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The
59-acre Hart Farm opened to the public for daily touring in the Spring
of 2004, after having served as a Special Events venue in 2003. It
is home to the Civil War Adventure Camp, Pamplin Historical Park’s
exciting new immersion experience. The Hart Farm can be accessed by
the 1/2 mile extension of the Breakthrough Trail.
The Hart Farm was the scene of fighting on two occasions during the
Petersburg Campaign. On the third day of the Battle of Peebles’
Farm, October 2, 1864, portions of Winfield Scott Hancock’s
Union 2nd Corps assaulted the rudimentary Confederate fortifications
that spanned the Hart property. The sector was defended by the 4th
North Carolina Cavalry, fighting dismounted, which was reinforced
by the brigade of William MacRae. This combined force shared in the
repulse of the Union attack.
Six months later, on the morning
of April 2, 1865, Ulysses S. Grant ordered a general assault against
Lee’s defensive position surrounding Petersburg. The assault’s
initial breakthrough occurred at the site of Pamplin Historical Park
when Horatio Wright’s 6th Corp swarmed over the thinly-manned
Confederate line. Truman Seymour’s division, on the left of
the 6th Corps assault, stormed the works that crossed the Hart Farm.
The breakthrough led to Lee’s evacuation of Petersburg that
night and his retreat westward, which ended one week later at Appomattox
Court House.
The original Hart farm house still stands on the property. Built not
long before the Civil War, it has been returned to its original appearance.
Wayside exhibits explain the farm's important history as the site
of two Civil War battles. The interior of the Hart House is not open
to the public.
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