National park sought at Civil War's cradle

A pleasure boat motors past Fort Sumter in this Friday, Sept. 9, 2016, photograph taken from the beach on Sullivans Island, S.C. U.S. Sen. Tim Scott, R-S.C., has introduced a bill in the Senate to designate Fort Sumter, which is in Charleston Harbor, and Fort Moultrie, on Sullivans Island, as a national park, raising the status of the sites in a move that is expected to attract more visitors. Fort Sumter is where the opening shots of the Civil War were fired in 1861.
A pleasure boat motors past Fort Sumter in this Friday, Sept. 9, 2016, photograph taken from the beach on Sullivans Island, S.C. U.S. Sen. Tim Scott, R-S.C., has introduced a bill in the Senate to designate Fort Sumter, which is in Charleston Harbor, and Fort Moultrie, on Sullivans Island, as a national park, raising the status of the sites in a move that is expected to attract more visitors. Fort Sumter is where the opening shots of the Civil War were fired in 1861.

CHARLESTON, S.C. -- U.S. Sen. Tim Scott, the first black U.S. senator from the Deep South since Reconstruction, is proposing that the site where the Civil War began be raised in status to that of a national park.

The Republican lawmaker has introduced a bill that would create the Fort Sumter and Fort Moultrie National Park as the nation's 60th national park and second in South Carolina.

Fort Sumter, in Charleston Harbor, was bombarded by Confederate guns on April 12, 1861, in a fight that started four years of civil war.

Moultrie, located on nearby Sullivans Island, is where American patriots turned back a British fleet trying to capture Charleston days before the signing of the Declaration of Independence.

Both forts are part of the Fort Sumter National Monument, one of 84 national monuments among 413 sites administered by the National Park Service.

Scott says a national park designation will give the forts a higher profile among the array of other national park properties and should mean more visitors to the sites, which now draw about 1 million visitors a year.

"What we hope to do is bring more attention," Scott said. "People know the first shots of the Civil War, but they don't necessarily know the history dating back to the first years of our country and the significance Fort Moultrie played."

It's not the first effort to create a national park at the sites. Similar legislation was introduced by the late U.S. Sen. Strom Thurmond, a Republican, in 2002. That bill died in committee.

Scott said he hasn't given much thought to the significance of a black man working to raise the status of a Civil War site.

"South Carolina has a provocative history," Scott said. "Perhaps part of that history is me representing in Congress the site where the Civil War began and now as a senator hopefully making it into a park."

He said the bill "resonates on both sides of the aisle and frankly I think it will resonate throughout the nation," and he hopes it can pass this year.

Tim Stone, the superintendent of the Fort Sumter National Monument, said a national park designation won't expand the park or mean more budget money.

"It just raises the profile and stature," he said. "It gives the importance of Fort Sumter and Fort Moultrie and their role in American history their proper due."

He said status as a national park is important because many people plan their travels around visiting national parks. If someone searched online for national parks in South Carolina, the only thing he would find is Congaree National Park near Columbia, he said.

Jim Thompson, director of Fort Sumter-Fort Moultrie Historic Trust, a nonprofit that helps support projects at the forts, is pleased that the proposed national park would have Moultrie in the name.

The fort was only partially finished when troops under Col. William Moultrie turned back a British fleet on June 28, 1776, six days before the signing of the Declaration of Independence.

"Word got back to Philadelphia, which gave courage to some of those who were on the fence to go ahead and sign the Declaration of Independence," Thompson said.

A Section on 09/12/2016

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