Today, the Brown County Board of Commissioners passed a resolution celebrating Ulysses S Grant’s 200th birthday, and declaring 2022 as the year of General & President Grant. Out heart-felt thanks goes out to commissioners Daryll Gray, Tony Applegate, and Barry Woodruff.
Road to the White House - Congratulations Maryjane!
The US Grant Homestead Association is proud to announce the winner of our Road to the White House student contest - Maryjane Fuller of Fayetteville Middle School! Nearly 150 seventh and eight grade students participated, submitting educational activities about Ohio’s seven presidents and their historical sites. Maryjane will be the proud winner of two $50 bills (each featuring Grant’s face). We’d like to thank all the students and teachers for their participation, and stay on the lookout for next year’s competition!
At least 140 seventh and eighth grade students of Ms. Lo Ann Haines, Fayetteville Middle School social studies teacher, participated in the Contest. Standing left to right are Sue Basta, Trustee, U.S. Grant Homestead Association; winning student Maryjane Fuller; and Lo Ann Haines, teacher, Fayetteville Middle School.
Grant's 200th
Grant at West Point
Dr. Curt Fields on Grant
Being Grant: Now and Then
The Interconnected Lives of Two Clermont County Generals
U.S. Grant Named a Stop on the Ohio Presidential Trail
CELEBRATE OHIO’S MILITARY SPIRIT
Ohio, Mother of Presidents
John Ruthven Passes Away at 95
He Belongs to the Ages Now - A Eulogy for Ed Bearss
The country, history, and the U.S. Grant Homestead Association has lost a great man, veteran, historian, and friend. He came to Georgetown Ohio ten years to support the USGA and teach and entertain a crowd of eager history lovers. We will miss him! Huzzah! Huzzah! Huzzah!
Ed was born in Billings, Montana, the elder son of Omar and Virginia Bearss. He grew up on the rugged family cattle ranch, the "E bar S", near Sarpy, Montana. His father, a WWI Marine, read accounts of military campaigns to young Ed and his brother. Ed's budding interest in military history was jump-started by a biography of the dashing J.E.B. Stuart that he read for school. Ed named many of the ranch animals after famous generals and battles; his favorite milk cow was Antietam. Ed graduated from Hardin High School in May 1941 and hitchhiked around the United States, visiting his first Civil War battlefields. He enlisted in the Marine Corps on April 28, 1942, and by July was on a troop transport to the Pacific War. He was with the 3rd Marine Raider Battalion in the invasion of Guadalcanal and the Russell Islands and 7th Regiment, 1st Marine Division, in New Britain.
On January 2, 1944, Ed was severely wounded at "Suicide Creek" (Cape Gloucester, New Britain) by Japanese machine gun fire. He spent 26 months recovering in various hospitals. He has used the experience as a tool to teach future generations the value of service and sacrifice. He was honorably discharged from the Marines as a corporal on March 15, 1946, and returned home to Montana. Ed used the G.I. Bill to finance his education at Georgetown University, from which he obtained a B.S. degree in Foreign Service studies in 1949. He received his M.A. in history from Indiana University in 1955, writing his thesis on Confederate General Patrick Cleburne. As part of his research, he visited the Western Theater battlefields on which Cleburne fought, telling friends, "You can't describe a battlefield unless you walk it”.
On the battlefield of Shiloh in 1954, he made a career decision inspired by the park historian he met, Charles E. (Pete) Shedd: interpretation of battles in the field was far more interesting than the academic study of history in an office. He soon took work as an historian at Vicksburg National Military Park, At Vicksburg, Ed did the research leading him and two friends to the long-lost Union gunboat U.S.S. Cairo. Which they raised from its muddy tomb in the Yazoo River and placed it on display at the Vicksburg Park. He also located several forgotten forts, was enlisted to develop a variety of new parks, and led efforts at hundreds of historic sites around the country including the Eisenhower Farm at Gettysburg and the Chilkoot Trail in Alaska. In 1966, Ed was transferred to Washington, D.C. On November 1, 1981, he was named Chief Historian of the National Park Service, a position he held until 1994. From 1994 to 1995 he served as special assistant to the director. After his retirement in 1995, he received the title Chief Historian Emeritus, which he holds to this day.
Retirement was loosely defined in Ed’s vocabulary; He travelled to lecture or lead tours 200 days of the year.
