Gettys-Black divide

Gettys-Black divide

The northern part of the divide is roughly along a Union line (blue) during the Battle of Gettysburg (the map inaccurately depicts Big Round Top west of Plum Run).
Highest point
Peak Big Round Top (north slope)
Elevation  
Coordinates 39°47′10.73″N 77°14′21.15″W / 39.7863139°N 77.2392083°W / 39.7863139; -77.2392083
Naming
Etymology Gettys Tavern & Black's Mill
Geography
Location northern point (confluence of Stevens Cr/Rock Cr)
Country United States
State Pennsylvania
County Adams
Range coordinates 39°50′13″N 77°13′17″W / 39.8369°N 77.2215°W / 39.8369; -77.2215Coordinates: 39°50′13″N 77°13′17″W / 39.8369°N 77.2215°W / 39.8369; -77.2215

The Gettys-Black divide is the primary drainage divide of Cumberland Township, Adams County, Pennsylvania; extending from the mouth of Stevens Creek southward past Samuel Gettys' 1761 tavern ~7 miles to the mouth of Plum Run at the dam site for Robert Black's 1798 Mill.[1] From a ridge within the Gettysburg borough, the divide extends southward across several strategic features of the Gettysburg Battlefield:

The divide descends the east slope of Big Round Top and passes north of a drainage, then extends south-southeast across farm fields near the Taneytown Road to Rock Creek at the unincorporated community of Barlow, Pennsylvania.

References

  1. ↑ Geiselman, John P. (1996). "Horner's Mill Becomes Barlow". In Cleveland, Linda K. Reflections. Preface: Audrey J. Sanders. Columbus GA: Brentwood Christian Press. p. 55. Retrieved 2010-05-04.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, July 28, 2013. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.