eSpd® Presents...

"A Last Salute" to...
 

Diabled person using todays technology

 

 

 

  • Espdesigns.com and eSpd.com are one of the oldest (1995 to present) independent Internet sites that used to be located close to Internic's (National Science Foundation) and AOL's corporate headquarters in Northern Virginia. Since 1995, we have continually provided, through our registered eSpd® service, previously unknown information in the field of historical preservation, paleontology and technology via the Internet," for educational institutions, scholars and the general public.

  • This site is also historic in it's own right, since it was one of only two broadband powered web sites during Bell Atlantic's (now Verizon's) ADSL trial in 1996... two years before broadband was publicly available.
  • The services offered here are currently being overhauled so bear with us as we try to bring it up to today's standards. Since this material (over 4GB) is used by a number of educational institutions we felt the only viable way to do this was to do it live, so do expect changes or periods of inactivity. Listed below are some of eSpd's® services now available but will be subject to change as we go forward...
  • Initially we demonstrated in 1995 for those of us who are disabled how we can still play a positive role in helping our global community and others through the Internet. Back then the Internet was just a small community run on a honor code. If anyone breached etiquette they were flamed or shunned. Email was not known at least the way it is now and few had use for firewall's.

At that time we presented "A Last Salute" (January 1996) to six Civil War soldiers who would have been bulldozed out of their graves had they not been located by local historian Kevin Ambrose and removed by the well known Smithsonian anthropologist Dr. Doug Owsley. Since so many children were asking who these unknown soldiers were, we posted the excavation online. From that point on the site grew on it's own especially as I started to post some of our previous findings from The Battle of Ox Hill (Chantilly)

 

  • The findings from the only archeological and historical salvage survey (1976-1986) of the lost Civil War Battle of Ox Hill (Chantilly) was the first time that an entire Civil War battlefield was documented both above and below it's hallowed ground. It is the only surviving physical record of the 300 acre + battlefield before it was developed with the local governments approval. The work presented so far has been verified by numerous well known Historians, Archeologists, Journals and Newspapers. It is an honor to be a steward of this history especially for the descendents of the combatants who have contributed never before seen letters and journals.
  • The record presents over 1000 plus artifacts from the survey that were plotted and are still being conserved (as time and strength permit). The record also shows where the combatants and the boundaries of the battle were located prior to the destruction of the battlefield. The local governments master plan had earmarked the battlefield for development and even offered the developer to move the badly overgrown granite memorials that lay forgotten in the woods commemorating the heroic deaths of two well known Union Generals killed during the battle.
  • History is what binds us to our mortal ideals and core values, somewhat like the many religions throughout the world that bind us spiritually. All should be treated with respect... especially on the sanctuary of hallowed ground. It defines who we are as a people...
  • The only other early examples of battlefield archeology in the United States was the archeological survey at Custers Last Stand which showed how it was anything but a heroic last stand. Instead dedicated professionals after a lot of hard work found it to be a rout that was over in minutes with most of the troopers fleeing for their lives as they were cut down. There was no last stand! An amazing endeavor of good honest forensic work, in spite of all the newspapers and books who had glorified Custer - in the end science prevailed.
  • The same type of investigation is true of the Ox Hill Battlefield except the hallowed ground where the fighting occurred was not protected by the National Park Service. It's a worst case scenario with a completely different outcome. No Battlefield! All that can now tell the real story is the archeological salvage survey and a detailed map updated one month before the battle (that we own) along with other maps from 1858 to present. Future generations won't be able to see an excellent example of Stonewall's tactical genius and ability to read the terrain or the courageous uphill advance of the outnumbered Union troops. All one has to do is look at the picture of the battlefield taken for the 1907 Board of Supervisors to see size and depth of the 300+ acre battlefield where the grass field was located and the low rise in the background where Benjamin's' Battery was located (which is now the county dump).

  • We also have an extensive collection of museum quality amber fossils that have been used by many schools and individuals. If we could ever photograph the entire collection it would recreate a prehistoric rain forest complete with plants and insects appearing just as they had 30-40 million years ago. The state of preservation of extinct species in amber is nothing short of miraculous.

A Last Salute to JFK

  • A lost film of the Kennedy's giving their "Last salute" to JFK at his grave site just after vacating the White House. This was a surprise visit as our family and thousands of broken-hearted Americans were lined up to pay their last respects. Although a brief film, it is a snapshot of how JFK was beloved to all Americans. The Original 16mm film was deteriorating so we transferred part of it to 35mm. We also included some excerpts from a comedy album from 1962 called "The First Family". The one track already posted is called VOTE! To my knowledge the album was never sold again after the assassination.

 

  • Our eSpd® Services provide one-of-a-kind original content not only from our contributions but from other contributors who were also interested in protecting who we are as a people... our history. People like the Brown and Proctor families have offered their personal knowledge as one of many other descendents whose family history have laid unknown in America's attic. The Internet has changed all of that and brought a lot of this history and other material into the public's view that never would have been seen otherwise.
 
  • I have spent 32 years and personally financed this entire project little by little. My only goal was truth and to be a good steward for those whose footsteps we follow... I'm not perfect but at least I tried...
    We hope other educational, corporate institutions or individuals will help support verifiable content to counteract the many self-serve encyclopedias, new search engines and dictionaries where anyone can post misleading material.
    eSpd® is open to any school or scholars who want to contribute or use it as a portal of verifiable knowledge. Contact Us
 
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Registered Trademark ESPD®, Copyright ©  1995 - 2008   All Rights Reserved. Information in this document is subject to change without notice. Web site established 1995. To Contact us please write to ESP Designs here.
Note: All colored historical pictures, maps, recovered  artifacts intellectual rights, and our may not be used outside this web site unless cited as our eSpd® service and given the address of this site,  This also includes the Intellectual property and  history derived from the only archeological survey ever conducted of the Ox Hill Battlefield  (Chantilly).