V t 475 ■^53 STATE OF NEW JERSEY. Copy 1 REPORT OF COMMISSIONERS TO CARE FOR (j^^etty^bui'^ Ijkttle jVLoi\uinei:\t^, 1802. TRENTON, N. J. Naar, Day & Naar, Printers 1893. ■*• STATE OF NEW JERSEY. RBPORT OF COMMISSIONERS TO CARE FOR Qetty^buf^ ijkttle jVtonurqerit^, 1892. TRENTON, N. J. Naar, Day & Naar, Printers 1893. 037 15 1904 D. ofO, Medallion on East. Face of Brigade Monument. Medallion on West Face of Brigade Monument. COMMISSIONERS' REPORT. To His Excellency, Leon Abhett, Governor of New Jersey : The undersigned Commissioners, appointed by the Governor pursuant to Chapter 35 of the Laws of 1889, to enclose, care for and improve the monuments erected upon the Gettysburg bat- tlefield, herewith respectfully submit their final reporjt, the three years for which they were appointed having expired. With great respect we are your Excellency's obedient ser- vants. WILLIAM H. CORBIN, E. L. STRATTON, G. T. RIBBLE, Commissioners, Dated, Trenton, December 12th, 1892. REPORT OF COMMISSIONERS TO CARE FOR Gettysburg Battle Monuments. Under an act approved March 13th, 1889, entitled "An act relating to the Gettysburg Monuments," the Governor, on No- vember 8th, 1889, appointed Col. E. L. Stratton,of Mullica Hill, and William H. Corbin, of Elizabeth, to be Commissioners under said act. At a later date Dr. George T. Ribble, of Mil- ford, was appointed as the third Commissioner. By the act it is provided that "One thousand dollars annu- ally is appropriated for the purpose of properly enclosing, im- proving and caring for the said monuments and grounds, and that the said Commissioners be paid their actual expenses." By the same act the Governor was authorized to have a bronze tablet placed upon the monument erected to Battery A, with proper inscription to identify the same as Hexamer's Battery of New Jersey. In fulfilling the duties enjoined upon them by this law the Commissioners visited the Gettysburg battlefield in May, 1890, in June, 1891, in October, 1891, and in June, 1892. At the request of His Excellency, Governor Abbett, the Com- missioners took in charge under his direction the matter of placing an inscription in bronze upon the monument to Hex- amer's Battery. The work of the Commission will be best understood by speaking of the several monuments in detail and stating the work done upon each. GETTYSBURG BATl^LE MONUMENTS. First New Jersey Brigade. This monument is in the form of a circular watch tower, forty feet high, and stands upon a rocky wooded eminence to the north of Little Round Top and a hundred yards distant from, and much higher than Battlefield avenue, the nearest road. The Commission built a good carriage road winding around the hill as an approach to this monument, and extended the road in a true circle around the monument. The mason work was re- pointed where necessary, the ground leveled and graded and the new road well graded and graveled. This work was laid out and superintended by Mr. A. J. Zabriskie, of Newark, the engineer of the New York State Commission on Gettysburg Monuments, a gentleman of much skill and experience in his profession. The Commission are indebted to him for his cour- teous and friendly assistance. The monument is in perfect order and the approach and surroundings are, in the judgment of the Commission, in proper condition. The surroundings should, we think, be interfered with as little as is consistent with a decent maintenance of the monuments. The first New Jersey Brigade was composed of the First,