Overnight School Trip Guide

2-Day Gettysburg Field Trip Itinerary

A two-day Gettysburg field trip gives students a much better chance to understand the battlefield without feeling rushed. With more time, teachers can include the most important battlefield stops, allow for stronger discussion, and create a more meaningful learning experience.

This sample 2-day Gettysburg field trip itinerary is designed for school groups that want a realistic schedule, manageable pacing, and a strong mix of major battlefield locations and educational value.

Best for middle school and high school trips that want more than a rushed one-day visit.

Why choose a 2-day Gettysburg field trip?

A one-day trip can still be worthwhile, but a two-day Gettysburg itinerary gives school groups much more flexibility. Teachers can spend more time at key battlefield locations, build in breaks and reflection, and avoid turning the trip into a race from stop to stop.

Better pacing

Students have more time to absorb what they are seeing instead of constantly moving.

Stronger learning

More time on site leads to better discussion, questions, and historical understanding.

More complete experience

A two-day format makes it easier to include both the most famous stops and important supporting sites.

Day 1 Gettysburg field trip itinerary

The first day should focus on orientation, big-picture understanding, and several of the most important battlefield locations.

Morning: Gettysburg National Military Park Museum and Visitor Center

Start the trip with the Visitor Center so students have context before moving onto the battlefield. This helps them understand the armies, the timeline, and the scale of the battle.

Late Morning: Little Round Top

Little Round Top is one of the most important and memorable stops for students. It works especially well for teaching terrain, leadership, and the importance of high ground.

Midday: Peach Orchard or nearby battlefield area

This stop helps broaden student understanding of the battlefield and gives them a better sense of how large and complex the fighting was.

Afternoon: Cemetery Ridge

Cemetery Ridge helps students visualize the Union line and sets up the story of later battlefield action in a very clear way.

End of Day 1: Gettysburg National Cemetery

This is a powerful closing stop for the first day because it connects the battle to remembrance, sacrifice, and national meaning.

Day 2 Gettysburg field trip itinerary

The second day can build on what students learned on day one by focusing on key battlefield interpretation, deeper understanding, and additional major sites.

Morning: Seminary Ridge

Starting the second day at Seminary Ridge helps students see the battlefield from a broader perspective and understand more of the Confederate position.

Late Morning: High Water Mark and The Angle

This is one of the most important stops of the entire trip. It helps students understand Pickett’s Charge and one of the best-known moments of the Battle of Gettysburg.

Midday: Additional battlefield interpretation stop

Depending on your group, this could be another major battlefield location, a monument area, or a teacher-selected stop that fits your unit goals.

Afternoon: Guided discussion or reflection activity

Before leaving Gettysburg, give students time to reflect on what they saw, what mattered most, and how the battlefield changed their understanding of the Civil War.

Best pages to use with this itinerary

These pages help teachers turn this 2-day plan into a stronger and more organized Gettysburg trip.

Gettysburg Battlefield Stops for Students

Use the full battlefield stops guide to decide which locations fit your group best.

Best Gettysburg Field Trip Stops

A focused page showing the top battlefield stops to prioritize first.

Must-See Gettysburg Battlefield Stops

A tighter list of essential stops for schools with limited time.

Gettysburg Field Trip Planning Checklist

Use this to organize the trip before departure day.

Gettysburg Field Trip FAQ

Find answers to common teacher and planning questions.

Helpful related Gettysburg planning pages

These pages strengthen the internal link structure of the site and make it easier for teachers to plan the full trip.