Yes it was some type of event the NPS was putting on. I remarked to my son that I couldn't believe they were using ramrods. When we were re-enacting they were taking them away from us for the weekend. Sadly Ripley passed away a few years ago.
I bridged into another historical phenom in the Virginia area, gold prospecting. Like we did with re-enacting we spend a lot of time documenting the cultural and historical significance Virginia played in the gold rush. An interesting note is that a certain person named Jedediah Hotchkiss was a world famous geologist and collected and consolidated volumes of documents pertaining to the early years of gold prospecting in the US. Google books has thousands of pages of information he pulled together. Oh yeah, he was also pretty famous for something else. Anyone care to take a guess?
The gold rush began in Virginia and North Carolina 50 years before the California gold rush. If you have a gold coin that predates 1848, it probably came from Virginia, NC, SC or Georgia. The saying there's gold in them hills actually originated from Georgia as the miners were leaving to go to California. The local merchants were begging them to stay.
I was in a club the CVGP and every year we take a couple ounces of gold to the field days of the past in Goochland. Every kid that hits our panning booths walked away with a piece of gold big enough to pick up with his fingers, a picker. Today we find ourselves totally defensive against the tree huggers as they try to limit where we can go prospecting but we keep up our efforts in educating folsk on the history and the contributions gold played in the foundation of our country.
We often thought of crashing a re-eanactors camp in our period dress (1835ish) just to see what would happen but we were too afraid of getting drafted.
So, back to Jedediah Hotchkiss and his link to the historical aspects of the Civil War and Gold prospecting. i will tell you this name is revered among gold prospectors.