Shiloh National Military Park Expansion Approved By Senate

  • Thursday, June 7, 2018

United States Senator Lamar Alexander on Thursday said the Senate’s passage of his bill to expand the Shiloh National Military Park in Shiloh, Tn., will help attract more visitors to Tennessee, boost local economies, and protect the site for future generations.

 

He said, “We talk a lot about the importance of science and math, but, according to the National Assessment of Educational Progress, most high school seniors in America score the worst in history.

I can think of no better way to encourage the study of U.S. history than to protect and preserve sites like the Shiloh National Military Park so future generations can learn about our past and help us become better Americans in the future. Expanding the Park will also provide an opportunity to attract more visitors to Tennessee and boost local economies.”

 

Senator Alexander introduced the Senate version of the bill –the Shiloh National Military Park Boundary Adjustment and Parker’s Crossroads Battlefield Designation Act – on Jan. 11, 2017.

The legislation would expand the boundary of Shiloh National Military Park to include three Civil War battlefields in Tennessee and Mississippi and designate Parker’s Crossroads as an affiliated area of the National Park System.

 

U.S. Rep. Marsha Blackburn introduced the same legislation in the House of Representatives, which passed the House on Feb. 27, 2017. The Senate approved the House version of the bill in the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee on March 30, 2017. The House version of the legislation was amended in the Senate and so the bill will now go back to the House of Representatives for consideration.  

Memories
AUDIO: Earl Winger, Sr. Remembers Early Days Of WDOD
AUDIO: Earl Winger, Sr. Remembers Early Days Of WDOD
  • 4/13/2024

Click here to listen to Earl Winger remembering early days at WDOD. more

Curtis Coulter: The Wreck Of The Old 97 At The Rock Creek Trestle
  • 4/11/2024

Granted, I have quite an imagination, but even I cannot make up stuff like the stories I am getting ready to tell here. In all the annals of town history, there have never been any wrecks to ... more

WDOD AM, Gone But Not Forgotten
WDOD AM, Gone But Not Forgotten
  • 4/9/2024

April 13, 1925, holds a special place in my memory because it was the beginning of the “Golden Age of Radio in the Tennessee Valley.” Two young friends from Ohio, who lived across the street ... more