from the grounds of a well-preserved log farmhouse in western Maryland to walk nearly five miles along dark rural roads and across a Potomac River bridge to Harpers Ferry National Historical Park in West Virginia.
Harpers Ferry National Historical Park The quaint hilltop town of Harpers Ferry, West Virginia, is perhaps best known as the site of the 1859 raid by slavery abolitionist John Brown.
Shackel have taken the insights and information compiled for their administrative history of Harpers Ferry National Historical Park and reworked them into a biography of the site.
00 Hardcover American Association for State and Local History book series F249 In this history of the Harpers Ferry National Historical Park, the authors (a professor and research assistant in the U.
Harpers Ferry National Historical Park sprawls over 2,300 acres in three states -- Maryland, Virginia and West Virginia -- at the confluence of the Shenandoah and Potomac rivers.
The rock, offering a sweeping view of where the Potomac and Shenandoah rivers meet in Harpers Ferry National Historical Park, was damaged Tuesday night or early Wednesday.