The Battle and Its Aftermath
Gettysburg was a pivotal clash between Union and Confederate forces. General Robert E. Lee's Army of Northern Virginia faced off against General George Meade's Army of the Potomac in a brutal three-day conflict. The battle ended with a decisive Union victory, halting Lee’s invasion of the North and marking the beginning of the Confederacy’s decline. However, victory came at an enormous cost.
Soldiers lay where they fell, and graves lined the once peaceful landscape. The devastation was overwhelming, turning Gettysburg into a grim scene of loss and suffering. One anonymous New Jersey soldier described the horrific scene:
“Burial Parties were sent out, and those who could get away from their commands went out to view the scene of carnage, and surely it was a scene never to be forgotten. Upon the open fields, like sheaves bound by the reaper, in crevices of the rocks, behind fences, trees, and buildings; in thickets, where they had crept for safety only to die in agony; by stream or wall or hedge, wherever the battle had raged, or their waking steps could carry them, lay the dead.”
The emotional and physical scars left behind in Gettysburg weren’t felt only by those who survived—it’s believed the sheer magnitude of suffering and death has left an imprint on the town that lingers to this day.
Theories Behind the Hauntings
There are various theories as to why Gettysburg is such a hub for alleged supernatural activity. According to Mark Nesbitt, a former National Park Service ranger and historian at Gettysburg and author of several books on the region’s ghosts, the battlefield may have been destined to be just that—a battlefield.
“Years before the Battle of Gettysburg, another battle, one even bigger, may have occurred about a mile from Big Round Top [at the southern peak of the battlefield],” he says. “Maps show that two Native American tribes had territories delineating through Adams County, suggesting it could have been a turf war between them.”
Emmanuel Bushman, a writer from Gettysburg, wrote in 1887 about "many unnatural and supernatural sights and sounds" experienced in the area of the Round Tops that he called the “Indian Fields."
Nesbitt, who also runs a ghost tour company in Gettysburg, mentions additional theories like the "Stone Tape Theory," which suggests that energy released at the moment of death becomes trapped in the area's abundant granite and quartz. While intriguing, these theories are speculative at best.
There are those individuals, like Jeff Belanger, an author and folklore researcher who has studied the history of Gettysburg, who simply accept the haunting presence as part of the region’s history. “Gettysburg is haunted because it should be haunted,” he says. “When you have [tens of thousands] dead, missing, or wounded in the span of three days, that leaves a stain that can never be washed away.”
Belanger points to the infamous words from President Abraham Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address:
“ … we cannot dedicate, we cannot consecrate, we cannot hallow this ground. The brave men, living and dead who struggled here have consecrated it far above our poor power to add or detract. The world will little note nor long remember what we say here, but it can never forget what they did here.”