Battle of New Market


The Bushong Farm is in the New Market Battlefield State Historical Park north of New Market, Virginia. (38°39’47.4″N 78°40’05.3″W, see map below) The Bushong Farm wayside marker tells the story of the farm and its preservation since the Civil War.  The Bushong farmhouse dates to the battle, although the outbuildings have been restored.

Front view of the Bushong Farm

Front view of the Bushong Farm

From the marker:

The Bushong Farm

Caught in the Crossfire

On June 22, 1791, Henry Bushong patented a 260-acre tract in Shenandoah County that would be home for several generations of his descendants. Henry’s son, Jacob married Sarah Strickler in 1818. They took up residence in a four-room log house and began a family that would grow to include four boys and two girls.

In 1825 Jacob Bushong built this vernacular Federal-style home. An 1852 expansion added double porches attached on the north end to provide extra room for the growing family. The Bushongs raised wheat, oats, cattle, hogs, and horses. Wheelwright and blacksmith shops provided farm implements for the Bushongs and other area families. The family worked alongside three African American slaves on the property—an unmarried man, a woman named Mary, and a young boy, Israel.

On May 15, 1864 seven family members took refuge in their sturdy cellar as the Battle of New Market raged across their farm. Peering through the windows, they saw VMI cadets pass on the east and west sides of the house as they marched to join the Confederate battle line. After the battle the house and barn, like most buildings in and around New Market, served as a hospital.

Caption from the painting at the upper left:
The Lions of the Hour by Keith Rocco

Caption from the photo at lower left:
Sarah Bushong, ca. 1880

Caption from the photo at the upper center:
Bushong Family 1899

Caption from the photo at the lower center:
Bushong Farm ca. 1880

The Bushong Farm wayside marker

Side view of the Bushong Farm

Side view of the Bushong Farm

From the Sidebar:

George R. Collins

In the early 1940s the Bushong family sold the farm to Mr. and Mrs. Everette Croxton, who in turn sold it in 1944 to George Randall Collins, VMI Class of 1911. At his death in 1964, Mr. Collins bequeathed the Bushong Farm and a $3 million operating endowment to VMI “to be used as a trust to perpetuate and maintain as a Memorial of the Battle of New Market.”

Restored Bushong Farm outbuildings

Restored Bushong Farm outbuildings

Location

The marker is on the west side of the George R. Collins Parkway in front of the front entrance (south side) of the Bushong farmhouse. The Collins Parkway can be reached from Old Cross Road at New Market immediately to the west of Interestate 81 exit 178.