v1.0//EN
CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
METHOD:PUBLISH
X-WR-CALNAME:Crazy Crow Trading Post
X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://www.crazycrow.com/site
X-WR-CALDESC:Events for Crazy Crow Trading Post
REFRESH-INTERVAL;VALUE=DURATION:PT1H
X-Robots-Tag:noindex
X-PUBLISHED-TTL:PT1H
BEGIN:VTIMEZONE
TZID:UTC
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:+0000
TZOFFSETTO:+0000
TZNAME:UTC
DTSTART:20190101T000000
END:STANDARD
END:VTIMEZONE
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20210717
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20210719
DTSTAMP:20240828T231030Z
CREATED:20170221T120220Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240828T231030Z
UID:40539-1626480000-1626652799@www.crazycrow.com
SUMMARY:Fort Taylor Living History Weekend
DESCRIPTION:Fort Taylor Living History Weekend\n\nRate This Event\n \n                                    \n                                        \n                                        \n                                        \n                                        \n                                    \nCelebrate Florida’s rich history at Fort Taylor Living History Weekend on the third Saturday and Sunday of each month at Historic Fort Taylor\, America’s Southernmost Civil War Fortress in Key West\, Florida. Join our re-enactors as they set up tents\, clean their weapons and fire up the blacksmith shop. Climb the circular stairways and experience the harbor view just as the soldiers did in 1861. Walk down our cannon row and touch the actual cannons used to protect this Union stronghold. Tours will be available and public interaction is strongly recommended. Re-enactor participation varies by weekend and weather conditions. \nYear Round\nOn the third weekend (Saturday and Sunday) of each of month\, Fort Taylor Living History Weekend offers you the opportunity to experience life in the fort as it was during the Civil War. \nLocation\nFort Zachary Taylor Historic State Park\n601 Howard England Way\nKey West\, FL 33040 \nMore Information: Kevin Bowes\, kevin.bowes@dep.state.fl.us (305) 292-6850 \nThe park is open from 8:00 a.m. until sundown\, 365 days a year. The fort closes at 5:00 p.m. \nAdmission Fees:\n$6.00* per vehicle. Limit 2-8 people per vehicle.\n$2.00* Pedestrians\, bicyclists\, extra passengers\, passengers in vehicle with holder of Annual Individual Entrance Pass.\n$4.00* Single-occupant vehicle or motorcycle.\n* Plus $.50 per person Monroe County Surcharge. \nHistory of Fort Zachary Taylor Historic State Park\nSpanish explorers first surveyed the island of Key West in 1513. After the Florida territory was transferred to the U.S.\, the Navy established a small depot here in 1822 to rid the area of pirates. Fishing\, salvaging wrecked ships and cigar manufacturing became the driving economic forces behind the island’s growth making Key West the richest city in Florida in the 1890s. The U.S. Army began construction of Fort Taylor\, named for President Zachary Taylor\, in 1845. With secession and the beginning of war in 1861\, Fort Taylor remained under federal control — one of only three fortresses in Florida to do so — and served as the headquarters for the Federal Navy’s East Gulf Coast Blockading Squadron staying on ‘active duty’ status through 1947. Today\, the fort is a National Historic Landmark containing the largest cache of Civil War-era seacoast cannons in the U.S. \nCannon and Arches\nUnion troops took control of Fort Zachary Taylor early in the Civil War and maintained it through the duration of the war. They made use of the fort’s impressive artillery\, including 10-inch Rodman and Columbiad cannons to detain blockade-running ships seeking to supply the Confederacy. In 1968\, a large supply of Civil War-era guns and ammunition were discovered in the Fort’s buried arsenal. In fact\, Fort Zachary Taylor held the largest collection of Civil War-era cannons in the United States. \nFort Moat\nSoon after the park opened to the public\, a contractor began the process of digging a moat around the fortress. There were two reasons for the project. One was to prevent easy entry into the structure. The other was to give the illusion of the fort in its early days\, surrounded by water. The end result was an attractive division between the fort and the beach and sea beyond. \nMark your calendar today so you don’t miss the next Fort Taylor Living History Weekend on the third Saturday and Sunday of each month at Historic Fort Taylor in Key West\, Florida. \nTags: Fort Taylor Living History Weekend\, Fort Zachary Taylor Living History Weekend\, Ft Taylor Living History Weekend \nView other Civil War Reenactments & Other Events
URL:https://www.crazycrow.com/site/event/fort-taylor-living-history-weekend-2017-08-19-2021-07-17/
LOCATION:Fort Zachary Taylor Historic State Park\, 601 Howard England Way\, Key West\, FL\, 33040\, United States
CATEGORIES:0-Regular Recurranace,American Civil War Reenactment,Historic American Forts,Living History Events,Same week in month
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.crazycrow.com/site/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/Fort-Taylor-Living-History-Weekend-03-850x567.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20210619
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20210621
DTSTAMP:20240828T231035Z
CREATED:20170221T120220Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240828T231035Z
UID:40410-1624060800-1624233599@www.crazycrow.com
SUMMARY:Fort Taylor Living History Weekend
DESCRIPTION:Fort Taylor Living History Weekend\n\nRate This Event\n \n                                    \n                                        \n                                        \n                                        \n                                        \n                                    \nCelebrate Florida’s rich history at Fort Taylor Living History Weekend on the third Saturday and Sunday of each month at Historic Fort Taylor\, America’s Southernmost Civil War Fortress in Key West\, Florida. Join our re-enactors as they set up tents\, clean their weapons and fire up the blacksmith shop. Climb the circular stairways and experience the harbor view just as the soldiers did in 1861. Walk down our cannon row and touch the actual cannons used to protect this Union stronghold. Tours will be available and public interaction is strongly recommended. Re-enactor participation varies by weekend and weather conditions. \nYear Round\nOn the third weekend (Saturday and Sunday) of each of month\, Fort Taylor Living History Weekend offers you the opportunity to experience life in the fort as it was during the Civil War. \nLocation\nFort Zachary Taylor Historic State Park\n601 Howard England Way\nKey West\, FL 33040 \nMore Information: Kevin Bowes\, kevin.bowes@dep.state.fl.us (305) 292-6850 \nThe park is open from 8:00 a.m. until sundown\, 365 days a year. The fort closes at 5:00 p.m. \nAdmission Fees:\n$6.00* per vehicle. Limit 2-8 people per vehicle.\n$2.00* Pedestrians\, bicyclists\, extra passengers\, passengers in vehicle with holder of Annual Individual Entrance Pass.\n$4.00* Single-occupant vehicle or motorcycle.\n* Plus $.50 per person Monroe County Surcharge. \nHistory of Fort Zachary Taylor Historic State Park\nSpanish explorers first surveyed the island of Key West in 1513. After the Florida territory was transferred to the U.S.\, the Navy established a small depot here in 1822 to rid the area of pirates. Fishing\, salvaging wrecked ships and cigar manufacturing became the driving economic forces behind the island’s growth making Key West the richest city in Florida in the 1890s. The U.S. Army began construction of Fort Taylor\, named for President Zachary Taylor\, in 1845. With secession and the beginning of war in 1861\, Fort Taylor remained under federal control — one of only three fortresses in Florida to do so — and served as the headquarters for the Federal Navy’s East Gulf Coast Blockading Squadron staying on ‘active duty’ status through 1947. Today\, the fort is a National Historic Landmark containing the largest cache of Civil War-era seacoast cannons in the U.S. \nCannon and Arches\nUnion troops took control of Fort Zachary Taylor early in the Civil War and maintained it through the duration of the war. They made use of the fort’s impressive artillery\, including 10-inch Rodman and Columbiad cannons to detain blockade-running ships seeking to supply the Confederacy. In 1968\, a large supply of Civil War-era guns and ammunition were discovered in the Fort’s buried arsenal. In fact\, Fort Zachary Taylor held the largest collection of Civil War-era cannons in the United States. \nFort Moat\nSoon after the park opened to the public\, a contractor began the process of digging a moat around the fortress. There were two reasons for the project. One was to prevent easy entry into the structure. The other was to give the illusion of the fort in its early days\, surrounded by water. The end result was an attractive division between the fort and the beach and sea beyond. \nMark your calendar today so you don’t miss the next Fort Taylor Living History Weekend on the third Saturday and Sunday of each month at Historic Fort Taylor in Key West\, Florida. \nTags: Fort Taylor Living History Weekend\, Fort Zachary Taylor Living History Weekend\, Ft Taylor Living History Weekend \nView other Civil War Reenactments & Other Events
URL:https://www.crazycrow.com/site/event/fort-taylor-living-history-weekend-2017-08-19-2021-06-19/
LOCATION:Fort Zachary Taylor Historic State Park\, 601 Howard England Way\, Key West\, FL\, 33040\, United States
CATEGORIES:0-Regular Recurranace,American Civil War Reenactment,Historic American Forts,Living History Events,Same week in month
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.crazycrow.com/site/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/Fort-Taylor-Living-History-Weekend-03-850x567.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20210515
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20210517
DTSTAMP:20240828T231041Z
CREATED:20170221T120220Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240828T231041Z
UID:40038-1621036800-1621209599@www.crazycrow.com
SUMMARY:Fort Taylor Living History Weekend
DESCRIPTION:Fort Taylor Living History Weekend\n\nRate This Event\n \n                                    \n                                        \n                                        \n                                        \n                                        \n                                    \nCelebrate Florida’s rich history at Fort Taylor Living History Weekend on the third Saturday and Sunday of each month at Historic Fort Taylor\, America’s Southernmost Civil War Fortress in Key West\, Florida. Join our re-enactors as they set up tents\, clean their weapons and fire up the blacksmith shop. Climb the circular stairways and experience the harbor view just as the soldiers did in 1861. Walk down our cannon row and touch the actual cannons used to protect this Union stronghold. Tours will be available and public interaction is strongly recommended. Re-enactor participation varies by weekend and weather conditions. \nYear Round\nOn the third weekend (Saturday and Sunday) of each of month\, Fort Taylor Living History Weekend offers you the opportunity to experience life in the fort as it was during the Civil War. \nLocation\nFort Zachary Taylor Historic State Park\n601 Howard England Way\nKey West\, FL 33040 \nMore Information: Kevin Bowes\, kevin.bowes@dep.state.fl.us (305) 292-6850 \nThe park is open from 8:00 a.m. until sundown\, 365 days a year. The fort closes at 5:00 p.m. \nAdmission Fees:\n$6.00* per vehicle. Limit 2-8 people per vehicle.\n$2.00* Pedestrians\, bicyclists\, extra passengers\, passengers in vehicle with holder of Annual Individual Entrance Pass.\n$4.00* Single-occupant vehicle or motorcycle.\n* Plus $.50 per person Monroe County Surcharge. \nHistory of Fort Zachary Taylor Historic State Park\nSpanish explorers first surveyed the island of Key West in 1513. After the Florida territory was transferred to the U.S.\, the Navy established a small depot here in 1822 to rid the area of pirates. Fishing\, salvaging wrecked ships and cigar manufacturing became the driving economic forces behind the island’s growth making Key West the richest city in Florida in the 1890s. The U.S. Army began construction of Fort Taylor\, named for President Zachary Taylor\, in 1845. With secession and the beginning of war in 1861\, Fort Taylor remained under federal control — one of only three fortresses in Florida to do so — and served as the headquarters for the Federal Navy’s East Gulf Coast Blockading Squadron staying on ‘active duty’ status through 1947. Today\, the fort is a National Historic Landmark containing the largest cache of Civil War-era seacoast cannons in the U.S. \nCannon and Arches\nUnion troops took control of Fort Zachary Taylor early in the Civil War and maintained it through the duration of the war. They made use of the fort’s impressive artillery\, including 10-inch Rodman and Columbiad cannons to detain blockade-running ships seeking to supply the Confederacy. In 1968\, a large supply of Civil War-era guns and ammunition were discovered in the Fort’s buried arsenal. In fact\, Fort Zachary Taylor held the largest collection of Civil War-era cannons in the United States. \nFort Moat\nSoon after the park opened to the public\, a contractor began the process of digging a moat around the fortress. There were two reasons for the project. One was to prevent easy entry into the structure. The other was to give the illusion of the fort in its early days\, surrounded by water. The end result was an attractive division between the fort and the beach and sea beyond. \nMark your calendar today so you don’t miss the next Fort Taylor Living History Weekend on the third Saturday and Sunday of each month at Historic Fort Taylor in Key West\, Florida. \nTags: Fort Taylor Living History Weekend\, Fort Zachary Taylor Living History Weekend\, Ft Taylor Living History Weekend \nView other Civil War Reenactments & Other Events
URL:https://www.crazycrow.com/site/event/fort-taylor-living-history-weekend-2017-08-19-2021-05-15/
LOCATION:Fort Zachary Taylor Historic State Park\, 601 Howard England Way\, Key West\, FL\, 33040\, United States
CATEGORIES:0-Regular Recurranace,American Civil War Reenactment,Historic American Forts,Living History Events,Same week in month
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.crazycrow.com/site/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/Fort-Taylor-Living-History-Weekend-03-850x567.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20210417
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20210419
DTSTAMP:20240828T231046Z
CREATED:20170221T120220Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240828T231046Z
UID:38827-1618617600-1618790399@www.crazycrow.com
SUMMARY:Fort Taylor Living History Weekend
DESCRIPTION:Fort Taylor Living History Weekend\n\nRate This Event\n \n                                    \n                                        \n                                        \n                                        \n                                        \n                                    \nCelebrate Florida’s rich history at Fort Taylor Living History Weekend on the third Saturday and Sunday of each month at Historic Fort Taylor\, America’s Southernmost Civil War Fortress in Key West\, Florida. Join our re-enactors as they set up tents\, clean their weapons and fire up the blacksmith shop. Climb the circular stairways and experience the harbor view just as the soldiers did in 1861. Walk down our cannon row and touch the actual cannons used to protect this Union stronghold. Tours will be available and public interaction is strongly recommended. Re-enactor participation varies by weekend and weather conditions. \nYear Round\nOn the third weekend (Saturday and Sunday) of each of month\, Fort Taylor Living History Weekend offers you the opportunity to experience life in the fort as it was during the Civil War. \nLocation\nFort Zachary Taylor Historic State Park\n601 Howard England Way\nKey West\, FL 33040 \nMore Information: Kevin Bowes\, kevin.bowes@dep.state.fl.us (305) 292-6850 \nThe park is open from 8:00 a.m. until sundown\, 365 days a year. The fort closes at 5:00 p.m. \nAdmission Fees:\n$6.00* per vehicle. Limit 2-8 people per vehicle.\n$2.00* Pedestrians\, bicyclists\, extra passengers\, passengers in vehicle with holder of Annual Individual Entrance Pass.\n$4.00* Single-occupant vehicle or motorcycle.\n* Plus $.50 per person Monroe County Surcharge. \nHistory of Fort Zachary Taylor Historic State Park\nSpanish explorers first surveyed the island of Key West in 1513. After the Florida territory was transferred to the U.S.\, the Navy established a small depot here in 1822 to rid the area of pirates. Fishing\, salvaging wrecked ships and cigar manufacturing became the driving economic forces behind the island’s growth making Key West the richest city in Florida in the 1890s. The U.S. Army began construction of Fort Taylor\, named for President Zachary Taylor\, in 1845. With secession and the beginning of war in 1861\, Fort Taylor remained under federal control — one of only three fortresses in Florida to do so — and served as the headquarters for the Federal Navy’s East Gulf Coast Blockading Squadron staying on ‘active duty’ status through 1947. Today\, the fort is a National Historic Landmark containing the largest cache of Civil War-era seacoast cannons in the U.S. \nCannon and Arches\nUnion troops took control of Fort Zachary Taylor early in the Civil War and maintained it through the duration of the war. They made use of the fort’s impressive artillery\, including 10-inch Rodman and Columbiad cannons to detain blockade-running ships seeking to supply the Confederacy. In 1968\, a large supply of Civil War-era guns and ammunition were discovered in the Fort’s buried arsenal. In fact\, Fort Zachary Taylor held the largest collection of Civil War-era cannons in the United States. \nFort Moat\nSoon after the park opened to the public\, a contractor began the process of digging a moat around the fortress. There were two reasons for the project. One was to prevent easy entry into the structure. The other was to give the illusion of the fort in its early days\, surrounded by water. The end result was an attractive division between the fort and the beach and sea beyond. \nMark your calendar today so you don’t miss the next Fort Taylor Living History Weekend on the third Saturday and Sunday of each month at Historic Fort Taylor in Key West\, Florida. \nTags: Fort Taylor Living History Weekend\, Fort Zachary Taylor Living History Weekend\, Ft Taylor Living History Weekend \nView other Civil War Reenactments & Other Events
URL:https://www.crazycrow.com/site/event/fort-taylor-living-history-weekend-2017-08-19-2021-04-17/
LOCATION:Fort Zachary Taylor Historic State Park\, 601 Howard England Way\, Key West\, FL\, 33040\, United States
CATEGORIES:0-Regular Recurranace,American Civil War Reenactment,Historic American Forts,Living History Events,Same week in month
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.crazycrow.com/site/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/Fort-Taylor-Living-History-Weekend-03-850x567.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20210320
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20210322
DTSTAMP:20240828T231054Z
CREATED:20170221T120220Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240828T231054Z
UID:37390-1616198400-1616371199@www.crazycrow.com
SUMMARY:Fort Taylor Living History Weekend
DESCRIPTION:Fort Taylor Living History Weekend\n\nRate This Event\n \n                                    \n                                        \n                                        \n                                        \n                                        \n                                    \nCelebrate Florida’s rich history at Fort Taylor Living History Weekend on the third Saturday and Sunday of each month at Historic Fort Taylor\, America’s Southernmost Civil War Fortress in Key West\, Florida. Join our re-enactors as they set up tents\, clean their weapons and fire up the blacksmith shop. Climb the circular stairways and experience the harbor view just as the soldiers did in 1861. Walk down our cannon row and touch the actual cannons used to protect this Union stronghold. Tours will be available and public interaction is strongly recommended. Re-enactor participation varies by weekend and weather conditions. \nYear Round\nOn the third weekend (Saturday and Sunday) of each of month\, Fort Taylor Living History Weekend offers you the opportunity to experience life in the fort as it was during the Civil War. \nLocation\nFort Zachary Taylor Historic State Park\n601 Howard England Way\nKey West\, FL 33040 \nMore Information: Kevin Bowes\, kevin.bowes@dep.state.fl.us (305) 292-6850 \nThe park is open from 8:00 a.m. until sundown\, 365 days a year. The fort closes at 5:00 p.m. \nAdmission Fees:\n$6.00* per vehicle. Limit 2-8 people per vehicle.\n$2.00* Pedestrians\, bicyclists\, extra passengers\, passengers in vehicle with holder of Annual Individual Entrance Pass.\n$4.00* Single-occupant vehicle or motorcycle.\n* Plus $.50 per person Monroe County Surcharge. \nHistory of Fort Zachary Taylor Historic State Park\nSpanish explorers first surveyed the island of Key West in 1513. After the Florida territory was transferred to the U.S.\, the Navy established a small depot here in 1822 to rid the area of pirates. Fishing\, salvaging wrecked ships and cigar manufacturing became the driving economic forces behind the island’s growth making Key West the richest city in Florida in the 1890s. The U.S. Army began construction of Fort Taylor\, named for President Zachary Taylor\, in 1845. With secession and the beginning of war in 1861\, Fort Taylor remained under federal control — one of only three fortresses in Florida to do so — and served as the headquarters for the Federal Navy’s East Gulf Coast Blockading Squadron staying on ‘active duty’ status through 1947. Today\, the fort is a National Historic Landmark containing the largest cache of Civil War-era seacoast cannons in the U.S. \nCannon and Arches\nUnion troops took control of Fort Zachary Taylor early in the Civil War and maintained it through the duration of the war. They made use of the fort’s impressive artillery\, including 10-inch Rodman and Columbiad cannons to detain blockade-running ships seeking to supply the Confederacy. In 1968\, a large supply of Civil War-era guns and ammunition were discovered in the Fort’s buried arsenal. In fact\, Fort Zachary Taylor held the largest collection of Civil War-era cannons in the United States. \nFort Moat\nSoon after the park opened to the public\, a contractor began the process of digging a moat around the fortress. There were two reasons for the project. One was to prevent easy entry into the structure. The other was to give the illusion of the fort in its early days\, surrounded by water. The end result was an attractive division between the fort and the beach and sea beyond. \nMark your calendar today so you don’t miss the next Fort Taylor Living History Weekend on the third Saturday and Sunday of each month at Historic Fort Taylor in Key West\, Florida. \nTags: Fort Taylor Living History Weekend\, Fort Zachary Taylor Living History Weekend\, Ft Taylor Living History Weekend \nView other Civil War Reenactments & Other Events
URL:https://www.crazycrow.com/site/event/fort-taylor-living-history-weekend-2017-08-19-2021-03-20/
LOCATION:Fort Zachary Taylor Historic State Park\, 601 Howard England Way\, Key West\, FL\, 33040\, United States
CATEGORIES:0-Regular Recurranace,American Civil War Reenactment,Historic American Forts,Living History Events,Same week in month
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.crazycrow.com/site/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/Fort-Taylor-Living-History-Weekend-03-850x567.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20210220
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20210222
DTSTAMP:20240828T231102Z
CREATED:20170221T120220Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240828T231102Z
UID:35293-1613779200-1613951999@www.crazycrow.com
SUMMARY:Fort Taylor Living History Weekend
DESCRIPTION:Fort Taylor Living History Weekend\n\nRate This Event\n \n                                    \n                                        \n                                        \n                                        \n                                        \n                                    \nCelebrate Florida’s rich history at Fort Taylor Living History Weekend on the third Saturday and Sunday of each month at Historic Fort Taylor\, America’s Southernmost Civil War Fortress in Key West\, Florida. Join our re-enactors as they set up tents\, clean their weapons and fire up the blacksmith shop. Climb the circular stairways and experience the harbor view just as the soldiers did in 1861. Walk down our cannon row and touch the actual cannons used to protect this Union stronghold. Tours will be available and public interaction is strongly recommended. Re-enactor participation varies by weekend and weather conditions. \nYear Round\nOn the third weekend (Saturday and Sunday) of each of month\, Fort Taylor Living History Weekend offers you the opportunity to experience life in the fort as it was during the Civil War. \nLocation\nFort Zachary Taylor Historic State Park\n601 Howard England Way\nKey West\, FL 33040 \nMore Information: Kevin Bowes\, kevin.bowes@dep.state.fl.us (305) 292-6850 \nThe park is open from 8:00 a.m. until sundown\, 365 days a year. The fort closes at 5:00 p.m. \nAdmission Fees:\n$6.00* per vehicle. Limit 2-8 people per vehicle.\n$2.00* Pedestrians\, bicyclists\, extra passengers\, passengers in vehicle with holder of Annual Individual Entrance Pass.\n$4.00* Single-occupant vehicle or motorcycle.\n* Plus $.50 per person Monroe County Surcharge. \nHistory of Fort Zachary Taylor Historic State Park\nSpanish explorers first surveyed the island of Key West in 1513. After the Florida territory was transferred to the U.S.\, the Navy established a small depot here in 1822 to rid the area of pirates. Fishing\, salvaging wrecked ships and cigar manufacturing became the driving economic forces behind the island’s growth making Key West the richest city in Florida in the 1890s. The U.S. Army began construction of Fort Taylor\, named for President Zachary Taylor\, in 1845. With secession and the beginning of war in 1861\, Fort Taylor remained under federal control — one of only three fortresses in Florida to do so — and served as the headquarters for the Federal Navy’s East Gulf Coast Blockading Squadron staying on ‘active duty’ status through 1947. Today\, the fort is a National Historic Landmark containing the largest cache of Civil War-era seacoast cannons in the U.S. \nCannon and Arches\nUnion troops took control of Fort Zachary Taylor early in the Civil War and maintained it through the duration of the war. They made use of the fort’s impressive artillery\, including 10-inch Rodman and Columbiad cannons to detain blockade-running ships seeking to supply the Confederacy. In 1968\, a large supply of Civil War-era guns and ammunition were discovered in the Fort’s buried arsenal. In fact\, Fort Zachary Taylor held the largest collection of Civil War-era cannons in the United States. \nFort Moat\nSoon after the park opened to the public\, a contractor began the process of digging a moat around the fortress. There were two reasons for the project. One was to prevent easy entry into the structure. The other was to give the illusion of the fort in its early days\, surrounded by water. The end result was an attractive division between the fort and the beach and sea beyond. \nMark your calendar today so you don’t miss the next Fort Taylor Living History Weekend on the third Saturday and Sunday of each month at Historic Fort Taylor in Key West\, Florida. \nTags: Fort Taylor Living History Weekend\, Fort Zachary Taylor Living History Weekend\, Ft Taylor Living History Weekend \nView other Civil War Reenactments & Other Events
URL:https://www.crazycrow.com/site/event/fort-taylor-living-history-weekend-2017-08-19-2021-02-20/
LOCATION:Fort Zachary Taylor Historic State Park\, 601 Howard England Way\, Key West\, FL\, 33040\, United States
CATEGORIES:0-Regular Recurranace,American Civil War Reenactment,Historic American Forts,Living History Events,Same week in month
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.crazycrow.com/site/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/Fort-Taylor-Living-History-Weekend-03-850x567.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20210116
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20210118
DTSTAMP:20240828T231109Z
CREATED:20170221T120220Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240828T231109Z
UID:32654-1610755200-1610927999@www.crazycrow.com
SUMMARY:Fort Taylor Living History Weekend
DESCRIPTION:Fort Taylor Living History Weekend\n\nRate This Event\n \n                                    \n                                        \n                                        \n                                        \n                                        \n                                    \nCelebrate Florida’s rich history at Fort Taylor Living History Weekend on the third Saturday and Sunday of each month at Historic Fort Taylor\, America’s Southernmost Civil War Fortress in Key West\, Florida. Join our re-enactors as they set up tents\, clean their weapons and fire up the blacksmith shop. Climb the circular stairways and experience the harbor view just as the soldiers did in 1861. Walk down our cannon row and touch the actual cannons used to protect this Union stronghold. Tours will be available and public interaction is strongly recommended. Re-enactor participation varies by weekend and weather conditions. \nYear Round\nOn the third weekend (Saturday and Sunday) of each of month\, Fort Taylor Living History Weekend offers you the opportunity to experience life in the fort as it was during the Civil War. \nLocation\nFort Zachary Taylor Historic State Park\n601 Howard England Way\nKey West\, FL 33040 \nMore Information: Kevin Bowes\, kevin.bowes@dep.state.fl.us (305) 292-6850 \nThe park is open from 8:00 a.m. until sundown\, 365 days a year. The fort closes at 5:00 p.m. \nAdmission Fees:\n$6.00* per vehicle. Limit 2-8 people per vehicle.\n$2.00* Pedestrians\, bicyclists\, extra passengers\, passengers in vehicle with holder of Annual Individual Entrance Pass.\n$4.00* Single-occupant vehicle or motorcycle.\n* Plus $.50 per person Monroe County Surcharge. \nHistory of Fort Zachary Taylor Historic State Park\nSpanish explorers first surveyed the island of Key West in 1513. After the Florida territory was transferred to the U.S.\, the Navy established a small depot here in 1822 to rid the area of pirates. Fishing\, salvaging wrecked ships and cigar manufacturing became the driving economic forces behind the island’s growth making Key West the richest city in Florida in the 1890s. The U.S. Army began construction of Fort Taylor\, named for President Zachary Taylor\, in 1845. With secession and the beginning of war in 1861\, Fort Taylor remained under federal control — one of only three fortresses in Florida to do so — and served as the headquarters for the Federal Navy’s East Gulf Coast Blockading Squadron staying on ‘active duty’ status through 1947. Today\, the fort is a National Historic Landmark containing the largest cache of Civil War-era seacoast cannons in the U.S. \nCannon and Arches\nUnion troops took control of Fort Zachary Taylor early in the Civil War and maintained it through the duration of the war. They made use of the fort’s impressive artillery\, including 10-inch Rodman and Columbiad cannons to detain blockade-running ships seeking to supply the Confederacy. In 1968\, a large supply of Civil War-era guns and ammunition were discovered in the Fort’s buried arsenal. In fact\, Fort Zachary Taylor held the largest collection of Civil War-era cannons in the United States. \nFort Moat\nSoon after the park opened to the public\, a contractor began the process of digging a moat around the fortress. There were two reasons for the project. One was to prevent easy entry into the structure. The other was to give the illusion of the fort in its early days\, surrounded by water. The end result was an attractive division between the fort and the beach and sea beyond. \nMark your calendar today so you don’t miss the next Fort Taylor Living History Weekend on the third Saturday and Sunday of each month at Historic Fort Taylor in Key West\, Florida. \nTags: Fort Taylor Living History Weekend\, Fort Zachary Taylor Living History Weekend\, Ft Taylor Living History Weekend \nView other Civil War Reenactments & Other Events
URL:https://www.crazycrow.com/site/event/fort-taylor-living-history-weekend-2017-08-19-2021-01-16/
LOCATION:Fort Zachary Taylor Historic State Park\, 601 Howard England Way\, Key West\, FL\, 33040\, United States
CATEGORIES:0-Regular Recurranace,American Civil War Reenactment,Historic American Forts,Living History Events,Same week in month
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.crazycrow.com/site/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/Fort-Taylor-Living-History-Weekend-03-850x567.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20201219
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20201221
DTSTAMP:20240828T231115Z
CREATED:20170221T120220Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240828T231115Z
UID:30678-1608336000-1608508799@www.crazycrow.com
SUMMARY:Fort Taylor Living History Weekend
DESCRIPTION:Fort Taylor Living History Weekend\n\nRate This Event\n \n                                    \n                                        \n                                        \n                                        \n                                        \n                                    \nCelebrate Florida’s rich history at Fort Taylor Living History Weekend on the third Saturday and Sunday of each month at Historic Fort Taylor\, America’s Southernmost Civil War Fortress in Key West\, Florida. Join our re-enactors as they set up tents\, clean their weapons and fire up the blacksmith shop. Climb the circular stairways and experience the harbor view just as the soldiers did in 1861. Walk down our cannon row and touch the actual cannons used to protect this Union stronghold. Tours will be available and public interaction is strongly recommended. Re-enactor participation varies by weekend and weather conditions. \nYear Round\nOn the third weekend (Saturday and Sunday) of each of month\, Fort Taylor Living History Weekend offers you the opportunity to experience life in the fort as it was during the Civil War. \nLocation\nFort Zachary Taylor Historic State Park\n601 Howard England Way\nKey West\, FL 33040 \nMore Information: Kevin Bowes\, kevin.bowes@dep.state.fl.us (305) 292-6850 \nThe park is open from 8:00 a.m. until sundown\, 365 days a year. The fort closes at 5:00 p.m. \nAdmission Fees:\n$6.00* per vehicle. Limit 2-8 people per vehicle.\n$2.00* Pedestrians\, bicyclists\, extra passengers\, passengers in vehicle with holder of Annual Individual Entrance Pass.\n$4.00* Single-occupant vehicle or motorcycle.\n* Plus $.50 per person Monroe County Surcharge. \nHistory of Fort Zachary Taylor Historic State Park\nSpanish explorers first surveyed the island of Key West in 1513. After the Florida territory was transferred to the U.S.\, the Navy established a small depot here in 1822 to rid the area of pirates. Fishing\, salvaging wrecked ships and cigar manufacturing became the driving economic forces behind the island’s growth making Key West the richest city in Florida in the 1890s. The U.S. Army began construction of Fort Taylor\, named for President Zachary Taylor\, in 1845. With secession and the beginning of war in 1861\, Fort Taylor remained under federal control — one of only three fortresses in Florida to do so — and served as the headquarters for the Federal Navy’s East Gulf Coast Blockading Squadron staying on ‘active duty’ status through 1947. Today\, the fort is a National Historic Landmark containing the largest cache of Civil War-era seacoast cannons in the U.S. \nCannon and Arches\nUnion troops took control of Fort Zachary Taylor early in the Civil War and maintained it through the duration of the war. They made use of the fort’s impressive artillery\, including 10-inch Rodman and Columbiad cannons to detain blockade-running ships seeking to supply the Confederacy. In 1968\, a large supply of Civil War-era guns and ammunition were discovered in the Fort’s buried arsenal. In fact\, Fort Zachary Taylor held the largest collection of Civil War-era cannons in the United States. \nFort Moat\nSoon after the park opened to the public\, a contractor began the process of digging a moat around the fortress. There were two reasons for the project. One was to prevent easy entry into the structure. The other was to give the illusion of the fort in its early days\, surrounded by water. The end result was an attractive division between the fort and the beach and sea beyond. \nMark your calendar today so you don’t miss the next Fort Taylor Living History Weekend on the third Saturday and Sunday of each month at Historic Fort Taylor in Key West\, Florida. \nTags: Fort Taylor Living History Weekend\, Fort Zachary Taylor Living History Weekend\, Ft Taylor Living History Weekend \nView other Civil War Reenactments & Other Events
URL:https://www.crazycrow.com/site/event/fort-taylor-living-history-weekend-2017-08-19-2020-12-19/
LOCATION:Fort Zachary Taylor Historic State Park\, 601 Howard England Way\, Key West\, FL\, 33040\, United States
CATEGORIES:0-Regular Recurranace,American Civil War Reenactment,Historic American Forts,Living History Events,Same week in month
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.crazycrow.com/site/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/Fort-Taylor-Living-History-Weekend-03-850x567.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20201121
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20201123
DTSTAMP:20190521T175036Z
CREATED:20170221T120220Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190521T175036Z
UID:30160-1605916800-1606089599@www.crazycrow.com
SUMMARY:Fort Taylor Living History Weekend
DESCRIPTION:Fort Taylor Living History Weekend\n\nRate This Event\n \n                                    \n                                        \n                                        \n                                        \n                                        \n                                    \nCelebrate Florida’s rich history at Fort Taylor Living History Weekend on the third Saturday and Sunday of each month at Historic Fort Taylor\, America’s Southernmost Civil War Fortress in Key West\, Florida. Join our re-enactors as they set up tents\, clean their weapons and fire up the blacksmith shop. Climb the circular stairways and experience the harbor view just as the soldiers did in 1861. Walk down our cannon row and touch the actual cannons used to protect this Union stronghold. Tours will be available and public interaction is strongly recommended. Re-enactor participation varies by weekend and weather conditions. \nYear Round\nOn the third weekend (Saturday and Sunday) of each of month\, Fort Taylor Living History Weekend offers you the opportunity to experience life in the fort as it was during the Civil War. \nLocation\nFort Zachary Taylor Historic State Park\n601 Howard England Way\nKey West\, FL 33040 \nMore Information: Kevin Bowes\, kevin.bowes@dep.state.fl.us (305) 292-6850 \nThe park is open from 8:00 a.m. until sundown\, 365 days a year. The fort closes at 5:00 p.m. \nAdmission Fees:\n$6.00* per vehicle. Limit 2-8 people per vehicle.\n$2.00* Pedestrians\, bicyclists\, extra passengers\, passengers in vehicle with holder of Annual Individual Entrance Pass.\n$4.00* Single-occupant vehicle or motorcycle.\n* Plus $.50 per person Monroe County Surcharge. \nHistory of Fort Zachary Taylor Historic State Park\nSpanish explorers first surveyed the island of Key West in 1513. After the Florida territory was transferred to the U.S.\, the Navy established a small depot here in 1822 to rid the area of pirates. Fishing\, salvaging wrecked ships and cigar manufacturing became the driving economic forces behind the island’s growth making Key West the richest city in Florida in the 1890s. The U.S. Army began construction of Fort Taylor\, named for President Zachary Taylor\, in 1845. With secession and the beginning of war in 1861\, Fort Taylor remained under federal control — one of only three fortresses in Florida to do so — and served as the headquarters for the Federal Navy’s East Gulf Coast Blockading Squadron staying on ‘active duty’ status through 1947. Today\, the fort is a National Historic Landmark containing the largest cache of Civil War-era seacoast cannons in the U.S. \nCannon and Arches\nUnion troops took control of Fort Zachary Taylor early in the Civil War and maintained it through the duration of the war. They made use of the fort’s impressive artillery\, including 10-inch Rodman and Columbiad cannons to detain blockade-running ships seeking to supply the Confederacy. In 1968\, a large supply of Civil War-era guns and ammunition were discovered in the Fort’s buried arsenal. In fact\, Fort Zachary Taylor held the largest collection of Civil War-era cannons in the United States. \nFort Moat\nSoon after the park opened to the public\, a contractor began the process of digging a moat around the fortress. There were two reasons for the project. One was to prevent easy entry into the structure. The other was to give the illusion of the fort in its early days\, surrounded by water. The end result was an attractive division between the fort and the beach and sea beyond. \nMark your calendar today so you don’t miss the next Fort Taylor Living History Weekend on the third Saturday and Sunday of each month at Historic Fort Taylor in Key West\, Florida. \nTags: Fort Taylor Living History Weekend\, Fort Zachary Taylor Living History Weekend\, Ft Taylor Living History Weekend \nView other Civil War Reenactments & Other Events
URL:https://www.crazycrow.com/site/event/fort-taylor-living-history-weekend-2017-08-19-2020-11-21/
LOCATION:Fort Zachary Taylor Historic State Park\, 601 Howard England Way\, Key West\, FL\, 33040\, United States
CATEGORIES:0-Regular Recurranace,American Civil War Reenactment,Historic American Forts,Living History Events,Same week in month
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.crazycrow.com/site/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/Fort-Taylor-Living-History-Weekend-03-850x567.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20201017
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20201019
DTSTAMP:20240828T231120Z
CREATED:20170221T120220Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240828T231120Z
UID:28895-1602892800-1603065599@www.crazycrow.com
SUMMARY:Fort Taylor Living History Weekend
DESCRIPTION:Fort Taylor Living History Weekend\n\nRate This Event\n \n                                    \n                                        \n                                        \n                                        \n                                        \n                                    \nCelebrate Florida’s rich history at Fort Taylor Living History Weekend on the third Saturday and Sunday of each month at Historic Fort Taylor\, America’s Southernmost Civil War Fortress in Key West\, Florida. Join our re-enactors as they set up tents\, clean their weapons and fire up the blacksmith shop. Climb the circular stairways and experience the harbor view just as the soldiers did in 1861. Walk down our cannon row and touch the actual cannons used to protect this Union stronghold. Tours will be available and public interaction is strongly recommended. Re-enactor participation varies by weekend and weather conditions. \nYear Round\nOn the third weekend (Saturday and Sunday) of each of month\, Fort Taylor Living History Weekend offers you the opportunity to experience life in the fort as it was during the Civil War. \nLocation\nFort Zachary Taylor Historic State Park\n601 Howard England Way\nKey West\, FL 33040 \nMore Information: Kevin Bowes\, kevin.bowes@dep.state.fl.us (305) 292-6850 \nThe park is open from 8:00 a.m. until sundown\, 365 days a year. The fort closes at 5:00 p.m. \nAdmission Fees:\n$6.00* per vehicle. Limit 2-8 people per vehicle.\n$2.00* Pedestrians\, bicyclists\, extra passengers\, passengers in vehicle with holder of Annual Individual Entrance Pass.\n$4.00* Single-occupant vehicle or motorcycle.\n* Plus $.50 per person Monroe County Surcharge. \nHistory of Fort Zachary Taylor Historic State Park\nSpanish explorers first surveyed the island of Key West in 1513. After the Florida territory was transferred to the U.S.\, the Navy established a small depot here in 1822 to rid the area of pirates. Fishing\, salvaging wrecked ships and cigar manufacturing became the driving economic forces behind the island’s growth making Key West the richest city in Florida in the 1890s. The U.S. Army began construction of Fort Taylor\, named for President Zachary Taylor\, in 1845. With secession and the beginning of war in 1861\, Fort Taylor remained under federal control — one of only three fortresses in Florida to do so — and served as the headquarters for the Federal Navy’s East Gulf Coast Blockading Squadron staying on ‘active duty’ status through 1947. Today\, the fort is a National Historic Landmark containing the largest cache of Civil War-era seacoast cannons in the U.S. \nCannon and Arches\nUnion troops took control of Fort Zachary Taylor early in the Civil War and maintained it through the duration of the war. They made use of the fort’s impressive artillery\, including 10-inch Rodman and Columbiad cannons to detain blockade-running ships seeking to supply the Confederacy. In 1968\, a large supply of Civil War-era guns and ammunition were discovered in the Fort’s buried arsenal. In fact\, Fort Zachary Taylor held the largest collection of Civil War-era cannons in the United States. \nFort Moat\nSoon after the park opened to the public\, a contractor began the process of digging a moat around the fortress. There were two reasons for the project. One was to prevent easy entry into the structure. The other was to give the illusion of the fort in its early days\, surrounded by water. The end result was an attractive division between the fort and the beach and sea beyond. \nMark your calendar today so you don’t miss the next Fort Taylor Living History Weekend on the third Saturday and Sunday of each month at Historic Fort Taylor in Key West\, Florida. \nTags: Fort Taylor Living History Weekend\, Fort Zachary Taylor Living History Weekend\, Ft Taylor Living History Weekend \nView other Civil War Reenactments & Other Events
URL:https://www.crazycrow.com/site/event/fort-taylor-living-history-weekend-2017-08-19-2020-10-17/
LOCATION:Fort Zachary Taylor Historic State Park\, 601 Howard England Way\, Key West\, FL\, 33040\, United States
CATEGORIES:0-Regular Recurranace,American Civil War Reenactment,Historic American Forts,Living History Events,Same week in month
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.crazycrow.com/site/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/Fort-Taylor-Living-History-Weekend-03-850x567.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200919
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200921
DTSTAMP:20240828T231126Z
CREATED:20170221T120220Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240828T231126Z
UID:28152-1600473600-1600646399@www.crazycrow.com
SUMMARY:Fort Taylor Living History Weekend
DESCRIPTION:Fort Taylor Living History Weekend\n\nRate This Event\n \n                                    \n                                        \n                                        \n                                        \n                                        \n                                    \nCelebrate Florida’s rich history at Fort Taylor Living History Weekend on the third Saturday and Sunday of each month at Historic Fort Taylor\, America’s Southernmost Civil War Fortress in Key West\, Florida. Join our re-enactors as they set up tents\, clean their weapons and fire up the blacksmith shop. Climb the circular stairways and experience the harbor view just as the soldiers did in 1861. Walk down our cannon row and touch the actual cannons used to protect this Union stronghold. Tours will be available and public interaction is strongly recommended. Re-enactor participation varies by weekend and weather conditions. \nYear Round\nOn the third weekend (Saturday and Sunday) of each of month\, Fort Taylor Living History Weekend offers you the opportunity to experience life in the fort as it was during the Civil War. \nLocation\nFort Zachary Taylor Historic State Park\n601 Howard England Way\nKey West\, FL 33040 \nMore Information: Kevin Bowes\, kevin.bowes@dep.state.fl.us (305) 292-6850 \nThe park is open from 8:00 a.m. until sundown\, 365 days a year. The fort closes at 5:00 p.m. \nAdmission Fees:\n$6.00* per vehicle. Limit 2-8 people per vehicle.\n$2.00* Pedestrians\, bicyclists\, extra passengers\, passengers in vehicle with holder of Annual Individual Entrance Pass.\n$4.00* Single-occupant vehicle or motorcycle.\n* Plus $.50 per person Monroe County Surcharge. \nHistory of Fort Zachary Taylor Historic State Park\nSpanish explorers first surveyed the island of Key West in 1513. After the Florida territory was transferred to the U.S.\, the Navy established a small depot here in 1822 to rid the area of pirates. Fishing\, salvaging wrecked ships and cigar manufacturing became the driving economic forces behind the island’s growth making Key West the richest city in Florida in the 1890s. The U.S. Army began construction of Fort Taylor\, named for President Zachary Taylor\, in 1845. With secession and the beginning of war in 1861\, Fort Taylor remained under federal control — one of only three fortresses in Florida to do so — and served as the headquarters for the Federal Navy’s East Gulf Coast Blockading Squadron staying on ‘active duty’ status through 1947. Today\, the fort is a National Historic Landmark containing the largest cache of Civil War-era seacoast cannons in the U.S. \nCannon and Arches\nUnion troops took control of Fort Zachary Taylor early in the Civil War and maintained it through the duration of the war. They made use of the fort’s impressive artillery\, including 10-inch Rodman and Columbiad cannons to detain blockade-running ships seeking to supply the Confederacy. In 1968\, a large supply of Civil War-era guns and ammunition were discovered in the Fort’s buried arsenal. In fact\, Fort Zachary Taylor held the largest collection of Civil War-era cannons in the United States. \nFort Moat\nSoon after the park opened to the public\, a contractor began the process of digging a moat around the fortress. There were two reasons for the project. One was to prevent easy entry into the structure. The other was to give the illusion of the fort in its early days\, surrounded by water. The end result was an attractive division between the fort and the beach and sea beyond. \nMark your calendar today so you don’t miss the next Fort Taylor Living History Weekend on the third Saturday and Sunday of each month at Historic Fort Taylor in Key West\, Florida. \nTags: Fort Taylor Living History Weekend\, Fort Zachary Taylor Living History Weekend\, Ft Taylor Living History Weekend \nView other Civil War Reenactments & Other Events
URL:https://www.crazycrow.com/site/event/fort-taylor-living-history-weekend-2017-08-19-2020-09-19/
LOCATION:Fort Zachary Taylor Historic State Park\, 601 Howard England Way\, Key West\, FL\, 33040\, United States
CATEGORIES:0-Regular Recurranace,American Civil War Reenactment,Historic American Forts,Living History Events,Same week in month
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.crazycrow.com/site/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/Fort-Taylor-Living-History-Weekend-03-850x567.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200815
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200817
DTSTAMP:20240828T231135Z
CREATED:20170221T120220Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240828T231135Z
UID:26223-1597449600-1597622399@www.crazycrow.com
SUMMARY:Fort Taylor Living History Weekend
DESCRIPTION:Fort Taylor Living History Weekend\n\nRate This Event\n \n                                    \n                                        \n                                        \n                                        \n                                        \n                                    \nCelebrate Florida’s rich history at Fort Taylor Living History Weekend on the third Saturday and Sunday of each month at Historic Fort Taylor\, America’s Southernmost Civil War Fortress in Key West\, Florida. Join our re-enactors as they set up tents\, clean their weapons and fire up the blacksmith shop. Climb the circular stairways and experience the harbor view just as the soldiers did in 1861. Walk down our cannon row and touch the actual cannons used to protect this Union stronghold. Tours will be available and public interaction is strongly recommended. Re-enactor participation varies by weekend and weather conditions. \nYear Round\nOn the third weekend (Saturday and Sunday) of each of month\, Fort Taylor Living History Weekend offers you the opportunity to experience life in the fort as it was during the Civil War. \nLocation\nFort Zachary Taylor Historic State Park\n601 Howard England Way\nKey West\, FL 33040 \nMore Information: Kevin Bowes\, kevin.bowes@dep.state.fl.us (305) 292-6850 \nThe park is open from 8:00 a.m. until sundown\, 365 days a year. The fort closes at 5:00 p.m. \nAdmission Fees:\n$6.00* per vehicle. Limit 2-8 people per vehicle.\n$2.00* Pedestrians\, bicyclists\, extra passengers\, passengers in vehicle with holder of Annual Individual Entrance Pass.\n$4.00* Single-occupant vehicle or motorcycle.\n* Plus $.50 per person Monroe County Surcharge. \nHistory of Fort Zachary Taylor Historic State Park\nSpanish explorers first surveyed the island of Key West in 1513. After the Florida territory was transferred to the U.S.\, the Navy established a small depot here in 1822 to rid the area of pirates. Fishing\, salvaging wrecked ships and cigar manufacturing became the driving economic forces behind the island’s growth making Key West the richest city in Florida in the 1890s. The U.S. Army began construction of Fort Taylor\, named for President Zachary Taylor\, in 1845. With secession and the beginning of war in 1861\, Fort Taylor remained under federal control — one of only three fortresses in Florida to do so — and served as the headquarters for the Federal Navy’s East Gulf Coast Blockading Squadron staying on ‘active duty’ status through 1947. Today\, the fort is a National Historic Landmark containing the largest cache of Civil War-era seacoast cannons in the U.S. \nCannon and Arches\nUnion troops took control of Fort Zachary Taylor early in the Civil War and maintained it through the duration of the war. They made use of the fort’s impressive artillery\, including 10-inch Rodman and Columbiad cannons to detain blockade-running ships seeking to supply the Confederacy. In 1968\, a large supply of Civil War-era guns and ammunition were discovered in the Fort’s buried arsenal. In fact\, Fort Zachary Taylor held the largest collection of Civil War-era cannons in the United States. \nFort Moat\nSoon after the park opened to the public\, a contractor began the process of digging a moat around the fortress. There were two reasons for the project. One was to prevent easy entry into the structure. The other was to give the illusion of the fort in its early days\, surrounded by water. The end result was an attractive division between the fort and the beach and sea beyond. \nMark your calendar today so you don’t miss the next Fort Taylor Living History Weekend on the third Saturday and Sunday of each month at Historic Fort Taylor in Key West\, Florida. \nTags: Fort Taylor Living History Weekend\, Fort Zachary Taylor Living History Weekend\, Ft Taylor Living History Weekend \nView other Civil War Reenactments & Other Events
URL:https://www.crazycrow.com/site/event/fort-taylor-living-history-weekend-2017-08-19-2020-08-15/
LOCATION:Fort Zachary Taylor Historic State Park\, 601 Howard England Way\, Key West\, FL\, 33040\, United States
CATEGORIES:0-Regular Recurranace,American Civil War Reenactment,Historic American Forts,Living History Events,Same week in month
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.crazycrow.com/site/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/Fort-Taylor-Living-History-Weekend-03-850x567.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200815
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200817
DTSTAMP:20190320T144454Z
CREATED:20160405T030017Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190320T144454Z
UID:4117-1597449600-1597622399@www.crazycrow.com
SUMMARY:Pipestone Civil War Days
DESCRIPTION:2020 Pipestone Civil War Days\n\nRate This Event\n \n                                    \n                                        \n                                        \n                                        \n                                        \n                                    \nExperience the excitement of Pipestone Civil War Days on August 15-16\, 2020 in Pipestone\, Minnesota. Pipestone Civil War Days is one of the most enduring and respected events of its type in the upper Midwest\, and is a tribute to our past. Set in a beautiful historic setting visitors are invited to interact with civilian and military reenactors to share some of the flavor of the 1860s with them. \nAmerican Civil War Reenactors\, or living historians\, from around our nation\, recreate scenes of daily life from the home to religion to education to military camps. Events throughout the Pipestone Civil War Days weekend include educational programs\, etiquette and ballroom dance lessons\, camp tours\, children’s games\, Sunday morning church services\, a Grand Ball and much more! \n\nPipestone Civil War Days\nThe roar of the cannon\, the smell of gun powder\, and the work of our reenactors\, performers\, and other participants make a full immersion in the 1860s possible at Pipestone Civil War Days. \nThe Pipestone Civil War Days are hosted by the 13th U.S. Infantry Regiment\, Company D. and made possible in part by a grant from the Southwest Minnesota Arts Councilwith funds appropriated by the State Legislature. \nAdmission FeesTickets: $8 each (Reg. $10)Weekend Passes: $13 each (Reg. $15)One-Day Family Tickets: $25 each (Reg. $30)Weekend Family Passes: $35 each (Reg. $40)Children 5 and under: Free. \nLocationPipestone Civil War Days Site820 North Hiawatha AvenuePipestone\, MN 56164 United StatesPhone: 866-747-368 \nDirections: From downtown Pipestone: Head East on Main Street toward Hiawatha Avenue. Turn left (North) on Hiawatha Avenue. Drive approximately 6 blocks\, event parking and registration is on the left after the playground. \nFor More Information:Pipestone Civil War Days Committee (800) 336-6125 PipestoneCWD@gmail.com \nSchool TimeExperience a school classroom out of the 1860’s. Visitors will learn about the educational system during this era and may be surprised at how schools managed during those difficult times. Our school teacher will be instructing all eager pupils out of the McGruffy Reader and Speller. \nQuilts and KnittingLearn about quilting and Civil War quilts and knitting at the Cedar Creek tent. While you are visiting\, knit a bandage to help the war effort or start a quilt for a soldier. All ages are encouraged to participate. \n \nSpecial Postal CancellationThe United States Postal Service will be on the grounds on Saturday in the Vendor area to provide a special postal cancellation opportunity to visitor. Buy Civil War Days postcards at the Red Rock Mercantile and send them to loved ones the same day from the Pipestone Civil War Days. \nBallroom Dance LessonsEver wanted to know how to do the Virginia Reel\, or the Schottische? The Minnesota Living History Society is offering free ballroom dance lessons on Saturday after the battle. Don’t have a partner? They we’ll provide a partner and the skills to dance like the gentry at the Grand Ball Saturday night in the brand new Hiawatha Lodge. \nThe Grand BallThe public is invited to the brand new Hiawatha Lodge Saturday evening at 8 pm for the Pipestone Civil War Days Grand Ball. Come see the reenactors in their Sunday best and join in the dancing. Our event band will play and call the different dances of the 1860s. All are welcome to join us for a free evening of entertainment. \nStoryteller Jim Two CrowsNational award winner\, Jim Two Crows Wallen\, is an oral historian who combines his love of history with a good story\, keeping you spellbound. For over 25 years\, the Missouri native has captured the imaginations of audiences spanning three continents. Two Crows invites you to be submerged in history through his exciting presentations on the Civil War. \nMusic of the Civil WarJust as it is today\, music was a vital element in the everyday lives of men and women of the Civil War. Music was sung and played at home\, in the camps by the soldiers\, performed by regimental bands on the march\, and was often played on the battlefield. The more than fifty thousand songs of this era came to express people’s goals\, aspirations\, fears\, and emotional and physical pain. Learn more about the music and the instruments. \nThe Battle ReenactmentYou will be able to witness the battle as the citizens of Washington D.C. did on the first major encounter of the Civil War. The North and South will be reenacting a battle from 1864 with scrimmages off and on during the morning culminating with the battle in the afternoon. \nFuneral PracticesThe war would have been an even greater horror than it was without one person–the undertaker. Learn about the role of the undertaker\, see a widow in full mourning and learn about funeral practices of the era. Presented by Pipestone’s own funeral director\, Randy Hartquist. \n \nMark your calendar today so you don’t miss the next Pipestone Civil War Days in August in Pipestone\, Minnesota. \nTags: Pipestone Civil War Days\, Pipestone Civil War Reenactment\, Civil War Days\, Minnesota Civil War Reenactment \nView other Civil War Reenactments\, Encampments & Other Events
URL:https://www.crazycrow.com/site/event/pipestone-civil-war-days/
LOCATION:Pipestone Civil War Days Site\, 820 North Hiawatha Avenue\, Pipestone\, MN\, 56164\, United States
CATEGORIES:American Civil War Reenactment,Living History Events
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.crazycrow.com/site/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/pipestone-civil-war-days-850x567.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Pipestone Civil War Days Committee":MAILTO:PipestoneCWD@gmail.com
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200718
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200720
DTSTAMP:20240828T231157Z
CREATED:20170221T120220Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240828T231157Z
UID:25301-1595030400-1595203199@www.crazycrow.com
SUMMARY:Fort Taylor Living History Weekend
DESCRIPTION:Fort Taylor Living History Weekend\n\nRate This Event\n \n                                    \n                                        \n                                        \n                                        \n                                        \n                                    \nCelebrate Florida’s rich history at Fort Taylor Living History Weekend on the third Saturday and Sunday of each month at Historic Fort Taylor\, America’s Southernmost Civil War Fortress in Key West\, Florida. Join our re-enactors as they set up tents\, clean their weapons and fire up the blacksmith shop. Climb the circular stairways and experience the harbor view just as the soldiers did in 1861. Walk down our cannon row and touch the actual cannons used to protect this Union stronghold. Tours will be available and public interaction is strongly recommended. Re-enactor participation varies by weekend and weather conditions. \nYear Round\nOn the third weekend (Saturday and Sunday) of each of month\, Fort Taylor Living History Weekend offers you the opportunity to experience life in the fort as it was during the Civil War. \nLocation\nFort Zachary Taylor Historic State Park\n601 Howard England Way\nKey West\, FL 33040 \nMore Information: Kevin Bowes\, kevin.bowes@dep.state.fl.us (305) 292-6850 \nThe park is open from 8:00 a.m. until sundown\, 365 days a year. The fort closes at 5:00 p.m. \nAdmission Fees:\n$6.00* per vehicle. Limit 2-8 people per vehicle.\n$2.00* Pedestrians\, bicyclists\, extra passengers\, passengers in vehicle with holder of Annual Individual Entrance Pass.\n$4.00* Single-occupant vehicle or motorcycle.\n* Plus $.50 per person Monroe County Surcharge. \nHistory of Fort Zachary Taylor Historic State Park\nSpanish explorers first surveyed the island of Key West in 1513. After the Florida territory was transferred to the U.S.\, the Navy established a small depot here in 1822 to rid the area of pirates. Fishing\, salvaging wrecked ships and cigar manufacturing became the driving economic forces behind the island’s growth making Key West the richest city in Florida in the 1890s. The U.S. Army began construction of Fort Taylor\, named for President Zachary Taylor\, in 1845. With secession and the beginning of war in 1861\, Fort Taylor remained under federal control — one of only three fortresses in Florida to do so — and served as the headquarters for the Federal Navy’s East Gulf Coast Blockading Squadron staying on ‘active duty’ status through 1947. Today\, the fort is a National Historic Landmark containing the largest cache of Civil War-era seacoast cannons in the U.S. \nCannon and Arches\nUnion troops took control of Fort Zachary Taylor early in the Civil War and maintained it through the duration of the war. They made use of the fort’s impressive artillery\, including 10-inch Rodman and Columbiad cannons to detain blockade-running ships seeking to supply the Confederacy. In 1968\, a large supply of Civil War-era guns and ammunition were discovered in the Fort’s buried arsenal. In fact\, Fort Zachary Taylor held the largest collection of Civil War-era cannons in the United States. \nFort Moat\nSoon after the park opened to the public\, a contractor began the process of digging a moat around the fortress. There were two reasons for the project. One was to prevent easy entry into the structure. The other was to give the illusion of the fort in its early days\, surrounded by water. The end result was an attractive division between the fort and the beach and sea beyond. \nMark your calendar today so you don’t miss the next Fort Taylor Living History Weekend on the third Saturday and Sunday of each month at Historic Fort Taylor in Key West\, Florida. \nTags: Fort Taylor Living History Weekend\, Fort Zachary Taylor Living History Weekend\, Ft Taylor Living History Weekend \nView other Civil War Reenactments & Other Events
URL:https://www.crazycrow.com/site/event/fort-taylor-living-history-weekend-2017-08-19-2020-07-18/
LOCATION:Fort Zachary Taylor Historic State Park\, 601 Howard England Way\, Key West\, FL\, 33040\, United States
CATEGORIES:0-Regular Recurranace,American Civil War Reenactment,Historic American Forts,Living History Events,Same week in month
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.crazycrow.com/site/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/Fort-Taylor-Living-History-Weekend-03-850x567.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200620
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200622
DTSTAMP:20240828T231207Z
CREATED:20170221T120220Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240828T231207Z
UID:25056-1592611200-1592783999@www.crazycrow.com
SUMMARY:Fort Taylor Living History Weekend
DESCRIPTION:Fort Taylor Living History Weekend\n\nRate This Event\n \n                                    \n                                        \n                                        \n                                        \n                                        \n                                    \nCelebrate Florida’s rich history at Fort Taylor Living History Weekend on the third Saturday and Sunday of each month at Historic Fort Taylor\, America’s Southernmost Civil War Fortress in Key West\, Florida. Join our re-enactors as they set up tents\, clean their weapons and fire up the blacksmith shop. Climb the circular stairways and experience the harbor view just as the soldiers did in 1861. Walk down our cannon row and touch the actual cannons used to protect this Union stronghold. Tours will be available and public interaction is strongly recommended. Re-enactor participation varies by weekend and weather conditions. \nYear Round\nOn the third weekend (Saturday and Sunday) of each of month\, Fort Taylor Living History Weekend offers you the opportunity to experience life in the fort as it was during the Civil War. \nLocation\nFort Zachary Taylor Historic State Park\n601 Howard England Way\nKey West\, FL 33040 \nMore Information: Kevin Bowes\, kevin.bowes@dep.state.fl.us (305) 292-6850 \nThe park is open from 8:00 a.m. until sundown\, 365 days a year. The fort closes at 5:00 p.m. \nAdmission Fees:\n$6.00* per vehicle. Limit 2-8 people per vehicle.\n$2.00* Pedestrians\, bicyclists\, extra passengers\, passengers in vehicle with holder of Annual Individual Entrance Pass.\n$4.00* Single-occupant vehicle or motorcycle.\n* Plus $.50 per person Monroe County Surcharge. \nHistory of Fort Zachary Taylor Historic State Park\nSpanish explorers first surveyed the island of Key West in 1513. After the Florida territory was transferred to the U.S.\, the Navy established a small depot here in 1822 to rid the area of pirates. Fishing\, salvaging wrecked ships and cigar manufacturing became the driving economic forces behind the island’s growth making Key West the richest city in Florida in the 1890s. The U.S. Army began construction of Fort Taylor\, named for President Zachary Taylor\, in 1845. With secession and the beginning of war in 1861\, Fort Taylor remained under federal control — one of only three fortresses in Florida to do so — and served as the headquarters for the Federal Navy’s East Gulf Coast Blockading Squadron staying on ‘active duty’ status through 1947. Today\, the fort is a National Historic Landmark containing the largest cache of Civil War-era seacoast cannons in the U.S. \nCannon and Arches\nUnion troops took control of Fort Zachary Taylor early in the Civil War and maintained it through the duration of the war. They made use of the fort’s impressive artillery\, including 10-inch Rodman and Columbiad cannons to detain blockade-running ships seeking to supply the Confederacy. In 1968\, a large supply of Civil War-era guns and ammunition were discovered in the Fort’s buried arsenal. In fact\, Fort Zachary Taylor held the largest collection of Civil War-era cannons in the United States. \nFort Moat\nSoon after the park opened to the public\, a contractor began the process of digging a moat around the fortress. There were two reasons for the project. One was to prevent easy entry into the structure. The other was to give the illusion of the fort in its early days\, surrounded by water. The end result was an attractive division between the fort and the beach and sea beyond. \nMark your calendar today so you don’t miss the next Fort Taylor Living History Weekend on the third Saturday and Sunday of each month at Historic Fort Taylor in Key West\, Florida. \nTags: Fort Taylor Living History Weekend\, Fort Zachary Taylor Living History Weekend\, Ft Taylor Living History Weekend \nView other Civil War Reenactments & Other Events
URL:https://www.crazycrow.com/site/event/fort-taylor-living-history-weekend-2017-08-19-2020-06-20/
LOCATION:Fort Zachary Taylor Historic State Park\, 601 Howard England Way\, Key West\, FL\, 33040\, United States
CATEGORIES:0-Regular Recurranace,American Civil War Reenactment,Historic American Forts,Living History Events,Same week in month
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.crazycrow.com/site/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/Fort-Taylor-Living-History-Weekend-03-850x567.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200516
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200518
DTSTAMP:20190521T175029Z
CREATED:20170221T120220Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190521T175029Z
UID:24855-1589587200-1589759999@www.crazycrow.com
SUMMARY:Fort Taylor Living History Weekend
DESCRIPTION:Fort Taylor Living History Weekend\n\nRate This Event\n \n                                    \n                                        \n                                        \n                                        \n                                        \n                                    \nCelebrate Florida’s rich history at Fort Taylor Living History Weekend on the third Saturday and Sunday of each month at Historic Fort Taylor\, America’s Southernmost Civil War Fortress in Key West\, Florida. Join our re-enactors as they set up tents\, clean their weapons and fire up the blacksmith shop. Climb the circular stairways and experience the harbor view just as the soldiers did in 1861. Walk down our cannon row and touch the actual cannons used to protect this Union stronghold. Tours will be available and public interaction is strongly recommended. Re-enactor participation varies by weekend and weather conditions. \nYear Round\nOn the third weekend (Saturday and Sunday) of each of month\, Fort Taylor Living History Weekend offers you the opportunity to experience life in the fort as it was during the Civil War. \nLocation\nFort Zachary Taylor Historic State Park\n601 Howard England Way\nKey West\, FL 33040 \nMore Information: Kevin Bowes\, kevin.bowes@dep.state.fl.us (305) 292-6850 \nThe park is open from 8:00 a.m. until sundown\, 365 days a year. The fort closes at 5:00 p.m. \nAdmission Fees:\n$6.00* per vehicle. Limit 2-8 people per vehicle.\n$2.00* Pedestrians\, bicyclists\, extra passengers\, passengers in vehicle with holder of Annual Individual Entrance Pass.\n$4.00* Single-occupant vehicle or motorcycle.\n* Plus $.50 per person Monroe County Surcharge. \nHistory of Fort Zachary Taylor Historic State Park\nSpanish explorers first surveyed the island of Key West in 1513. After the Florida territory was transferred to the U.S.\, the Navy established a small depot here in 1822 to rid the area of pirates. Fishing\, salvaging wrecked ships and cigar manufacturing became the driving economic forces behind the island’s growth making Key West the richest city in Florida in the 1890s. The U.S. Army began construction of Fort Taylor\, named for President Zachary Taylor\, in 1845. With secession and the beginning of war in 1861\, Fort Taylor remained under federal control — one of only three fortresses in Florida to do so — and served as the headquarters for the Federal Navy’s East Gulf Coast Blockading Squadron staying on ‘active duty’ status through 1947. Today\, the fort is a National Historic Landmark containing the largest cache of Civil War-era seacoast cannons in the U.S. \nCannon and Arches\nUnion troops took control of Fort Zachary Taylor early in the Civil War and maintained it through the duration of the war. They made use of the fort’s impressive artillery\, including 10-inch Rodman and Columbiad cannons to detain blockade-running ships seeking to supply the Confederacy. In 1968\, a large supply of Civil War-era guns and ammunition were discovered in the Fort’s buried arsenal. In fact\, Fort Zachary Taylor held the largest collection of Civil War-era cannons in the United States. \nFort Moat\nSoon after the park opened to the public\, a contractor began the process of digging a moat around the fortress. There were two reasons for the project. One was to prevent easy entry into the structure. The other was to give the illusion of the fort in its early days\, surrounded by water. The end result was an attractive division between the fort and the beach and sea beyond. \nMark your calendar today so you don’t miss the next Fort Taylor Living History Weekend on the third Saturday and Sunday of each month at Historic Fort Taylor in Key West\, Florida. \nTags: Fort Taylor Living History Weekend\, Fort Zachary Taylor Living History Weekend\, Ft Taylor Living History Weekend \nView other Civil War Reenactments & Other Events
URL:https://www.crazycrow.com/site/event/fort-taylor-living-history-weekend-2017-08-19-2020-05-16/
LOCATION:Fort Zachary Taylor Historic State Park\, 601 Howard England Way\, Key West\, FL\, 33040\, United States
CATEGORIES:0-Regular Recurranace,American Civil War Reenactment,Historic American Forts,Living History Events,Same week in month
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.crazycrow.com/site/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/Fort-Taylor-Living-History-Weekend-03-850x567.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20200420T053000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20200420T203000
DTSTAMP:20200310T142633Z
CREATED:20170410T164050Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200310T142633Z
UID:14001-1587360600-1587414600@www.crazycrow.com
SUMMARY:Isaac Davis Trail March
DESCRIPTION:2020 Isaac Davis Trail March – Patriot’s Day Events\n\nRate This Event\n \n                                    \n                                        \n                                        \n                                        \n                                        \n                                    \nJoin the Isaac Davis Trail March on Monday\, April 20\, 2020 starting at the Isaac Davis Homestead in Acton\, ending at the Old North Bridge in Concord. Each year\, on the Monday of Patriots’ Day weekend\, the Acton Minutemen lead the Isaac Davis Trail March\, recreating the famous march to Concord over the remnants of the original trail that Isaac Davis and his men traveled on that fateful day\, referred to by stone markers labeled “Line of March\, April 19\, 1775”. \n\nIsaac Davis Trail March\nThe Isaac Davis Trail March starts at the Isaac Davis Homestead in Acton at 5:50 am\, where there will be a short ceremony of remembrance. From there\, the march goes to Acton Center\, arriving about 6:20 am at the monument where Isaac Davis\, Abner Hosmer\, and James Hayward are buried\, and have another short remembrance ceremony. From there\, the march proceeds to Concord over the original route (as closely as possible)\, arriving at the Old North Bridge about 9:00 am. At the bridge\, the Acton Minutemen will take part in a battle reenactment of the Old North Bridge Battle that took place there\, along with the 10th and 4th Regiment of Foot. The Acton Minutemen will lay a wreath at the base of the Minuteman statue (which was sculpted in Isaac Davis’s likeness) and fire a volley from amid the bridge in honor of those who fell there from Acton’s ranks. \nThe public is encouraged to join the minutemen on the Isaac Davis Trail March from Acton to Concord. It is an experience that you and your family will never forget. Join in the history\, in the fun\, and in the tradition. Make this event a regular tradition in your family and keep the “life” in living history! \nStart: Isaac Davis homestead at 39 Hayward Road\, Acton\, MA\nEnd: Minuteman National Park\, Old North Bridge\, Concord\, MA \nIsaac Davis Trail March Schedule:\n5:45 AM Start at the Isaac Davis house\n6:20 AM in Acton Center\n8:55 AM Arrive at Old North Bridge \n \nAbout The Isaac Davis Trail March\nThe Isaac Davis Trail\, also known as the Acton Trail\, is an historic 6-mile trail running east-west in the towns of Acton and Concord\, Massachusetts. The trail was significant in 1775 when it was used by Captain Isaac Davis and the Acton Minutemen to march on Concord during the battles of Lexington and Concord. The trail was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1972. \nThe Isaac Davis Trail March begins at Isaac Davis’ house (which still stands) in Acton\, and ends at western end of the North Bridge in the Minuteman National Historical Park in Concord. Most of the route is now paved roads\, where in some cases the alignment no longer matches the exact route. Despite this\, the trail route evokes the time of the march\, with its roadways lined with stone walls\, and houses generally set back from the street. \nHistory of the Isaac Davis Trail March\nIn the early dawn hours of April 19th\, 1775\, an alarm rider galloped his way throughout the town of Acton\, warning of the British advance out of Boston. The objective of the march was Concord\, where the British General\, Thomas Gage\, had heard there were stores of weapons\, ammunition\, and supplies for a protracted military campaign. As such\, when the alarm came to Captain Isaac Davis\, the leader of the Acton Minute Company\, he sounded the alarm shots to rally his men to come to his house and prepare to head off for Concord\, a journey of about 7 miles. \nDavis had said that when 30 men had arrived at his house\, he would depart for Concord. As his men arrived\, Isaac’s wife Hannah\, who had been taking care of their four sick children\, made the men breakfast and helped them to powder their wigs. Then they formed up in two long columns and headed out. They had only marched a few paces\, when Davis halted them\, walked back to Hannah as if to say something profound to her\, and said only “Take good care of the children”. Those would be the last words she would ever hear him say\, for the Acton Minutemen marched off to Concord\, met the British head-on at the North Bridge\, and Davis was shot and killed. He would go down in history as the first commissioned officer to die in the service of the new young Republic. \n \nMark your calendar so you don’t forget the next Isaac Davis Trail March on Patriots’ Day starting at the Isaac Davis Homestead in Acton\, MA. \nTags: Isaac Davis Trail March\, Patriot’s Day Events \nView other Patriots Day Reenactments and Other Events\nView other Revolutionary War Reenactments & Other Events
URL:https://www.crazycrow.com/site/event/isaac-davis-trail-march/
LOCATION:Isaac Davis Homestead\, 39 Hayward Road\, Acton\, MA\, 01720\, United States
CATEGORIES:0-Regular Recurranace,American Revolutionary War Reenactment,Battle Reenactments & Encampments,Living History Events,Patriots Day
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.crazycrow.com/site/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/Isaac-Davis-Trail-March-03-850x567.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Acton Historical Society":MAILTO:jenkslibrary@verizon.net
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20200419T033000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20200419T083000
DTSTAMP:20200310T145017Z
CREATED:20170411T171740Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200310T145017Z
UID:14028-1587267000-1587285000@www.crazycrow.com
SUMMARY:Sudbury March to Concord
DESCRIPTION:2020 Sudbury March to Concord – Patriot’s Day\n\nRate This Event\n \n                                    \n                                        \n                                        \n                                        \n                                        \n                                    \nJoin the Sudbury March to Concord on April 19\, 2020\, Patriots’ Day beginning at the First Parish Church in Wayland. Show your fortitude and love of local history with this annual march through Wayland and Sudbury to Concord. Please note this march takes place on the “original” Patriot’s Day of April 19\, and that only those vetted by the colonel will be able to fire from the North Bridge. \n\nPatriot’s Day Sudbury March to Concord\nThe Sudbury Companies of Militia and Minute\, accompanied by the Sudbury Ancient Fyfe and Drum Companie\, will recreate the April 19\, 1775 march of over 300 Sudbury men to Concord to take part in the battles of Lexington and Concord at the start of the American Revolution. The Companies will assemble first at the First Parish Meeting House in Wayland Center at 3:45 AM for a march along Old Sudbury Road and Glezen Lane to the Grout-Heard House\, North Cemetery and the Old Training Field where salutes will be fired commemorating the participation of the East Company of the Sudbury Companies of Militia and Minute in the events of 1775. \nThe commemorative Sudbury March encompasses at least two phases. First\, the Sudbury Companies of Militia and Minute march through Wayland\, once Sudbury\, and then from Sudbury to the Old North Bridge\, Concord. Details for each of these phases is described below. \nFor more information\, contact Col. Steve Taskovics: colonel@sudburyminutemen.org \nSudbury March to Concord Assembly Points (please be prompt)\n3:45 am Wayland Center\n5:30 am Sudbury Center\nDownload the Route of March \nSudbury Militia March Through Wayland\nAnnually on April 19\, the Sudbury Militia march through Wayland\, Massachusetts. This event reenacts and commemorates the mission of our forefathers who did the same on April 19\, 1775\, at the start of the American Revolution. At that time\, Wayland was a part of Sudbury and home to one of the Sudbury Companies of Militia & Minutes’\, the East Company. \nThe Sudbury Militia march through Wayland starting at 3:45 am by the First Parish Church (Wayland Center) stopping for commemorative salutes at Grout-Heard House and North Cemetery. We end with a salute at the Olde East Company Training Field before breakfasting around 5am. Then\, the company leapfrogs to Old Sudbury Center to ready for the next leg\, the Sudbury March. \nSudbury March to Concord Mini-Gallery\n[/fusion_gallery]\n \nEast Sudbury Center (Wayland Center)\n3:45 am Assembly of Troops at the First Parish Church\, Wayland\n4:15 am Depart First Parish Church\n4:20 am Grout Heard House   Flag Raising & Salute\n4:25 am ConOnue March North on Old Sudbury Road\n5:05 am Olde East Company Training Field   Fire Salute\n5:40 am Depart by carriage and coach to Sudbury Center \nSudbury Militia March from Sudbury Center to the Old North Bridge\nAnnually on April 19\, the Sudbury Companies of Militia and Minute march from Sudbury Center to the Old North Bridge in Concord\, Massachusetts. This event reenacts and commemorates the mission of our forefathers who did the same on April 19\, 1775\, at the start of the American Revolution. \nOn April 19th\, 1775\, a messenger reached Sudbury between 3 and 4am bringing news that British Regulars had left Boston the evening before and were headed westward\, presumably to Concord where military supplies were garrisoned. Each Sudbury contingent heeded the call and took the most expedient route to what is now called Battle Road. The present day Sudbury Companies of Militia and Minute follow a route that approximates one of the routes. While on route\, we honor those who lay in rest at several cemeteries with prayer and musket salute.Upon reaching the North Bridge\, we give one final salute at the North Bridge. \nSudbury Center\n5:30 am Assembly of all participants for the March to Concord\n6:15 am Begin March to Concord\n6:20 am Olde Town Cemetery   Fire Salute\n6:25 am Proceed along Concord Road to Pantry Road\n7:00 am North Cemetery   Fire Salute\n7:05 am ConOnue on Pantry Road towards Dakin Road\n7:30 am Becomes Old Picard Road at Concord Line   Fire last Salute\n8:00 am Concord Middle School   Refreshment stop\n8:30 am Proceed on Old Marlboro Road\, leO onto Old Bridge Rd\n9:00 am LeO onto Main St\, bare right onto Commonwealth Ave.\n9:30 am Cross Route 2 at Rotary\, conOnue onto Barre?’s Mill Rd.\n10:00 am Proceed to Honorable Col. Barre?’s Home\n10:30 am Depart Barre?’s Home and conOnue on Barre?’s Mill Rd.\n11:00 am Arrive at North Bridge Visitor Center\n11:30 am Ceremonies on North Bridge Honoring the Brave Souls of our Ancestors\n12:00 noon Return to Wayside Inn for Flag Ceremony\n12:30 pm Flag Changing Ceremony over Front Door of the Wayside Inn \n \nMark your calendar today so you don’ miss the next Sudbury March to Concord onPatriots’ Day beginning at the First Parish Church in Wayland\, MA. \nTags: Sudbury March to Concord\, Sudbury Minutemen March to Concord\, March to Concord\, Patriots Day Events \nView other Patriots Day Reenactments and Other Events\nView other Revolutionary War Reenactments & Other Events
URL:https://www.crazycrow.com/site/event/sudbury-march-to-concord/
LOCATION:First Parish In Wayland\, 50 Cochituate Road\, Wayland\, MA\, 01778\, United States
CATEGORIES:0-Regular Recurranace,American Revolutionary War Reenactment,Living History Events,Patriots Day
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.crazycrow.com/site/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/Sudbury-March-to-Concord-03-850x567.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Sudbury Companies of Militia and Minute":MAILTO:colonel@sudburyminutemen.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200418
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200420
DTSTAMP:20190521T175028Z
CREATED:20170221T120220Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190521T175028Z
UID:23640-1587168000-1587340799@www.crazycrow.com
SUMMARY:Fort Taylor Living History Weekend
DESCRIPTION:Fort Taylor Living History Weekend\n\nRate This Event\n \n                                    \n                                        \n                                        \n                                        \n                                        \n                                    \nCelebrate Florida’s rich history at Fort Taylor Living History Weekend on the third Saturday and Sunday of each month at Historic Fort Taylor\, America’s Southernmost Civil War Fortress in Key West\, Florida. Join our re-enactors as they set up tents\, clean their weapons and fire up the blacksmith shop. Climb the circular stairways and experience the harbor view just as the soldiers did in 1861. Walk down our cannon row and touch the actual cannons used to protect this Union stronghold. Tours will be available and public interaction is strongly recommended. Re-enactor participation varies by weekend and weather conditions. \nYear Round\nOn the third weekend (Saturday and Sunday) of each of month\, Fort Taylor Living History Weekend offers you the opportunity to experience life in the fort as it was during the Civil War. \nLocation\nFort Zachary Taylor Historic State Park\n601 Howard England Way\nKey West\, FL 33040 \nMore Information: Kevin Bowes\, kevin.bowes@dep.state.fl.us (305) 292-6850 \nThe park is open from 8:00 a.m. until sundown\, 365 days a year. The fort closes at 5:00 p.m. \nAdmission Fees:\n$6.00* per vehicle. Limit 2-8 people per vehicle.\n$2.00* Pedestrians\, bicyclists\, extra passengers\, passengers in vehicle with holder of Annual Individual Entrance Pass.\n$4.00* Single-occupant vehicle or motorcycle.\n* Plus $.50 per person Monroe County Surcharge. \nHistory of Fort Zachary Taylor Historic State Park\nSpanish explorers first surveyed the island of Key West in 1513. After the Florida territory was transferred to the U.S.\, the Navy established a small depot here in 1822 to rid the area of pirates. Fishing\, salvaging wrecked ships and cigar manufacturing became the driving economic forces behind the island’s growth making Key West the richest city in Florida in the 1890s. The U.S. Army began construction of Fort Taylor\, named for President Zachary Taylor\, in 1845. With secession and the beginning of war in 1861\, Fort Taylor remained under federal control — one of only three fortresses in Florida to do so — and served as the headquarters for the Federal Navy’s East Gulf Coast Blockading Squadron staying on ‘active duty’ status through 1947. Today\, the fort is a National Historic Landmark containing the largest cache of Civil War-era seacoast cannons in the U.S. \nCannon and Arches\nUnion troops took control of Fort Zachary Taylor early in the Civil War and maintained it through the duration of the war. They made use of the fort’s impressive artillery\, including 10-inch Rodman and Columbiad cannons to detain blockade-running ships seeking to supply the Confederacy. In 1968\, a large supply of Civil War-era guns and ammunition were discovered in the Fort’s buried arsenal. In fact\, Fort Zachary Taylor held the largest collection of Civil War-era cannons in the United States. \nFort Moat\nSoon after the park opened to the public\, a contractor began the process of digging a moat around the fortress. There were two reasons for the project. One was to prevent easy entry into the structure. The other was to give the illusion of the fort in its early days\, surrounded by water. The end result was an attractive division between the fort and the beach and sea beyond. \nMark your calendar today so you don’t miss the next Fort Taylor Living History Weekend on the third Saturday and Sunday of each month at Historic Fort Taylor in Key West\, Florida. \nTags: Fort Taylor Living History Weekend\, Fort Zachary Taylor Living History Weekend\, Ft Taylor Living History Weekend \nView other Civil War Reenactments & Other Events
URL:https://www.crazycrow.com/site/event/fort-taylor-living-history-weekend-2017-08-19-2020-04-18/
LOCATION:Fort Zachary Taylor Historic State Park\, 601 Howard England Way\, Key West\, FL\, 33040\, United States
CATEGORIES:0-Regular Recurranace,American Civil War Reenactment,Historic American Forts,Living History Events,Same week in month
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.crazycrow.com/site/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/Fort-Taylor-Living-History-Weekend-03-850x567.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200401
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200406
DTSTAMP:20200129T214319Z
CREATED:20160807T153731Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200129T214319Z
UID:7042-1585699200-1586131199@www.crazycrow.com
SUMMARY:Fur Trade Rendezvous at Fort Washita
DESCRIPTION:2020 Fur Trade Rendezvous at Fort Washita\n\nRate This Event\n \n                                    \n                                        \n                                        \n                                        \n                                        \n                                    \nStep back in time at the 29th Annual Fur Trade Rendezvous at Fort Washita on April 1-5\, 2020 at Fort Washita in Durant\, Oklahoma. Since 1981\, Fur Trade Rendezvous at Fort Washita features a Living History Festival of America’s early explorers\, trappers and traders. For a full week you can experience the commerce of the wild frontier as reenactors take visitors back to the time of fur trappers and traders at the Fur Trade Era Rendezvous\, held at the Fort Washita Historic Site near Durant. Learn about the lifestyle of the time period between 1820 and 1850 through high-spirited competitions\, educational stations and much more. \n\nFur Trade Rendezvous at Fort Washita\nThe Fur Trade Rendezvous at Fort Washita will include instructive programs in customs\, survival skills and lifestyles of the period. Living history interpreters will showcase historical music\, and food vendors will be on site. \n“School Days” are scheduled for Thursday and Friday. Students can visit the camps where reenactors will explain life on the frontier in the early nineteenth century. Visit Fort Washita and experience the sights\, sounds and smells of history. There is no entrance fee. \nBring your cameras and capture an era of the past to take home with you. Enjoy a picnic lunch with family and friends\, or choose from a variety of modern food vendors available. Wednesday through Friday attractions at the Fur Trade Rendezvous at Fort Washita are historically geared toward school children. \nFor more information\nEmail: marissa.taylor@chickasaw.net or tommie.postoak@chickasaw.net; Call 580-924-6502. \nLocation\nFort Washita Hitoric Site\n3348 State Rd. 199\nDurant\, OK 74701\n(580) 924-6502 \nAbout Fort Washita\nFort Washita was built in 1842 as the southwestern-most military post of the United States. The mission of Fort Washita was to maintain peace for the Chickasaw and Choctaw Nations within their new lands\, pursuant to treaty obligations. There were many outside threats to the new home of the Chickasaw people\, including attacks by Republic of Texas militia\, interference by unscrupulous intruders\, constant raids by Plains tribes\, the presence of traders and trappers\, and unsettled scores with some of the Plains tribes due to disputes concerning hunting grounds in the Homeland. Fort Washita operated as a United States military post until the start of the Civil War in 1861. It was then occupied by Confederate forces through 1865. The fort was almost entirely destroyed by the Confederates as they fled at the end of the Civil War. \nLearn MoreAfter the war\, the fort was granted to the Chickasaw Nation and later the Dawes Commission allotted the fort and surrounding land to the Charles and Abbie Davis Colbert family. \nThe Oklahoma Historical Society acquired Fort Washita in 1962 and restored it as a historic site and museum. In 2016\, the Chickasaw Nation partnered with the Oklahoma Historical Society to assume responsibility and management of Fort Washita. The site is listed on the National Register of Historic Places and is designed as a National Historic Landmark. \nVisitors to Fort Washita can tour restored structures\, witness Civil War reenactments and take part in the yearly Fur Trade Era Rendezvous to experience what life was like before and during the Civil War. Other events throughout the year include storytelling\, outdoor movies and special seasonal and holiday events that the whole family can enjoy.\n \nMark your calendar today so you don’t miss the next Fur Trade Rendezvous at Fort Washita at Fort Wichita in Durant\, Oklahoma. \nTags: Fur Trade Rendezvous at Fort Washita\, Fort Washita Fur Trade Rendezvous\, Oklahoma Mountain Man Rendezvous\, Oklahoma Rendezvous \nView Oklahoma Mountain Man Rendezvous\, Encampments & Related Events
URL:https://www.crazycrow.com/site/event/fur-trade-rendezvous-at-fort-washita/
LOCATION:Fort Washita\, 3348 State Rd. 199\, Durant\, OK\, 74701\, United States
CATEGORIES:0-Regular Recurranace,Living History Events,Mountain Man Rendezvous,Oklahoma Rendezvous,Same week in month
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.crazycrow.com/site/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/Fur-Trade-Rendezvous-a-Fort-Washita-01-850x567.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200328
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200330
DTSTAMP:20190410T020656Z
CREATED:20170103T174538Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190410T020656Z
UID:10137-1585353600-1585526399@www.crazycrow.com
SUMMARY:Goliad Massacre Reenactment and Living History Program
DESCRIPTION:2020 Goliad Massacre Reenactment and Living History Program\n\nRate This Event\n \n                                    \n                                        \n                                        \n                                        \n                                        \n                                    \nJoin us for the 35th Annual Goliad Massacre Reenactment and Living History Program on March 28-29\, 2019 at Presidio La Bahia in Goliad\, Texas where Reenactors and Living Historians from across Texas gather to recreate the final days of Colonel Fannin’s command. Stroll through the camps of both the Mexican and Texian armies and visit with reenactors as they go about their daily activities. The reenactors who you will see during the reenactments over the weekend set up camp within the Presidio with period tents\, equipment and clothing. \n\nGoliad Massacre Reenactment and Living History Program\nThe reenactors work hard to make the experience genuine for visitors. You may see a gunsmith with period guns on display\, young girls instructing crowds on animal pelts\, or meals cooking in large cast iron pots over open fires.\nGrab a front row seat for one of the Goliad Massacre Reenactment battles that take place in front of Presidio La Bahia. Stay after the battle and immerse yourself in the turbulent times surrounding Colonel Fannin and his men with the candlelight tours Saturday evening. Be sure to come back out Sunday and witness a recreation of the final days of Fannin’s men followed by a memorial at the Fannin Monument. \nAdmission Fee\nAdmission is $4 for adults\, $3.50 for seniors\, $1 for children 6-11\, under 6 are free. Candlelight Tour tickets are an additional $2 and must be purchased the day of the event. \nLocation\nPresidio La Bahia\n108 Park Rd 6\nGoliad\, TX 77963 \nFor More Information\nPresidio La Bahia: Call (361) 645-3752; Email presidiolabahiainfo@gmail.com\nCrossroads of Texas Living History Asso. David Vickers djvickers@hotmail.com \nCamping\nIf staying for both days\, camping at Goliad State Park adds to the experience of the Goliad Massacre Reenactment and Living History Program. It is a short walk and an even shorter bike ride to the Presidio. The wildflowers are beautiful this time of year. The park campground includes full hook-ups for campers\, as well as tent camping areas. There are bathrooms and showers throughout the Park. Reserve your spot early – the Goliad Massacre Reenactment and Living History Program is very popular and well-attended! \nGoliad Massacre Reenactment and Living History Program Mini Gallery\n\n \nSchedule Of Events\nSATURDAY\n9:00 AM GATES OPEN\n10:00 AM INFANTRY/CAVALRY & ARTILLERY SKIRMISH in front of Presidio La Bahia\n10:30 AM LIVING HISTORY inside the walls of Presidio La Bahia\n11:00 AM PRESENTATION IN OUR LADY OF LORETO CHAPEL TBA\n12:00 PM SHOWING OF VIDEO:“Presidio La Bahia And Its Place In The History of Texas”\n1:00 PM CAVALRY SKIRMISH in front of Presidio La Bahia\n2:00 PM LIVING HISTORY inside the walls of Presidio La Bahia\n3:00 PM BATTLE OF COLETO CREEK in front of Presidio La Bahia\n4:00 PM LIVING HISTORY inside the walls of Presidio La Bahia\n5:00 PM GATES CLOSE\n6:30-9:00 PM CANDLELIGHT TOUR—ENTER AT SOUTH GATE inside the walls of Presidio La Bahia \nSunday\n9:00 AM GATES OPEN\n9:30 AM “ISAAC HAMILTON” PORTRAYAL inside the walls of Presidio La Bahia\n10:00 AM DEATH MARCH FROM CHAPEL TO MASSACRE SITE\nFollowed by: “ISAAC HAMILTON” PORTRAYAL inside the walls of Presidio La Bahia\nFollowed by: EXECUTION OF COL. FANNIN & THE OTHER TEXIANS inside the walls of Presidio La Bahia\n11:30 AM MEMORIAL SERVICE BEGINS IN THE CHAPEL\, PROCESSES TO THE ANGEL OF GOLIAD PLAZA WITH THE PROCESSION CONTINUING TO THE FANNIN MONUMENT FOR THE CONCLUSION OF THE MEMORIAL SERVICE \n\nBattle of Coleto Creek Reenactment\nBattle of Coleto Creek Reenactment (Saturday 3:00 p.m.\nJames Fannin surrenders to General Urea the second morning of battle after Urrea’s troops have been reinforced with heavy artillery. Fannin and his troops are marched back to the Presidio; those too wounded to walk are left on the prairie and brought back to the Presidio after two or three days. Though the real (Battle of Coleto Creek took place many miles away\, it’s reenacted in front of the Presidio for convenience. \nPresidio La Bahia Candlelight Tour (Saturday 6:30 p.m. – 9:00 p.m.\nA limited number of tickets are sold for the Candlelight Tour\, and they typically sell out on Saturday morning. Candlelight Tours take place inside the Presidio La Bahia on Saturday night. Your tour lets you silently bear witness to historical scenes\, acted out in front of you by the reenactors themselves. You see the aftermath of the battles you witnessed during the day\, and you experience the conflict leading up to the Goliad Massacre\, which you will see on Sunday morning. \nDeath March From Chapel To Actual Massacre Site (Sunday 10:00 a.m.)\nMeet outside the Presidio Chapel with hundreds of others\, and follow the Texian prisoners and their Mexican captors on a march to the actual massacre site. There\, the Goliad Massacre is reenacted as you stand in reverent silence. Followed by Memorial Service that starts in chapel\, then a pocession to the Fannin Monument for the conclusion of the memorial service. \nAbout the Goliad Massacre\nAround 6:00 a.m. on Palm Sunday\, March 27\, 1836\, after being held captive for one week\, Colonel Fannin’s men were told to gather up their things. They thought that they were going to the Port of Copano and then on to New Orleans. They were happy and singing. They knew that Colonel Fannin had returned from the Port of Copano the previous day. What they didn’t know was that at 7:00 p.m. the pervious evening\, Colonel Portilla had received word directly from General Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna to execute the men. About an hour after Portilla received the excution order from Santa Anna\, he received another order from General Urrea to “Treat the prisoners with consideration\, particularly their leader\, Fannin\, and to employ them in rebuilding Goliad.” \n \nMark your calendar today so you won’t miss the next Goliad Massacre Reenactment and Living History Program\, and don’t forget that early camping reservation. \nTags: Goliad Massacre Reenactment and Living History Program Goliad Massacre Reenactment\, Goliad Massacre Living History Program\, Texas Revolution\, Battle of Coleto Creek Reenactment \nView Other Texas Revolution Events\nView Other Living History Events
URL:https://www.crazycrow.com/site/event/goliad-massacre-reenactment-living-history-program/
LOCATION:Presidio La Bahia\, 108 Park Rd 6\, Goliad\, TX\, 77963\, United States
CATEGORIES:Living History Events,Texas Revolution Events,US Historic Reenactor Events
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.crazycrow.com/site/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/Goliad-Massacre-Reenactment-01b-1350x900.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200321
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200323
DTSTAMP:20190521T175017Z
CREATED:20170221T120220Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190521T175017Z
UID:23036-1584748800-1584921599@www.crazycrow.com
SUMMARY:Fort Taylor Living History Weekend
DESCRIPTION:Fort Taylor Living History Weekend\n\nRate This Event\n \n                                    \n                                        \n                                        \n                                        \n                                        \n                                    \nCelebrate Florida’s rich history at Fort Taylor Living History Weekend on the third Saturday and Sunday of each month at Historic Fort Taylor\, America’s Southernmost Civil War Fortress in Key West\, Florida. Join our re-enactors as they set up tents\, clean their weapons and fire up the blacksmith shop. Climb the circular stairways and experience the harbor view just as the soldiers did in 1861. Walk down our cannon row and touch the actual cannons used to protect this Union stronghold. Tours will be available and public interaction is strongly recommended. Re-enactor participation varies by weekend and weather conditions. \nYear Round\nOn the third weekend (Saturday and Sunday) of each of month\, Fort Taylor Living History Weekend offers you the opportunity to experience life in the fort as it was during the Civil War. \nLocation\nFort Zachary Taylor Historic State Park\n601 Howard England Way\nKey West\, FL 33040 \nMore Information: Kevin Bowes\, kevin.bowes@dep.state.fl.us (305) 292-6850 \nThe park is open from 8:00 a.m. until sundown\, 365 days a year. The fort closes at 5:00 p.m. \nAdmission Fees:\n$6.00* per vehicle. Limit 2-8 people per vehicle.\n$2.00* Pedestrians\, bicyclists\, extra passengers\, passengers in vehicle with holder of Annual Individual Entrance Pass.\n$4.00* Single-occupant vehicle or motorcycle.\n* Plus $.50 per person Monroe County Surcharge. \nHistory of Fort Zachary Taylor Historic State Park\nSpanish explorers first surveyed the island of Key West in 1513. After the Florida territory was transferred to the U.S.\, the Navy established a small depot here in 1822 to rid the area of pirates. Fishing\, salvaging wrecked ships and cigar manufacturing became the driving economic forces behind the island’s growth making Key West the richest city in Florida in the 1890s. The U.S. Army began construction of Fort Taylor\, named for President Zachary Taylor\, in 1845. With secession and the beginning of war in 1861\, Fort Taylor remained under federal control — one of only three fortresses in Florida to do so — and served as the headquarters for the Federal Navy’s East Gulf Coast Blockading Squadron staying on ‘active duty’ status through 1947. Today\, the fort is a National Historic Landmark containing the largest cache of Civil War-era seacoast cannons in the U.S. \nCannon and Arches\nUnion troops took control of Fort Zachary Taylor early in the Civil War and maintained it through the duration of the war. They made use of the fort’s impressive artillery\, including 10-inch Rodman and Columbiad cannons to detain blockade-running ships seeking to supply the Confederacy. In 1968\, a large supply of Civil War-era guns and ammunition were discovered in the Fort’s buried arsenal. In fact\, Fort Zachary Taylor held the largest collection of Civil War-era cannons in the United States. \nFort Moat\nSoon after the park opened to the public\, a contractor began the process of digging a moat around the fortress. There were two reasons for the project. One was to prevent easy entry into the structure. The other was to give the illusion of the fort in its early days\, surrounded by water. The end result was an attractive division between the fort and the beach and sea beyond. \nMark your calendar today so you don’t miss the next Fort Taylor Living History Weekend on the third Saturday and Sunday of each month at Historic Fort Taylor in Key West\, Florida. \nTags: Fort Taylor Living History Weekend\, Fort Zachary Taylor Living History Weekend\, Ft Taylor Living History Weekend \nView other Civil War Reenactments & Other Events
URL:https://www.crazycrow.com/site/event/fort-taylor-living-history-weekend-2017-08-19-2020-03-21/
LOCATION:Fort Zachary Taylor Historic State Park\, 601 Howard England Way\, Key West\, FL\, 33040\, United States
CATEGORIES:0-Regular Recurranace,American Civil War Reenactment,Historic American Forts,Living History Events,Same week in month
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.crazycrow.com/site/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/Fort-Taylor-Living-History-Weekend-03-850x567.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200314
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200316
DTSTAMP:20190403T112624Z
CREATED:20170127T120040Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190403T112624Z
UID:10974-1584144000-1584316799@www.crazycrow.com
SUMMARY:New Ulm Trade Fair and Living History Event
DESCRIPTION:2020 New Ulm Trade Fair and Living History Event\n\nRate This Event\n \n                                    \n                                        \n                                        \n                                        \n                                        \n                                    \nJoin us for the 39th Annual New Ulm Trade Fair and Living History Event on March 14-15\, 2020 at the Turner Hall in New Ulm\, Minnesota. Minnesota’s longest running history trade fair is considered by many to be the “Season Opener” of the Midwest living history season. Held at the historic Turner Hall in New Ulm\, MN this event is constantly striving to provide the best products and experience for it’s participants. \nArea residents will have an opportunity to step into the past Saturday at the annual New Ulm Trade Fair and Living History Event at Turner Hall. The event\, which specializes in 1750s to 1830s products\, features over 100 tables and 80 vendors throughout the day. New Ulm Trade Fair and Living History Event puts history on display with quality American Fur Trade Era Trade Goods and Demonstrations. \nHours\nSaturday 9:00 am – 5:00 pm\nSunday 9:00 am – 3:00 pm \nAdmission\nAdults $5.00\nChildren under 5 are Free\n2-Day Medallions: $8.00 \nThe products being offered at the New Ulm Trade Fair and Living History Event ranged from turtle shells and carved bones to pioneer clothing to musket guns\, knives and even tomahawks. All the vendors dressed in period dress ranging from Civil War soldier garb to pioneers to fur traders. The event draws vendors from all over the Midwest area. \nThe event is one of the longest running trade fairs in the Midwest. The fair is a simple\, fun event that people have been enjoying for a long time. Do you have historic items for sale? If you are a fur trade era vendor or just a casual seller of hand made trade goods from the fur trade era you should consider a table at the New Ulm Trade Fair and Living History Event. \nMark your calendar today so you won’t miss the next New Ulm Trade Fair and Living History Event in New Ulm\, Minnesota.\nTags: New Ulm Trade Fair and Living History Event\, New Ulm Trade Fair\, New Ulm Trade Faire\, New Ulm Market Fair New Ulm Living History Event \nView other Market Fair & Trade Fair Events
URL:https://www.crazycrow.com/site/event/new-ulm-trade-fair-and-living-history-event/
LOCATION:Turner Hall\, 102 S State Street\, New Ulm\, MN\, 56073\, United States
CATEGORIES:Living History Events,Market Fair
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.crazycrow.com/site/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/New-Ulm-Trade-Fair-and-Living-History-Event-02-850x567.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Northern Rifleman LLC":MAILTO:memery@newulmtradefair.com
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200314
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200316
DTSTAMP:20200114T223634Z
CREATED:20170218T191728Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200114T223634Z
UID:11928-1584144000-1584316799@www.crazycrow.com
SUMMARY:Battle of Guilford Courthouse Reenactment
DESCRIPTION:2020 Battle of Guilford Courthouse Reenactment\n\nRate This Event\n \n                                    \n                                        \n                                        \n                                        \n                                        \n                                    \nCommemorate the 238th Anniversary Battle of Guilford Courthouse Reenactment on March 14-15\, 2020 at Greensboro Country Park in Greensboro\, North Carolina. Over 300 Revolutionary War reenactors from across the country will muster for the Battle of Guilford Courthouse Reenactment and the scheduled events take place from 8:30 AM to 5:00 PM each day. Other events related to the commenoration of the battle will be held at Guilford Courthouse National Military Park and the Colonial Heritage Center. \n\nBattle of Guilford Courthouse Reenactment\nThe Battle of Guilford Courthouse Reenactment is held partly on the Greensboro City Park\, which is next to Guilford Courthouse Military Park. — at Guilford Courthouse National Military Park. At 10:00 AM on Saturday\, Guilford Courthouse National Military Park will honor those who fought on these grounds in a ceremony at the Nathanael Greene Monument. The program will feature Revolutionary War music performed by the Guilford Courthouse Fife & Drum Corps\, a wreath-laying ceremony\, and a volley of flintlock musket fire. Other weekend events include a variety of interpretive programs demonstrating military life\, colonial life-ways\, 18th century dancing\, musical performances by the Guilford Courthouse Fife and Drum\, firearms demonstrations\, and guided walks of the battlefield. There will also be a dedication to the new Crown Forces Monument at 11:00 AM on Sunday. All three parks will have military encampments. \nDo you love excitement\, energy\, and entertainment? If you do\, you should attend the Battle of Guilford Courthouse Reenactment. Or even become a member of a reenactment group which participates in the event. Each year on the weekend nearest the anniversary of the battle\, March 15\, 1781\, the Battle of Guilford Courthouse Reenactment attracts hundreds of participants and thousands of onlookers to see a live recreation of the original battle. From the opening cannon fusillades to the last solitary musket shot\, there is a whirl of intense activity as the American and British troops fire\, advance\, attach bayonets\, charge\, retreat\, reload and fire again amid the swirling smoke and acrid odor of gunpowder.\nLike any great story\, even if you know the ending\, it is still captivating to see the action that brings you to the climax. But this event recreates a story of real life and death. Not only of the men who fought and died on this hallowed ground\, but also of the end of an old way of life and the beginning of a new nation. \nAll activities are free to the public.\nThe Battle of Guilford Courthouse will be reenacted at 2:00 PM in Greensboro Country Park both Saturday and Sunday. Parking for the reenactment is available at Jaycee Park located at 3899 Jaycee Park Drive\, Greensboro\, NC 27455. \nBattle of Guilford Courthouse Reenactment Mini-Gallery\n\n \nLocation (Battle Reenactment)\nGuilford Courthouse National Military Park\n2332 New Garden Road\nGreensboro\, NC 27410\nPhone: (336) 288-1776 \nAbout the Battle of Guilford Courthouse\nOn March 15\, 1781. the largest\, most hotly-contested battle of the Revolutionary War’s Southern Campaign was fought at the small North Carolina backcounty hamlet of Guilford Courthouse. Major General Nathanael Greene\, defending the ground at Guilford Courthouse with an army of almost 4\,500 American militia and Continentals\, was tactically defeated by a smaller British army of about 1\,900 veteran regulars and German allies commanded by Lord Charles Cornwallis. After 2-1/2 hours of intense and often brutal fighting\, Cornwallis forced his opponent to withdraw from the field. Greene’s retreat preserved the strength of his army\, but Cornwallis’s frail victory was won at the cost of over 25% of his army. \nGuilford Courthouse proved to be the highwater mark of British military operations in the Revolutionary War. Weakened in his campaign against Greene\, Cornwallis abandoned the Carolinas hoping for success in Virginia. At Yorktown\, seven months after his victory at Guilford Courthouse\, Lord Cornwallis would surrender to the combined American and French forces under General George Washington. \nFor More Information: \nGuilford Battleground Company patriots@guilfordbattlegroundcompany.org\nReenactor Information: carlivar@yahoo.com \nMark your calendar today so you don’t miss the next Battle of Guilford Courthouse Reenactment in Greensboro\, North Carolina. \n \nTags: Battle of Guilford Courthouse Reenactment\, Revolutionary War Reenactment\, Guilford Courthouse Battle Reenactment \nView other Revolutionary War Reenactments & Other Events
URL:https://www.crazycrow.com/site/event/battle-of-guilford-courthouse-reenactment/
LOCATION:Greensboro Country Park\, 3905 Nathanael Green Drive\, Greensboro\, NC\, 27455\, United States
CATEGORIES:American Revolutionary War Reenactment,Battle Reenactments & Encampments,Fife & Drum Corps Events,Living History Events,US Historic Reenactor Events
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.crazycrow.com/site/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/Battle-of-Guilford-Courthouse-Reenactment-07-850x567.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Guilford Battleground Company":MAILTO:patriots@guilfordbattlegroundcompany.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200307
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200309
DTSTAMP:20190313T170610Z
CREATED:20170222T163230Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190313T170610Z
UID:12124-1583539200-1583711999@www.crazycrow.com
SUMMARY:St Lawrence Valley Primitive Snowshoe Biathlon
DESCRIPTION:2020 St Lawrence Valley Primitive Snowshoe Biathlon\n\nRate This Event\n \n                                    \n                                        \n                                        \n                                        \n                                        \n                                    \nJoin us for the St Lawrence Valley Primitive Snowshoe Biathlon on March 7-8\, 2020 at the St Lawrence Valley Sportsman’s Club in Ogdensburg\, New York. If you’re suffering from cabin fever and are up for a challenge\, come to the St Lawrence Valley Primitive Snowshoe Biathlon and match your black powder shooting and snowshoeing skills against some of the toughest competitors in the North East – or – take it a little slower as a woods walk. \nParticipants are encouraged to wear historic clothes covering 1750 to 1812. Fort de la Présentation was one of a handful of French colonial forts in New York State. Forsyth’s Rifles from Ogdensburg re-enacts a U.S. Army regiment posted in Northern New York during the War of 1812; from the French and Indian War period\, they portray a unit of French marines. \nThose hardy souls participating in the Snowshoe Biathlon will run a one and a half mile course\, stopping at each of 5 stations and firing 2 shots; at the 6th and final station\, there’s an optional tomahawk throw. Runners or woods walkers using a traditional muzzleloader will complete the course on traditional wood-framed snowshoes. \nThree Divisions: Primitive Rifle\, Primitive Smoothbore and Modern In-Line. Competitors in the primitive divisions must run the course on traditional\, wooden snowshoes\, while in-line shooters have the option of using wooden or modern snowshoes. Snowshoes must be carried if there is light snow cover. \nThe St. Lawrence Valley Primitive Snowshoe Biathlon is modeled after the popular Smugglers’ Notch Primitive Biathlon and is one of several biathlons scheduled across New York and New England each year. \nA modern class will be open to shooters using in-line muzzleloaders and modern snowshoes. All shooters must use firearms with open sights. \nThe St Lawrence Valley Primitive Snowshoe Biathlon is sponsored by the Fort La Présentation Association and Forsyth’s Rifles. \nHours: Saturday & Sunday: 10:00 AM – 2:00PM. \nLocation\nSt Lawrence Valley Sportsman’s Club\n25 Sportsman’s Club Road\nOgdensburg\, NY 13669 \nFor More Information: Fred Hanss\, Chairman: Email fhanss@twcny.rr.com \nWhat is a Primitive Snowshoe Biathlon?\nPrimitive Snowshoe Biathlons\, unlike modern snowshoe biathlons with olympic-style target rifles and cross-country skis\, involve the use of muzzleloading rifles and snowshoes. Eligibility for overall prizes is limited to single-barrel traditional style muzzleloaders – no in-lines or optical sights – and traditional wood-framed snowshoes\, although modern equipment users are welcome to participate in separate competition classes. In the primitive spirit of the event\, and in the interest of fairness\, the use of round-ball ammunition is requested. Period dress is definitely encouraged\, though not required. \n \nMark your calendar today so you don’t miss the next St Lawrence Valley Primitive Snowshoe Biathlon the first weekend in March in Ogdensburg\, New York. \nTags: St Lawrence Valley Primitive Snowshoe Biathlon\, Primitive Snowshoe Biathlon \nView other Primitive Snowshoe Biathlons & Related Events
URL:https://www.crazycrow.com/site/event/st-lawrence-valley-primitive-snowshoe-biathlon/
LOCATION:St Lawrence Valley Sportsmens Club\, 25 Sports Club Road\, Ogdensburg\, NY\, 13669\, United States
CATEGORIES:0-Regular Recurranace,Living History Events,Primitive Snowshoe Biathlons,Same week in month,War of 1812
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.crazycrow.com/site/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/St-Lawrence-Valley-Primitive-Snowshoe-Biathlon-01-850x567.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Fort La Presentation Association":MAILTO:barbokeefe3@gmail.com
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200222
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200224
DTSTAMP:20190311T112519Z
CREATED:20170222T143113Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190311T112519Z
UID:12115-1582329600-1582502399@www.crazycrow.com
SUMMARY:Battle of Ogdensburg Reenactment
DESCRIPTION:2020 Battle of Ogdensburg Reenactment\n\nRate This Event\n \n                                    \n                                        \n                                        \n                                        \n                                        \n                                    \nCannon and musket fire will mark the Battle of Ogdensburg Reenactment on February 22-23\, 2020 at the former site of Fort De La Peesentation in Ogdensburg\, New York. Sponsored by Forsythe’s Rifles\, Prescott and Ogdensburg will commemorate the War of 1812 Battle of Ogdensburg with activities in both communities over the weekend. This will be an expanded re-enactment\, as thrilling as the original battle\, only safer. On Saturday afternoon\, the Battle of Ogdensburg Reenactment will take place along the streets\, following a similar route of the Anglo-Canadian army in 1813 as it fought toward the fort on Lighthouse Point. \n\nBattle of Ogdensburg Reenactment\nWatch as the British once again charge down the streets of Ogdensburg as militia and regular soldiers commanded by Major Benjamin Forsyth stage their last and ultimately failed attempt to repel the redcoats from the city. \nWearing full winter gear and braving the bitter cold\, the 7/60th will participate in the annual Battle of Ogdensburg Reenactment event by fighting on the same ground contested two centuries ago. For two nights the group will be quartered in the barracks at Fort Wellington National Historic Site in Prescott\, Ontario\, and will cross the St. Lawrence River (albeit by car and bridge) during the days to participate in the battles. \nThe first battle reenactment will be held in the streets of downtown Ogdensburg with a special emphasis on the last stand of St. Lawrence County Sheriff Joseph York\, a member of the local militia who attempted to single-handedly repel the British at the intersection of State and Ford streets. When the British spotted Mr. York alone in the streets\, their officers commanded the soldiers not to fire. Regarding him as “too brave to kill\,” the British captured him instead. The rest of the militia was either killed\, captured or melted back into the community. \nOn Sunday the action will move to Lighthouse Point\, where a fierce battle was fought that forced troops commanded by Major Forsyth to retreat to Sackets Harbor. The battle at Lighthouse Point saw hundreds of British soldiers cross the frozen St. Lawrence River from Prescott\, Ontario\, to surround the Americans. \nBesides the battles there will be a number of other activities for children and adults during the reenactment. \nSchedule (Tentative) \nSaturday – The return of the invasion of the British to Ogdensburg in 1813. \n10:00 am to 4:00 pm – Open house at the AmVets Lodge\, 215 Ford Street featuring historical displays\, lectures\, and refreshments. \n11:00 am War of 1812 presentation \n1:30 pm – Battle Reenactment: Downtown Ogdensburg will once again erupt with musket and cannon fire at the reenactment of the Battle of Ogdensburg on the very places it was fought 200+ years ago. \n3:00 pm – English country dance demonstration at the National Guard Armory. \n7:30 pm – If you enjoyed the demonstration get into the action at the\, English country dance Winter Ball at the Am-Vets on Ford Street. \nSunday\n10:30 am – Wreath laying at Ogdensburg cemetery. \n1:30 pm – Battle Reenactment: Conclusive reenactment of the Battle of Ogdensburg at Van Reselaer Point (Lighthouse Point) the former site of Fort De La Peesentation\, also known as Fort Oswegatchie. \nLocation\nFort de La Présentation\n323 Washington Street\nOgdensburg\, NY 13669 \nFor more information: tcryderman1@twcny.rr.com \nAbout the Battle of Ogdensburg\nOn 22 February 1813 the British garrison of Prescott\, Upper Canada launched a surprise assault across the frozen St. Lawrence River against the opposite American post at Ogdensburg\, New York. Catching the Americans unprepared by first pretending to drill upon the ice (a frequent practice in winter)\, the mixed force of British regulars and Canadian militia achieved a decisive victory\, eliminating the American military presence in the town and the threat they posed to the British supply route along the St. Lawrence since the beginning of the War of 1812. \nMark your calendar today so you don’t miss the next Battle of Ogdensburg Reenactment in Ogdensburg\, New York. \nTags: Battle of Ogdensburg Reenactment\, War of 1812 Reenactment\, Battle of Ogdensburg Reenactment \nView other War of 1812 Encampments & Reenactments
URL:https://www.crazycrow.com/site/event/battle-of-ogdensburg-reenactment/
LOCATION:Downtown Ogdensburg\, 323 Washington Street\, Ogdensburg\, NY\, 13669\, United States
CATEGORIES:0-Regular Recurranace,Battle Reenactments & Encampments,Living History Events,Same week in month,War of 1812
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.crazycrow.com/site/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/Battle-of-Ogdensburg-Reenactment-02-850x567.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Forsyths Rifles Inc":MAILTO:tcryderman1@twcny.rr.com
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200215
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200217
DTSTAMP:20190521T175016Z
CREATED:20170221T120220Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190521T175016Z
UID:22713-1581724800-1581897599@www.crazycrow.com
SUMMARY:Fort Taylor Living History Weekend
DESCRIPTION:Fort Taylor Living History Weekend\n\nRate This Event\n \n                                    \n                                        \n                                        \n                                        \n                                        \n                                    \nCelebrate Florida’s rich history at Fort Taylor Living History Weekend on the third Saturday and Sunday of each month at Historic Fort Taylor\, America’s Southernmost Civil War Fortress in Key West\, Florida. Join our re-enactors as they set up tents\, clean their weapons and fire up the blacksmith shop. Climb the circular stairways and experience the harbor view just as the soldiers did in 1861. Walk down our cannon row and touch the actual cannons used to protect this Union stronghold. Tours will be available and public interaction is strongly recommended. Re-enactor participation varies by weekend and weather conditions. \nYear Round\nOn the third weekend (Saturday and Sunday) of each of month\, Fort Taylor Living History Weekend offers you the opportunity to experience life in the fort as it was during the Civil War. \nLocation\nFort Zachary Taylor Historic State Park\n601 Howard England Way\nKey West\, FL 33040 \nMore Information: Kevin Bowes\, kevin.bowes@dep.state.fl.us (305) 292-6850 \nThe park is open from 8:00 a.m. until sundown\, 365 days a year. The fort closes at 5:00 p.m. \nAdmission Fees:\n$6.00* per vehicle. Limit 2-8 people per vehicle.\n$2.00* Pedestrians\, bicyclists\, extra passengers\, passengers in vehicle with holder of Annual Individual Entrance Pass.\n$4.00* Single-occupant vehicle or motorcycle.\n* Plus $.50 per person Monroe County Surcharge. \nHistory of Fort Zachary Taylor Historic State Park\nSpanish explorers first surveyed the island of Key West in 1513. After the Florida territory was transferred to the U.S.\, the Navy established a small depot here in 1822 to rid the area of pirates. Fishing\, salvaging wrecked ships and cigar manufacturing became the driving economic forces behind the island’s growth making Key West the richest city in Florida in the 1890s. The U.S. Army began construction of Fort Taylor\, named for President Zachary Taylor\, in 1845. With secession and the beginning of war in 1861\, Fort Taylor remained under federal control — one of only three fortresses in Florida to do so — and served as the headquarters for the Federal Navy’s East Gulf Coast Blockading Squadron staying on ‘active duty’ status through 1947. Today\, the fort is a National Historic Landmark containing the largest cache of Civil War-era seacoast cannons in the U.S. \nCannon and Arches\nUnion troops took control of Fort Zachary Taylor early in the Civil War and maintained it through the duration of the war. They made use of the fort’s impressive artillery\, including 10-inch Rodman and Columbiad cannons to detain blockade-running ships seeking to supply the Confederacy. In 1968\, a large supply of Civil War-era guns and ammunition were discovered in the Fort’s buried arsenal. In fact\, Fort Zachary Taylor held the largest collection of Civil War-era cannons in the United States. \nFort Moat\nSoon after the park opened to the public\, a contractor began the process of digging a moat around the fortress. There were two reasons for the project. One was to prevent easy entry into the structure. The other was to give the illusion of the fort in its early days\, surrounded by water. The end result was an attractive division between the fort and the beach and sea beyond. \nMark your calendar today so you don’t miss the next Fort Taylor Living History Weekend on the third Saturday and Sunday of each month at Historic Fort Taylor in Key West\, Florida. \nTags: Fort Taylor Living History Weekend\, Fort Zachary Taylor Living History Weekend\, Ft Taylor Living History Weekend \nView other Civil War Reenactments & Other Events
URL:https://www.crazycrow.com/site/event/fort-taylor-living-history-weekend-2017-08-19-2020-02-15/
LOCATION:Fort Zachary Taylor Historic State Park\, 601 Howard England Way\, Key West\, FL\, 33040\, United States
CATEGORIES:0-Regular Recurranace,American Civil War Reenactment,Historic American Forts,Living History Events,Same week in month
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.crazycrow.com/site/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/Fort-Taylor-Living-History-Weekend-03-850x567.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200214
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200217
DTSTAMP:20190407T094357Z
CREATED:20160817T121337Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190407T094357Z
UID:7328-1581638400-1581897599@www.crazycrow.com
SUMMARY:Battle of Round Mountain Reenactment
DESCRIPTION:2020 Battle of Round Mountain Reenactment\n\nRate This Event\n \n                                    \n                                        \n                                        \n                                        \n                                        \n                                    \nHistory comes to life at the 23rd Annual Battle of Round Mountain Reenactment on February 14-16\, 2020 in Yale\, Oklahoma. The Winter Encampment and Battle of Round Mountain Reenactment recreates a winter encampment of the Civil War era. This event takes place over three days\, with living history Union and Confederate soldiers setting up opposing camps on Friday. \n\nBattle of Round Mountain Reenactment\nHours\nFriday: Noon to 5 p.m.\nSaturday & Sunday; 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. \nAdmission:\nFriday: Free\nSaturday & Sunday: Adult $5\, Children 10 and younger Free \nLocation\nBattle of Round Mountain Reenactment Site\nJunction Hwy 51 & Hwy 18 – Take Hwy 18 north 1/4 mi\nYale\, OK 74085\nDirections: 4 miles west of Yale\, at intersection of Hwys 51 and 18\, take Hwy 18 north for a 1/4 mile. Event will be on the right. \nFriday Noon to 4pm – School Days – Free\nTeachers bring your class for living history. Hundreds of students from dozens of schools will get a little bit of Civil War history on Friday. School children will see how field hospitals treated battle wounds in the Civil War where more soldiers died from disease than wounds. They will see cannons and muskets\, and learn the difference between cavalry sabers and soldier swords. They will see how teenagers 150 years ago dressed. \nSaturday & Sunday: 2 pm – Battle Reenactments\nHear the blast of cannons and smell the smoke of musketry when the Battle of Round Mountain Reenactment begin at 2 pm Saturday and Sunday with horse-mounted soldiers joining the infantry in battle\, along with staged hand-to-hand combat. The battle area is a natural amphitheater a few minutes walk from the camp that will allow visitors to watch the fighting and feel like a part of the action. Visitors are invited to witness as Confederate and Union soldiers slowly advance towards each other on the battlefield. You will see the soldiers of both sides as they prepare to fire cannons\, and watch the battle as smoke fills the air from the muskets and cannons. Visitors should bring lawn chairs or blankets for extra seating. \nBattle of Round Mountain Reenactment Mini Gallery\n\n \nSaturday: 7 pm – Civil War Grand Ball\nRecall the romance of the Civil War at a Reenactment Ball in the Yale old high school gym Saturday night. Everyone is encouraged to dress in period attire\, but everyone is welcome regardless of dress with plenty of seating for those who just want to watch. Dancers will swirl around the dance floor as band plays music appropriate to the period. \nCivil War Era Military and Civilian Sutlers\nVendors in period dress will set up tents and sell their wares on church grounds to both participants and visitors from 10 am to 3 pm Friday and 9 am to 4 pm Saturday and Sunday. Reenactors will find clothing and gear to enhance their “persona”; visitors can purchase items as reminders of the sights and sounds of the Battle of Round Mountain Reenactment. Food vendors offer food from the era for those whose appetites reject hard tack and salt mule. There will be several modern food vendors\, too. \nQuilt Show\nIn addition to the Winter Encampment\, the Jim Thorpe Memorial Foundation will also hold a month-long quilt show throughout February. Those who wish to participate may bring a quilt to the nearby Jim Thorpe Home for display. The public will vote and prizes will be awarded. \nAbout The Battle of Round Mountain\nThe Battle of Round Mountain is listed as the first battle fought in Indian Territory during the Civil War. This historic battle fought in Payne County saw approximately 1\,400 Confederate soldiers under the command of Colonel Douglas H. Cooper pursue roughly 9\,000 Unionist civilians led by Opothleyahola\, a famous Upper Creek leader. These civilians were attempting to avoid an alliance with the Confederacy and ultimately chose to flee to the protection of Union forces in Kansas. Colonel Cooper set out on November 19\, 1861 in an attempt to coerce Opothleyahola into submission. Each February\, the town of Yale comes alive with the Battle of Round Mountain Re-enactment. \nFor More Information\nSuttlers: 918-519-7071 or 405-455-2248; School Days: 918-855-2438\nEmail: southwind7307344@yahoo.com \n \nMark your calendar today so you don’t miss the next Battle of Round Mountain Reenactment in February in Yale\, Oklahoma. \nTags: Battle of Round Mountain Reenactment\, Battle of Round Mountain Civil War Reenactment\, Oklahoma Civil War Reenactment\, Civil War Reenactment \nView other Civil War Reenactments & Other Events
URL:https://www.crazycrow.com/site/event/battle-of-round-mountain-reenactment/
LOCATION:Battle of Round Mountain Reenactment Site\, Hwy 51 & Hwy 18\, Yale\, OK\, 74085\, United States
CATEGORIES:American Civil War Reenactment,Battle Reenactments & Encampments,Living History Events,US Historic Reenactor Events
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.crazycrow.com/site/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/Battle-of-Round-Mountain-Reenactment-54-1000x667.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20200208T100000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20200209T160000
DTSTAMP:20190210T175321Z
CREATED:20180719T050746Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190210T175321Z
UID:25280-1581156000-1581264000@www.crazycrow.com
SUMMARY:Wormsloe Historic Site Colonial Faire and Muster
DESCRIPTION:2019 Wormsloe Historic Site Colonial Faire and Muster\n\nRate This Event\n \n                                    \n                                        \n                                        \n                                        \n                                        \n                                    \nDon’t miss the 20th Annual Wormsloe Historic Site Colonial Faire and Muster on February 9-10\, 2019 at Wormsloe Historic Site in Savannah\, Georgia. The event will run from 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. on both days. The Wormsloe Historic Site Colonial Faire and Muster is free and open to the public. Experience life in Colonial Georgia during the 18th century with a military encampment\, Sutler’s Row\, craft demonstrations\, military demonstrations\, and period music and dance. Food concessions will be available. \n\n18th Century Dance at Colonial Faire & Muster\nJoin the thousands of all ages who will be at the Wormsloe Historic Site to enjoy this popular\, family-friendly annual living history program. The event features costumed interpreters and vendors offering students and adults a taste of the excitement and adversity of life for the first settlers of colonial Georgia. Highlights include cannon and musket firing; blacksmithing\, craft\, and cooking demonstrations; Native American life interpretations; storytelling; and period music and dance. Sponsored by AT&T and Colonial Group\, Inc. \nFree and open to the public. \nHours: Saturday & Sunday: 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. \nLocation\nWormsloe Historic Site\n7601 Skidaway Road\nSavannah\, GA 31406 \nFor More Information: \nGeorgia Historical Society: Call 912.651.2125\, ext. 116 \nWormsloe Historic Site is located 8 miles southeast of Savannah’s historic district on Skidaway Road. If arriving by taxi or car service\, note that the museum and trails are a one-mile walk from the front entrance. \nAbout the Wormsloe Historic Site\nToday\, visitors can interact with costumed interpreters during programs and events\, and view a museum with artifacts unearthed at Wormsloe\, as well as a short film about the site and the founding of Georgia. The interpretive nature trail leads past the tabby ruins along the marsh to the Colonial Life Area where\, during programs and special events\, demonstrators in period dress exhibit the tools and skills of colonial Georgia. The site hosts several events throughout the year\, including the “Colonial Faire and Muster” in February\, which highlights aspects of 18th-century life\, such as music\, dancing\, crafts and military drills and the “Tools and Skills that Built a Colony” event over Labor Day weekend. \n Wormsloe Historic Site Colonial Faire and Muster Mini Gallery\n\n \nMark your calendar today so you don’t miss the next Wormsloe Historic Site Colonial Faire and Muster in February at Wormsloe Historic Site in Savannah\, Georgia. \nTags: Wormsloe Historic Site Colonial Faire and Muster\, Wormsloe Historic Site Colonial Faire\, 18th Century Colonial Faire\, Isle of Hope Colonial Faire & Muster\, Colonial Market Fair\, Revolutionary War Reenactment \nView other Revolutionary War Reenactments\, Musters\, Encampments & Other Events\nView other Market Fair & Trade Fair Events
URL:https://www.crazycrow.com/site/event/wormsloe-historic-site-colonial-faire-and-muster/
LOCATION:Wormsloe Historic Site\, 7601 Skidaway Road\, Savannah\, GA\, 31406\, United States
CATEGORIES:0-Regular Recurranace,American Revolutionary War Reenactment,History Festivals,Living History Events,Market Fair,Same week in month
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.crazycrow.com/site/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/Wormsloe-Historic-Site-Colonial-Faire-Muster-07-900x600.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Georgia Historical Society":MAILTO:webmaster@georgiahistory.com
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20200208T080000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20200209T170000
DTSTAMP:20190303T063617Z
CREATED:20160615T132026Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190303T063617Z
UID:5464-1581148800-1581267600@www.crazycrow.com
SUMMARY:Fort Foster Rendezvous
DESCRIPTION:2020 Fort Foster Rendezvous\n\nRate This Event\n \n                                    \n                                        \n                                        \n                                        \n                                        \n                                    \nJoin us for the 24th Annual Fort Foster Rendezvous on February 8-9\, 2020 at Fort Foster State Historic Site in Thonotosassa\, Florida. The Fort Foster Rendezvous is a living history reenactment featuring military\, Seminole\, and civilian reenactors\, sutlers\, traders\, and craft demonstrations. The annual Fort Foster Rendezvous features military demonstrations and a small reenactment that is loosely based on the skirmish and varies from year to year. This Fort Foster Rendezvous weekend will offer ongoing daily live firing demonstrations and a skirmish between the Seminoles and US military after 1:00 pm both Saturday and Sunday. \n\nFort Foster Rendezvous\nSchool Days at Fort Foster\nThis “Back in Time” living history program\, “School Days at Fort Foster”\, takes place on the Wednesday\, Thursday and Friday before the Fort Foster Rendezvous. School Days at Fort Foster features the military\, Seminoles and civilians along with a variety of craft demonstrations. This event offers a special time for students to enjoy a first person history lesson\, students can take a ranger-led tour of a Florida frontiers fort\, and interact with period-dress\, Seminole natives. For more information\, see School Days at Fort Foster details. \nLiving History Program Reenactment Fees: \n$5 per person\, donation; Ages 5 and under\, FREE. Proceeds benefit the Hillsborough River State Park Preservation Society. \nCamping & Trader Fees\nModern Boondock Campers: $25.00\nSutlers or Traders Fee: $35.00\nBlanket Traders Fee: $15.00\nArrivals prior to Monday\, add $5.00 per night \nEvent Time: \nRepeats every day 2 times .\nSaturday – 10:00am to 3:00pm EST\nSunday – 10:00am to 3:00pm EST \nLocation\nFort Foster State Historic Site\n15402 US-301\nThonotosassa\, FL 33592\n(813) 987-6771 \nFort Foster Rendezvous Mini-Gallery\n\n\n \nAnyone who wishes to participation in the Fort Foster Rendezvous battle reenactments must meet the following requirements \nIn order to participate in this program\, you must have the ability to: \n\nFollow visual and /or verbal instructions independently or with assistance of a companion.\nWithstand exposure to the outdoors for a period of up to 3 hours.\nTraverse sandy\, dry\, uneven terrain for several hundred feet independently or with the aid of a companion.\nTolerate loud noises\, such as cannon and rifle fire\, for a period of up to 45 minutes.\n\nRegistration forms are available online. An opportunity to purchase period merchandise & refreshments is available to our park visitors. \nAbout Fort Foster\nFort Foster State Historic Site is a reproduction of a fort originally built on the same grounds in December 1836\, by Col. William S. Foster and his 430 men. During the Second Seminole War the purpose of Fort Foster was to defend the bridge crossing at the Hillsborough River and act as a resupply point for the soldiers in the field. The Fort Foster was garrisoned on and off from December\, 1836 – April\, 1838. Although the fort was attacked on several occasions\, the worst attack occurred in February 1836\, when a small group of Seminoles attempted to set fire to the bridge. The attempt was thwarted by aggressive musket and cannon fire from the fifty or so U.S. Navy sailors and the 20 artillery men within the fort. Today\, park staff and reenactors provide living history demonstrations of life at Fort Foster. Each year\, the site offers two living history events: Fort Foster Rendezvous in January\, and the Candlelight Experience at Fort Foster in December. \n \nMark your calendar today so you don’t miss the next Fort Foster Rendezvous at Fort Foster State Historic Site in Thonotosassa\, Florida (generally on the last weekend of January). \nTags: Fort Foster Rendezvous\, Florida Mountain Man Rendezvous\, Florida Rendezvous \nView other Buckskinner Rendezvous
URL:https://www.crazycrow.com/site/event/fort-foster-rendezvous/
LOCATION:Fort Foster State Historic Site\, 15402 U.S. 301 N.\, Thonotosassa\, FL\, 33592\, United States
CATEGORIES:0-Regular Recurranace,Battle Reenactments & Encampments,Florida Rendezvous,Florida Seminole Wars,Historic American Forts,Living History Events,Mountain Man Rendezvous,Same week in month,US Historic Reenactor Events
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.crazycrow.com/site/wp-content/uploads/2016/06/fort-foster-historic-site-reenactment-florida-07-850x567.jpg
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR