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  2. Photographers of the American Civil War - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Photographers_of_the...

    Albert seems to have been the driving force behind the brothers' Civil War images. He and his friend Emanuel Leutze obtained passes in October 1861 from Gen. Winfield Scott to travel, photograph and sketch along the Potomac River outside of Washington, D.C. They took 19 stereoview photographs of war-time Washington, D.C., and its nearby defenses.

  3. List of photographs of Abraham Lincoln - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_photographs_of...

    A Civil War soldier from Parma, Ohio, was the original owner of this portrait, published in the Cleveland Plain Dealer on February 12, 1942, from a print in the Anthony L. Maresh collection. Possibly it is a photographic copy of one of two daguerreotypes, both now lost, taken in Ohio.

  4. Mathew Brady - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mathew_Brady

    Many images in this presentation were graphic photographs of corpses, a presentation new to America. This was the first time that many Americans saw the realities of war in photographs, as distinct from previous artists' impressions. Through his many paid assistants, Brady took thousands of photos of Civil War scenes.

  5. The Photographic History of the Civil War - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Photographic_History...

    A significant later effort to collect and publish photos of the American Civil War in an almost duplicate manner as the 1911 release, was the National Historical Society's 2,768-page The Image of War, 1861–1865 in six volumes under the overall auspices of renowned Civil War historians William C. Davis and Bell I. Wiley as senior editors. [3]

  6. Peter (enslaved man) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_(enslaved_man)

    Negatives for the first two images may have been exposed on the same day, while the third photo was taken at a later time. [5] The original images of Peter and Gordon, and at least two other known photos of contrabands photographed by McPherson & Oliver, were taken in a "makeshift studio with a hanging sheet for a backdrop and bare ground". [21]

  7. Alexander Gardner (photographer) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexander_Gardner...

    Alexander Gardner, 1860s. Abraham Lincoln became the President of the United States in the November 1860 election and along with his election came the threat of war. Gardner was well-positioned in Washington, D.C. to document the pre-war events, and his popularity rose as a portrait photographer, capturing the visages of soldiers leaving for war.

  8. Wikipedia : Featured pictures/History/American Civil War

    en.wikipedia.org/.../History/American_Civil_War

    American Civil War prison camp survivor, author unknown (restored by Jujutacular) Andersonville Prison , by John L. Ransom (restored by Jujutacular ) John F. Reynolds , by Alfred Rudolph Waud (edited by Jujutacular and Papa Lima Whiskey )

  9. George S. Cook - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_S._Cook

    George Smith Cook (February 23, 1819 – November 27, 1902) was an early American photographer known as a pioneer in the development of the field. Primarily a studio portrait photographer, he is the first to have taken a photograph of combat during a war: he captured images in 1863 of Union ironclads firing on Fort Moultrie in South Carolina during the Civil War.