civil war photo album abraham lincoln jefferson davis

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Civil War Photo Album Abraham Lincoln Jefferson Davis

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Page 1: Civil War Photo Album Abraham Lincoln Jefferson Davis

Civil War Photo Album

Abraham Lincoln Jefferson Davis

Page 2: Civil War Photo Album Abraham Lincoln Jefferson Davis

This September 1862 photo provided by the Library of Congress shows Allan Pinkerton on horseback during the Battle of Antietam, near Sharpsburg, Maryland. Before the outbreak of war, he had founded the Pinkerton National Detective Agency. In 1861, he famously foiled an alleged plot to assassinate president-elect Lincoln, and later served as the head of the Union Intelligence Service -- the forerunner of the U.S. Secret Service.

Page 3: Civil War Photo Album Abraham Lincoln Jefferson Davis

Fort Sumter, South Carolina, April, 1861, under the Confederate flag. The first shots of the Civil War took place here, on April 12, 1861, as Confederate batteries opened fire on the Union fort, bombarding it for 34 straight hours. On April 13, Union forces surrendered and evacuated the fort. Union forces made many attempts to retake the fort throughout the war, but only took possession on February 22, 1865, after Confederate forces had evacuated Charleston

Page 4: Civil War Photo Album Abraham Lincoln Jefferson Davis

Yorktown, Virginia, Embarkation for White House Landing, Virginia, Photograph from the main eastern theater of war, the Peninsular Campaign, May-August 1862

Page 5: Civil War Photo Album Abraham Lincoln Jefferson Davis

A captured Confederate encampment near Petersburg, Virginia, in June of 1864.

Page 6: Civil War Photo Album Abraham Lincoln Jefferson Davis

A view of Washington, D.C. from the intersection of 3rd and Indiana Avenue, ca. 1863. In the foreground is Trinity Episcopal Church, in the background, the unfinished Capitol building. Construction on the capitol was briefly suspended early in the war, but continued through the later years.

Page 7: Civil War Photo Album Abraham Lincoln Jefferson Davis

Fortifications at Yorktown, Virginia, during the Peninsula Campaign of 1862.

Page 8: Civil War Photo Album Abraham Lincoln Jefferson Davis

A March, 1863 photo of the USS Essex. The 1000-ton ironclad river gunboat, originally a steam-powered ferry, was acquired during the American Civil War by the US Army in 1861 for the Western Gunboat Flotilla. She was transferred to the US Navy in 1862 and participated in several operations on the Mississippi River, including the capture of Baton Rouge and Port Hudson in 1863.

Page 9: Civil War Photo Album Abraham Lincoln Jefferson Davis

The 150th Pennsylvania Infantry camp on Belle Plain, Virginia, is pictured in March 1862, three weeks before the Battle of Chancellorsville.

Page 10: Civil War Photo Album Abraham Lincoln Jefferson Davis

Morris Island, South Carolina. The shattered muzzle of a 300-pounder Parrott Rifle after it had burst, photographed in July or August of 1863

Page 11: Civil War Photo Album Abraham Lincoln Jefferson Davis

 On the steps of the Tennessee State Capitol building in Nashville, Tennessee, with covered guns (lower right) set up nearby, in 1864.

Page 12: Civil War Photo Album Abraham Lincoln Jefferson Davis

Inflation of the Intrepid, a hydrogen gas balloon used by the Union Army Balloon Corps for aerial reconnaissance. The Balloon Corps operated a total of seven balloons, with the Intrepid being favored by Chief Aeronaut Thaddeus Lowe.

Page 13: Civil War Photo Album Abraham Lincoln Jefferson Davis

A scene in Alexandria, Virginia, in August of 1863. The storefront of 283 Duke St. reads "Price, Birch & Co., dealers in slaves.

Page 14: Civil War Photo Album Abraham Lincoln Jefferson Davis

Stacked cannon balls, possibly a view of an arsenal yard in Washington, D.C

Page 15: Civil War Photo Album Abraham Lincoln Jefferson Davis

Rebel prisoners waiting at Belle Plain, Virginia, for transportation

Page 16: Civil War Photo Album Abraham Lincoln Jefferson Davis

Wounded soldiers at rest near Marye's Heights, Fredericksburg, Virginia. After the battle of Spotsylvania, in 1864

Page 17: Civil War Photo Album Abraham Lincoln Jefferson Davis

The CSS Stonewall was a 1,390-ton ironclad built in Bordeaux, France, for the Confederate Navy in 1864. After she crossed the Atlantic, reaching Havana, Cuba, it was already May, 1865, and the war had ended. Spanish Authorities took possession, soon handing it over to the U.S. government.

Page 18: Civil War Photo Album Abraham Lincoln Jefferson Davis

Union prisoners draw their rations in this view from main gate of Andersonville Prison, Georgia, on August 17, 1864.

Page 19: Civil War Photo Album Abraham Lincoln Jefferson Davis

A view of Andersonville Prison, Georgia, on August 17, 1864. Andersonville was an infamous Confederate Prisoner-of-war camp, where nearly 13,000 of its approximately 45,000 Union prisoners died in brutal conditions, suffering from starvation, disease, and abuse from their captors.

Page 20: Civil War Photo Album Abraham Lincoln Jefferson Davis

Dead horses surround the damaged Trostle House, results of the Battle of Gettysburg, in July of 1863. Union general Major General Daniel Sickles used the farmhouse as a headquarters and Union and Confederate troops fought among the farm buildings during the fierce battle.

Page 21: Civil War Photo Album Abraham Lincoln Jefferson Davis

An execution in Washington, D.C., on November 10, 1865. Henry Wirz, former commander of the Confederate prisoner of war camp near Andersonville, Georgia, was tried and hung after the war for conspiracy and murder related to his command of the notorious camp.

Page 22: Civil War Photo Album Abraham Lincoln Jefferson Davis

African Americans prepare cotton for a cotton gin on Smith's plantation, Port Royal Island, South Carolina, in 1862.

Page 23: Civil War Photo Album Abraham Lincoln Jefferson Davis

Officers of the 69th Infantry New York, at Fort Corcoran, Virginia, with Col. Michael Corcoran

Page 24: Civil War Photo Album Abraham Lincoln Jefferson Davis

A Federal encampment on the Pamunkey River, Cumberland Landing, Virginia, in May of 1862

Page 25: Civil War Photo Album Abraham Lincoln Jefferson Davis

"A harvest of death", a famous scene from the aftermath of the Battle of Gettysburg, in Pennsylvania, in July of 1863

Page 26: Civil War Photo Album Abraham Lincoln Jefferson Davis

Federal cavalry at Sudley Ford, Virginia, following the battle of First Bull Run, in March of 1862.

Page 27: Civil War Photo Album Abraham Lincoln Jefferson Davis

Petersburg, Virginia, the first Federal army wagon train entering the town in April of 1865.

Page 28: Civil War Photo Album Abraham Lincoln Jefferson Davis

Union forces of Benson's Battery in the Battle of Seven Pines stand guard in the fighting against Gen. Thomas "Stonewall" Jackson's Confederate troops at Fair Oaks, near Richmond, Virginia. The battle, also called Fair Oaks, took place on May 31 and June 1, 1862.

Page 29: Civil War Photo Album Abraham Lincoln Jefferson Davis

Confederate dead lie among rifles and other gear, behind a stone wall at the foot of Marye's Heights near Fredericksburg, Virginia on May 3, 1863. Union forces penetrated the Confederate

lines at this point, during the Second Battle of Fredericksburg

Page 30: Civil War Photo Album Abraham Lincoln Jefferson Davis

The Federal Ironclad Galena, after recent action with Confederate batteries at Drewry's Bluff, on Virginia's James River, ca. 1862

Page 31: Civil War Photo Album Abraham Lincoln Jefferson Davis

Interior of a ward of Washington D.C.'s Harewood General Hospital in 1864. Harewood opened in September 1862 and closed in May 1866, after the end of the war.

Page 32: Civil War Photo Album Abraham Lincoln Jefferson Davis

White House Landing, on the Pamunkey river, Virginia. The site was a major Union Army Supply Base in 1862 ,during the Peninsula Campaign.

Page 33: Civil War Photo Album Abraham Lincoln Jefferson Davis

A black Union soldier sits, posted in front of a slave auction house on Whitehall Street in Atlanta, Georgia, in 1864. The sign reads "Auction & Negro Sales".

Page 34: Civil War Photo Album Abraham Lincoln Jefferson Davis

Rebel fortifications in front of Atlanta, Georgia, in 1863 or 1864.

Page 35: Civil War Photo Album Abraham Lincoln Jefferson Davis

African Americans collect the remains of soldiers killed in battle near Cold Harbor, Virginia, in April of 1865

Page 36: Civil War Photo Album Abraham Lincoln Jefferson Davis

In Atlanta, Georgia, soldiers sit atop boxcars at a railroad depot. At right is the office of Atlanta's Daily Intelligencer newspaper. Panorama made from two photographs taken by George N.

Barnard in 1864.

Page 37: Civil War Photo Album Abraham Lincoln Jefferson Davis

The deck and turret of the ironclad U.S.S. Monitor on the James River, Virginia, on July 9, 1862. the Monitor was the first ironclad warship commissioned by the U.S. Navy, and famously fought the Confederate

ironclad CSS Virginia (built from the remnants of the USS Merrimack) in the Battle of Hampton Roads -- the first meeting in combat of ironclad warships -- on March 8-9, 1862

Page 38: Civil War Photo Album Abraham Lincoln Jefferson Davis

A Pontoon bridge near Petersburg, Virginia, in April of 1865.

Page 39: Civil War Photo Album Abraham Lincoln Jefferson Davis

The camp of the Tennessee Colored Battery, pictured during the Siege of Vicksburg at Johnsonville, Tennessee,

Page 40: Civil War Photo Album Abraham Lincoln Jefferson Davis

Serving as a soldier in uniform and getting regular army pay, a former slave (center, with hands in pockets) stands with other Federal soldiers at the Army of the Potomac winter headquarters near

Fredericksburg, Virginia, The log hut served as a mess house for the regiment.

Page 41: Civil War Photo Album Abraham Lincoln Jefferson Davis

Bodies of soldiers lie on the ground in front of Dunker Church, after the Battle of Antietam, in Maryland, in September of 1862.

Page 42: Civil War Photo Album Abraham Lincoln Jefferson Davis

A party of the 50th New York Engineers builds a road on the south bank of the North Anna River, near Jericho Mills, Virginia, on May 24, 1864.

Page 43: Civil War Photo Album Abraham Lincoln Jefferson Davis

Confederate dead lie strewn near a fence on the Hagerstown road, after the Battle of Antietam, in Maryland, in September of 1862.

Page 44: Civil War Photo Album Abraham Lincoln Jefferson Davis

A view of the burned district of Richmond, Virginia, and the Capitol across the Canal Basin, in 1865. The city was assaulted by Union forces for more than nine months during the Siege of

Petersburg, after which Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee's army abandoned the battered city in April, 1865.

Page 45: Civil War Photo Album Abraham Lincoln Jefferson Davis

The Baptist Church in Fredericksburg, Virginia, photographed from the backyard of the Sanitary Commission depot on May 20, 1864, after the city had been damaged in two different major

battles of the war.

Page 46: Civil War Photo Album Abraham Lincoln Jefferson Davis

The ruins of an extensively damaged Roundhouse in Atlanta, Georgia after the Atlanta Campaign in the summer of 1864. After Union Maj. Gen. William T. Sherman captured the city, he began his

destructive March to the Sea, finally taking the port of Savannah on December 21

Page 47: Civil War Photo Album Abraham Lincoln Jefferson Davis

A view of Columbia, South Carolina, seen from the Capitol, following the occupation of the Union Army in 1865 -- during which much of the city was destroyed.

Page 48: Civil War Photo Album Abraham Lincoln Jefferson Davis

Grounds of the destroyed Arsenal with scattered shot and shell in Richmond, Virginia, in 1865

Page 49: Civil War Photo Album Abraham Lincoln Jefferson Davis

Residents walk through the ruins of Richmond, Virginia, in April of 1865. Richmond served as the capital of the Confederate States of America during the majority of the Civil War. After a long siege in 1865, with General Ulysses S. Grant's Union troops about to take the city, Confederate troops were ordered to evacuate, destroying bridges and burning supplies they they could not carry. A massive

fire swept through Richmond, destroying large parts of the city. About one week after the evacuation of Richmond, Gen. Robert E. Lee surrendered to Grant in near Appomattox, Virginia, on April 9, 1865

Page 50: Civil War Photo Album Abraham Lincoln Jefferson Davis

Surgeon embalming a soldier

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Hanging a deserter

Page 52: Civil War Photo Album Abraham Lincoln Jefferson Davis

A lone grave for a soldier while walking back home

Page 53: Civil War Photo Album Abraham Lincoln Jefferson Davis

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