by Donald Smith

In early August, the Fredericksburg and Spotsylvania National Military Park (FSNMP) placed a sign inside the Stonewall Jackson Death Site. Known to many people as the Jackson Shrine, it’s a plantation office building where Jackson died after being mortally wounded at the Battle of Chancellorsville.ย
The sign said this: “Stonewall Jackson led an army that fought against the United States with keeping slavery as one of their [sic] goals. Why then did this place become a United States National Park Site?” FSNMP says the park โis committed to telling a fuller, more inclusive history of the Stonewall Jackson Death Site.โ This sign is part of an FSNMP initiative to “spark conversations and to broaden the story of the site and context for Jacksonโs death and memory.โย
If the first things that come to the National Park Serviceโs mind, when it thinks of the most noteworthy aspects of Stonewall Jackson’s legacy, are that he fought for the Confederacy and the Confederacy supported slavery — then we really do need to have a conversation.ย ย
FSNMP placed three signs in the Death Site in early August. None mentioned Jacksonโs reputation as one of America’s greatest battlefield generals. (Patton told Eisenhower he would be Ike’s Jackson, and Chesty Puller carried a biography of Stonewall.) No mention of First Manassas, the Valley Campaign, Cedar Mountain, Second Manassas or Chancellorsville.









