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> Corinth Civil War Interpretive Center
Site Name Corinth Civil War Interpretive Center
Street Address 1055 Pittsburg Landing Rd.
City / State / Zip Shiloh TN, 38376
Phone number 662-287-9273
Web Page www.nps.gov/shil
 
Admission Fee None
Hours Daily: 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Closed Christmas Day
Visitor services Public Restrooms; Handicapped Access; Bookstore
Regular Events
   
Directions Located near the junctions of US Hwy 72 and US Hwy 45, in Northeast Mississippi.
 
Site photo
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Site Description
For six months in 1862, Corinth, Mississippi, a critical railroad junction, second only to Richmond in military importance, captured the full attention of a divided nation. As one of the National Park Service’s newest visitor centers, the Corinth Civil War Interpretive Center explains the key role of Corinth, in the Civil War’s western theater. Opening in 2004, the 15,000 square-foot facility features interactive exhibits, a multimedia presentation on the Battle of Shiloh, and a video on the Battle of Corinth. Interpretive exhibits detail the causes and coming of the war, the battle of Shiloh, the siege, occupation, and battle of Corinth. The African American experience in Civil War Corinth is a major interpretive theme within the exhibits. The Corinth Contraband Camp, beginning as a tent city in the fall of 1862, became known as a model camp with over 6,000 African Americans residing in the camp at its peak. A life size diorama of earthwork construction along with a full-scale reproduction of a 2-gun battery, explain the importance of field fortification through the course of the Civil War. An extensive courtyard exhibit is home to a water feature commemorating 100 years of American history. The Center stands near the site of Battery Robinett, a Union fortification witness to bloody fighting during the October, 1862 Battle of Corinth.

 

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