Emmor Cope

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Emmor_Cope an entity of type: Thing

Emmor Cope was an American Civil War officer of the Union Army noted for the "Map of the Battlefield of Gettysburg from the original survey made August to October, 1863", which he researched by horseback as a sergeant after being ordered back to Gettysburg by Maj. Gen. George G. Meade. Cope is also noted for commemorative era battlefield administration and designs, including the layout of the 1913 Gettysburg reunion. Cope had enlisted as a Private of Company A, (First Pennsylvania Reserves), temporarily detached to Battery C, 5th U.S. Artillery, and mustered out as a V Corps aide-de-camp of Maj Gen Gouverneur K. Warren. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Emmor Cope
rdf:langString Emmor Bradley Cope
rdf:langString Emmor Bradley Cope
xsd:float 39.82039260864258
xsd:float -77.23019409179688
rdf:langString Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, US
rdf:langString East Bradford Township, Chester County, Pennsylvania, US
xsd:integer 31669199
xsd:integer 1106212739
xsd:gMonthDay --06-04
rdf:langString
rdf:langString United States
xsd:integer 26
rdf:langString Battles
xsd:date 1834-07-23
rdf:langString Union Army
xsd:date 1927-05-28
xsd:integer 35 --02-09
xsd:string 39.820391 -77.230196
rdf:langString Emmor Cope was an American Civil War officer of the Union Army noted for the "Map of the Battlefield of Gettysburg from the original survey made August to October, 1863", which he researched by horseback as a sergeant after being ordered back to Gettysburg by Maj. Gen. George G. Meade. Cope is also noted for commemorative era battlefield administration and designs, including the layout of the 1913 Gettysburg reunion. Cope had enlisted as a Private of Company A, (First Pennsylvania Reserves), temporarily detached to Battery C, 5th U.S. Artillery, and mustered out as a V Corps aide-de-camp of Maj Gen Gouverneur K. Warren. On July 17, 1893, Cope was appointed the Topographical Engineer of the Gettysburg National Park Commission (established for "ascertaining the extent of... the trolley") and oversaw the 1893-5 battlefield survey with benchmark at the Gettysburg center square. By 1904, Cope was the first park superintendent, and, after the commission became defunct in March 1922 when the last commissioner died, became the battlefield head through the remainder of the commemorative era of the Gettysburg National Military Park. Cope's designs include structures (e.g., the original park "gateway"), markers (1908 GNMP bronze tablet/granite monolith), buildings (the 1903 Roller and Storage Building), roads (Cross, Brooke, and De Trobriand avenues), and the observation tower at Gettysburg and Valley Forge. He oversaw the development of post-war maps drawn by GNPC cartographer Schuyler A. Hammond, as well as a 14 ft (4.3 m) wooden relief map of the battlefield by J. C. Wierman for the 1904 Louisiana Purchase Exposition (on display at the Gettysburg Museum and Visitor Center). Emmor Cope is buried with his wife along the outside of the Gettysburg National Cemetery fence near the New York State Memorial, and had a daughter and son: Jean Wible and John B. Cope (1877-1903). Cope's 1996 biography is If You Seek His Monument- Look Around: E.B. Cope and the Gettysburg National Military Park.
xsd:integer 1861
xsd:integer 1893
xsd:integer 1927
rdf:langString
rdf:langString Chief of Engineers, GNPC1st Superintendent, GNMP
rdf:langString Interment
xsd:string United States
xsd:gYear 0004
xsd:gYear 0004
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 12262
<Geometry> POINT(-77.230194091797 39.820392608643)

data from the linked data cloud