Alt Text Map of Anderson National Historic Site in Georgia. Park property is indicated in green. State Route 49 borders part of the park’s northern and western edges and Sweetwater Creek the southern edge. The surrounding areas are pale gray. Extended Description State Route 49 angles from the top right corner west and then south through the height of the park. A one-way park road travels from the entrance on State Route 49 south to the National Prisoner of War Museum, which has information, parking, and restrooms, and a curving Commemorative Walkway. A short road connects the entrance road to a two-way park road that leads north to Anderson National Cemetery and south to The Prison Site when followed south. This description will begin with the cemetery and then travel south to The Prison Site before a full transcription of the legend. Anderson National Cemetery The two-way road passes a picnic area as it runs north to the cemetery and enters along the southern side. The cemetery grounds have two main drivable roads, one that spans the grounds south to north, and one that travels west to east, splitting the grounds into quadrants and meeting in the middle in a diamond round-about. The west branch leads to the Cemetery Office, which has restrooms. and Park Headquarters near an entrance on the west side, which is accessible from State Route 49 but marked “Funeral Entrance Only.” The north branch continues through the north half of the grounds, leading to a dead end. The east branch leads to a circle that abuts the rostrum. Monuments throughout the grounds are marked by yellow dots, one at the south entrance, two in the southwest quadrant, one in the northwest quadrant, one at the northern dead end, two in the northeast quadrant, two on either side of the eastern circle, and three in the southeast quadrant. The Prison Site Having traveled south on the two-way road, a one-way road creates a rectangular loop around The Prison Site. The travelway is just outside the original extent of the prison wall, which is indicated with faint brown lines. Historic earthenworks sit just outside the northwest corner of the loop, and eleven numbered Prison Site monuments and two well remains are clustered just inside that corner. Continuing south on the one-way road are the North Gate Reconstruction site and Providence Spring. The road passes over the Stockade Branch, which meets Sweetwater Creek near the bottom right corner of the map outside the park, and the site of South Gate (no longer present) to Star Fort off the southwest point of the loop. From Star Fort the road leads southeast past more historic earthworks, and then northeast, recrossing Stockade Branch and curving west at the Northeast Corner Reconstruction. The road passes two walkways that connect The Prison Site to the museum and commemorative walkway and then completes the loop near The Prison Site Monuments. A one-road travels from the loop around The Prison Site to exit the park to the west. After crossing State Road 49 the road turns into Church Street and runs through the Town of Andersonville to Wirz Monument. State Route 228 runs east-west parallel to Church Street, also connecting with State Route 49. Legend A legend in the lower left corner of the map reads as follows: Black lines for Walking path, Sage-green line for Historic earthworks, Blue dot for Well remains, and Yellow dot for Monument. A column of symbols represents Information, Parking, Restrooms, and Picnic area. Yellow circles identify Prison Site monuments as follows: Wisconsin Lizabeth Turner Clara Barton Sun Dial Lincoln-Logan Rhode Island Massachusetts Michigan Ohio Tennessee Eight-State A scale below measures distances of 0.25 kilometers and 0.25 miles.