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June sun. It is a Civil War living history presentation, an eye opening lesson to which teachers and students look forward.The event has become a rite of passage of sorts for eighth graders at Milton M. Somers and Piccowaxen middle schools. This is the third year at Piccowaxen, the 10th at Somers.see it when they in sixth and seventh grades, Piccowaxen teacher Christine Gamble said. they in eighth grade they ask, is Civil War day? re enactors not only come from Southern Maryland but from Virginia, West Virginia and North Carolina. The band of history buffs all who have ancestors who fought in the Civil War set up camp in the fields of the schools. At Piccowaxen on Wednesday, the tents dot the outfield of the baseball field.At each tent are a few re enactors dressed in the period correct uniforms of Union and the Confederate troops ready to tell the eager and interested students about the Civil War.they learn here with the living history is more than I can teach them all year in a classroom, Gamble said.Re enactors shoot weapons that would have been used during the war as each round of new students enters the camp. Ray Mishoe, a member of the Orphan Brigade Camp 2166 of the Sons of Confederate Veterans, talks about weapons. There were revolvers, rifles, bayonets ( were very few [people] bayoneted in the Civil War, Mishoe said, adding that the actual bayonet was used as a candleholder, a trenching tool or to skewer food during cooking), and knives including a huge flat knife carried by Confederate soldiers that was pretty useless, Mishoe said.lot of ended up being thrown aside on marches,