near Sharpsburg, in June 2005 The first American of European descent to own land in what would become Sharpsburg was trader Edmund Cartledge. By the time Cartledge surveyed his "Hickory Tavern" land tract in 1737, the
Great Philadelphia Wagon Road was established over the path that would become Sharpsburg's main street. The patent says Hickory Tavern sits between the wagon road and Garrison Spring, today's Big Spring. Thousands of immigrants used this route to travel south from Pennsylvania as far as the Carolinas. On May 1, 1755, the road was used by Major General Edward Braddock;
Horatio Sharpe, the
Proprietary Governor of the
Province of Maryland; and several of Braddock's staff officers to reach
Winchester, Virginia, while his 48th Regiment took a longer route via today's
Williamsport, Maryland. At the end of the
French and Indian War in 1763, Joseph Chapline founded a town and named it for his friend Sharpe. Its original settlers were mostly of
German or
Swiss origin who arrived from Pennsylvania via the wagon road. They planted wheat in the region, whose farms had largely depended on tobacco. Located east of the
Potomac River, Sharpsburg was incorporated in 1832, It attracted industry in the early 19th century, especially after the
Chesapeake and Ohio Canal was extended to the town in 1836. Sharpsburg gained national recognition during the
American Civil War, when
Confederate General
Robert E. Lee invaded Maryland with his
Army of Northern Virginia in the summer of 1862 and was intercepted near the town by Union General
George B. McClellan with the
Army of the Potomac. The rival armies met on September 17, in the
Battle of Antietam (called by the Confederates the Battle of Sharpsburg). It would be the bloodiest single day in all American military annals, with a total of nearly 23,000 casualties to both sides. A few days earlier, the multi-sited
Battle of South Mountain occurred at the three low-lying passes in
South Mountain—
Crampton's Gap,
Turner's Gap, and
Fox's Gap—where Lee's forces attempted to hold back the advancing Union regiments moving westward especially along the important
National Road (now
U.S. Route 40 Alternate) which is now a part of
South Mountain State Battlefield Park. The drawn battle is considered a turning point of the war, since it kept the
Confederacy from winning a needed victory on Northern soil, which might have gained it European recognition. Lee's retreat gave
Abraham Lincoln the opportunity he needed to issue his
Emancipation Proclamation, declaring all slaves residing in rebelling Confederate territory against the federal government, to be "forever free". This act made it even more unlikely that Europe would grant diplomatic recognition to the South. In 1866,
Tolson's Chapel was constructed by African Americans as a Methodist meeting place and served as a Freedmen's Bureau school. Historians since the 2000s have recovered evidence of a once vibrant "
Affrilachian" community in Sharpsburg that declined during the twentieth century. Sharpsburg claims its
Memorial Day commemoration as one of the first in the U.S., having their 147th consecutive celebration in 2014. The town core was added to the
National Register of Historic Places in 2008 as the
Sharpsburg Historic District. Also listed are the Antietam National Battlefield,
William Chapline House,
Good-Reilly House,
William Hagerman Farmstead,
Joseph C. Hays House,
Jacob Highbarger House,
Mount Airy,
Piper House,
Tolson's Chapel,
Wilson-Miller Farm, and
Woburn Manor. The
Antietam National Battlefield is an important source of local tourism and activities. ==Government==