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April McDonough

Memorial Luminary Tour on November 15th

Wilson’s Creek National Battlefield invites the public to the 20th Annual Memorial Luminary Tour on Friday, November 15, 2024, starting at 5:30 p.m. This free event commemorates the 2,539 casualties suffered at the Battle of Wilson’s Creek on August 10, 1861.

Luminaries representing those who died, were injured, or went missing during the battle will be placed on the battlefield at three locations of concentrated casualties. Visitors will join a vehicle caravan led by park staff to the three stops in the battlefield. At each stop, participants may view the luminaries and listen to the stories of soldiers who experienced the tragedy of war that fateful day in August.

The event is free, but reservations and a personal vehicle are required for the tour. Tours are scheduled every 20 minutes from 5:30 pm to 9:30 pm. Each tour will last one hour and twenty minutes. Reservations can be made starting Friday November 8th, at 10:00 a.m. over the phone at 417-732-2662, or in person at the Wilson’s Creek National Battlefield Visitor Center during operating hours. Reservations will not be held via voicemail.

The tour involves walking short distances, less than 50 yards, on uneven terrain lit by lanterns. For information, or accommodation requests related to accessibility please call the visitor center.

In the event of inclement weather including rain, high winds, or freezing temperatures, the program will be cancelled. For program updates, please call the visitor center at 417-732-2662 or check the park website at www.nps.gov/wicr or the Wilson’s Creek National Battlefield Facebook page.

Information provided by Wilson’s Creek National Battlefield News Release, November 4, 2024.

Battlefield Visitors Support Communities

A new National Park Service report shows that 317,000 visitors to Wilson’s Creek National Battlefield in 2023 spent $21.2 million in communities near the park. That spending supported 311 jobs in the local area and had a cumulative benefit to the local economy of $28.7 million. See the news release WICR 7_2024 Visitor Spending Effects 2023.

“I’m so proud that our parks and the stories we tell make a lasting impact on more than 300 million visitors a year,” said National Park Service Director Chuck Sams. “And I’m just as proud to see those visitors making positive impacts of their own, by supporting local economies and jobs in every state in the country.”

“People come to Wilson’s Creek to learn about the Trans-Mississippi theater of the Civil War, to commemorate and reflect on a difficult period of our history, and to enjoy the recreational benefits throughout the site,” said Superintendent Sarah Cunningham. “We recognize tourism as a critical driver to our local economies and are proud that Wilson’s Creek National Battlefield supports 311 jobs and generations $28.7 million in revenue to communities near the park.”

The National Park Service report, 2023 National Park Visitor Spending Effects, finds that 325.5 million visitors spent $26.4 billion in communities near national parks. This spending supported 415,400 jobs, provided $19.4 billion in labor income and $55.6 in economic output to the U.S. economy. The lodging sector had the highest direct contributions with $9.9 billion in economic output and 89,200 jobs. The restaurants received the next greatest direct contributions with $5.2 billion in economic output and 68,600 jobs.

An interactive tool is available to explore visitor spending, jobs, labor income, and total economic contribution by sector for national, state and local economies. Users can also view year-by-year trend data. The interactive tool and report are available on the NPS website.

To learn more about national parks in Missouri and how the National Park Service works with Missouri communities to help preserve local history, conserve the environment, and provide outdoor recreation, go to www.nps.gov/missouri.

 

 

Donor With Ancestral Ties to Battle Leaves Legacy Gift of $100,000

Albert Magnus Price, a longtime supporter of Wilson’s Creek National Battlefield, passed away in September 2023 and left a legacy gift of nearly $100,000 to the foundation. Albert Price is the great-grand-nephew of Sterling Price, general and commander of the Missouri State Guard at the Battle of Wilson’s Creek on August 10, 1861. The donation will be used to build the foundation’s endowment and to support purchase of land and artifacts, operations, educational programs, and park events.

Al Price

In addition to the legacy gift, Albert Price previously donated artifacts to the Wilson’s Creek National Battlefield Museum collection, including Sterling Price’s pocket watch, a memorial lithograph, and his revolver (on loan from the Price family). These items are currently on display in the visitor center.

“We are incredibly grateful to Albert Price for his forethought years ago when he named the Wilson’s Creek National Battlefield Foundation in his charitable trust,” says Melissa Adler, executive director. “Planned gifts like these are impactful because they’re typically larger than what most people can donate during their lifetime.”

Albert Price met his wife, Margaret Johanna Langrell in Columbia, Missouri, and raised three sons, Lang, Robbie, and Lake. They were married for 71 years. His career was marked by significant contributions to Boone County National Bank, where he started as a teller in 1951 and eventually became president and Chairman of the Board. Albert earned recognition for community service, including MU’s Distinguished Citizen Award. He and his family enjoyed the outdoors and traveling.

The Wilson’s Creek National Battlefield Foundation, founded in 1950, is one of the longest serving park partners of the National Park Service. Foundation leaders spearheaded efforts to make the initial land purchase of 37 acres, attain National Park status, build the visitor center, and provide funding for a 7,700 square-foot Civil War library and education center addition in 2020.

Gen. Sterling Price at the Second Major Battle of the Civil War

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Library of Congress

To his men, he was “Pap” Price, an admired and respected battlefield commander. The former congressman, Mexican-American War general of volunteers and Missouri governor became a general and commander of the Missouri State Guard in May 1861. Price led the State Guard at Wilson’s Creek and Lexington, in what one of his officers called “a series of triumphs and successes.” He commanded a division of State Guardsmen and Missouri Confederates at Pea Ridge. Accepting a commission as a Confederate major general in 1862, Price fought on both sides of the Mississippi River, including the battles of Corinth and Iuka, Mississippi, and Helena, Arkansas. He led the longest cavalry raid of the Civil War through Missouri in the fall of 1864, meeting defeat at Westport and Mine Creek. Price moved to Mexico after the war but returned to St. Louis and died in 1867.

Richard H. Musser, one of Price’s officers, wrote after the war that the general “knew little of tactics and the details of military administration, but he applied to his offensive and defensive operations an exhaustless fund of practical common sense and his own sound judgement, in which he implicitly relied. Never was he known to hesitate at the most unforeseen difficulties, nor did his soldiers ever falter at any command. His forte was action, prompt, effective, and aggressive, and his proper sphere was the field. Being accompanied with brave and efficient officers, who executed all his commands in their details, he gave to his raw troops the steadiness of veterans … He was, perhaps, at the time, the only officer of either army who fully estimated the American citizen-soldier at his full worth.”