Letters from Vicksburg. A series of 61 newspaper articles from the Memphis Daily Appeal before, during and after the Siege of Vicksburg. Both soldiers and correspondents contributed their stories. Oral history at its finest. <<Sample Article>>>

Memories of the Civil War - Special Edition. Over one hundred twenty articles from our popular Memories of the Civil War series. <<<Article List>>> <<Sample Article>>>

Gardner’s Photographic Sketch Book of the War. (Washington: Philp & Solomons, 1865–66) was published in two editions, one in 1865 and the other in 1866, both editions consisting of two volumes of fifty albumen print photographs, each with a descriptive caption, generally believed to have been written by Gardner himself. Historians estimate that no more than 200 copies of the Sketch Book were produced. The small print run is due primarily to the difficulty of mass-producing photographically illustrated books in the 1860s. <<Sample Photo>>>

Harper’s Pictorial History of the Civil War. During and after the war, Harper’s Weekly editors Alfred H. Guernsey and Henry M. Alden worked to compile and publish a definitive history of the Civil War.  Combining original illustrations and content from Harper’s Weekly wartime coverage with historical context and previously unpublished information, Guernsey and Alden authored Harper’s Pictorial History of the Great Rebellion in the United States from 1863-1867.  Published between 1866-1868 by Harper and Bros., the multi-volume work was later re-released as Harper’s Pictorial History of the Civil War. The Pictorial History featured over 1,000 illustrations by artists of renown including Thomas Nast and Winslow Homer. <<Sample Page>>>

The West Point Atlas of the Civil War. Originally published in 1959 as part of a two-volume set is considered a classic of military history. The original volumes were prepared by distinguished members of the Department of Military Art and Engineering at the U.S. Military Academy and used as instructional tools for the cadets. This mammoth and invaluable work was created under the direction of Brigadier General Vincent J. Esposito, a faculty member at West Point for more than twenty years. His highly respected endeavor allows readers to easily follow the entire course of a campaign or battle in detail while gaining a greater understanding of the Civil War. <<Sample Map>>>

Atlas of the Battlefield of Antietam. Prepared under the direction of the Antietam Battlefield Board, Lieut. Col. Geo. W. Davis, U.S.A., President, Gen. E.A. Carman, U.S.V., Gen. H. Heth, C.S.A. Surveyed by Lieut. Col. E.B. Cope, engineer, H.W. Mattern, assistant engineer, of the Gettysburg National Park. Drawn by Charles H. Ourand, 1899. Position of troops by gen. E. A. Carman. Published by authority of the Secretary of War, under the direction of the Chief of Engineers, U.S. Army, 1904. Relief shown by contour lines. Cover title. "Organization of the Union and Confederate armies at the Battle of Antietam (Sharpsburg), September 17, 1862". <<Sample Map Detail>>>

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The Memorial War Book. As drawn from historical records and personal narratives of the men who served in the great struggle., by Major George F. Williams. Illustrated by two thousand magnificent engravings reproduced largely from photographs taken by the U.S. Government photographers, M.B. Brady and Alexander Gardner, being the only original photographs taken during the war of the Rebellion. <<Cover>> <<Sample Page>>>

# 47

Frank Leslie's Scenes and Portraits of the Civil War (1894). The most important events of the conflict between the states graphically pictured. Stirring battle scenes and grand naval engagements, drawn by special artists on the spot. Portraits of principal participants, military and civil; famous forts; pathetic episodes, etc. The whole forming an authentic pictorial history of the war. Illustrated with 512 line drawings depicting various aspects of the war. Scarce. An amazing compendium of visual materials about the major occurrence of the nineteenth century. <<Sample Page>>>

# 48

Harpers New Monthly Magazine-The Civil War Years: It was founded in 1850 as Harper’s New Monthly Magazine, a literary journal, by the printing and publishing firm of the Harper brothers. Noted in its early years for its serialization of great English novels and for the fine quality of its own essays and other literature of the period, Harper’s was the first American magazine to introduce the extensive use of woodcut illustrations. It was a leader in publishing the writings of the most illustrious British and American authors, and by 1865 it had become the most successful periodical in the United States.                       The Story of Harper's Magazine>>> <<Sample Page>>>

# 49

Thirty Pen and Ink maps of the Maryland Campaign, 1862: Drawn from descriptive readings and map fragments by Robert E. Lee Russell, 1932. <<Sample Map Detail>>>

# 50

Artists of Lincoln Portraits - Excerpts from newspapers and other sources: The set comprises over 400 volumes, one per artist. We processed the entire collection into one file with bookmarks for each artist.

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Compendium of the War of the Rebellion by Frederick Henry Dyer. This is a SEARCHABLE compilation of the records of the Union Army from the Official Records of the War of the Rebellion and other records of the Federal & Confederate armies, reports of the adjutant generals of the various states, army registers, and other sources. Part I contains statistical breakdowns; Part II the records of campaigns, battles, skirmishes & important events and operations; Part III the regimental histories. All description is at the regimental level. (1,796 pages) <<<Table of Contents>>>   <<Sample pages>>>

# 39

The Papers of Ulysses S. Grant - 31 Volumes. This is a SEARCHABLE compilation. This digital collection consists of 31 volumes of The Papers of Ulysses S. Grant, political cartoons, and sheet music. At least 80 per cent of the text has never before been printed and most has been unavailable in any form. Every significant Grant document is printed in full and all others are incorporated in calendars at the back of the volumes. Items in the calendars include routine letters and documents, letters to Grant with no known reply, and material for which no reliable text is available. <<<Volume List>>>     <<Sample pages>>>

# 38

Maps of the Battle of the Wilderness by Robert E.L. Russell. A beautiful set of  26 Pen and Ink maps of the Battle of the Wilderness, May 5-6 and 7, 1864 between Lee (60,000) and Grant (120,000) including the approach and the movement toward Spottsylvania Courthouse. <<<Sample map>>> <<<Map list>>>

# 37

Civil War Atlas to Accompany Steele's American Campaigns. 136 plates covering the following campaigns: General map -- First Bull Run campaign -- Henry and Donelson -- Shiloh campaign -- Peninsular campaign -- Jackson's Valley campaign -- Second Bull Run campaign -- Antietam campaign -- Fredericksburg campaign -- Stones River campaign -- Chancellorsville campaign -- Gettysburg campaign -- Vicksburg campaign -- Chickamauga campaign -- Battles around Chattanooga -- Wilderness campaign -- Spottsylvania campaign -- Petersburg campaign -- Atlanta campaign -- Franklin and Nashville campaign. Published by US Military Academy (Dept. Of Military Art and Engineering), West Point, 1941.                                                        <<<Sample Map>>>     <<<Table of Contents>>>

The Union Army:  History of Military Affairs in the Loyal States 1861-65. Records of the Regiments in the Union Army-Cyclopedia of Battles-Memoirs of Commanders and Soldiers. SEARCHABLE, 8 volumes, 1908. <<<Table of Contents>>>

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Report of the Camps, Marches & Engagements, of the Second Corps, Army of Northern Virginia, and of the Army of the Valley District of the Department of Northern Virginia., during the Campaign of 1864 by Jed Hotchkiss, Top. Eng., 1908. 41 Maps and text. <<<Sample Map>>>

# 34

History of the Army of the Cumberland- Its Organization, Campaigns and Battles by Thomas Van Horne.  2 Volumes and accompanying Atlas. <<<Table of Contents - Vol. 1>>> <<<Table of Contents - Vol. 2>>> <<<Sample Map>>>

# 33

The Official Records to Accompany the Union and Confederate Navies.  Scanned images of all 30 volumes in PDF format, fully SEARCHABLE. Also search across the text of all 30 volumes in one PDF file. <<<Collection Guide

# 32

Second Manassas Campaign: August 17 - September 1, 1862. A series of 30 Pen and Ink Maps drawn by Robert E. Lee Russell, 1943. <<<Map List>>>   <<<Sample>>>

# 31

Second Manassas Campaign: A series of 21 Pen and Ink Maps showing details of the battles of Gainesville, Groveton, Second Manassas, and Chantilly, August 28 - September 1, 1862 drawn by Robert E. Lee Russell, 1943. <<<Map List>>>   <<<Sample>>>

 Bonus Collection List - Updated 6/24/24

# 30

The Novels of John Esten Cooke: John Esten Cooke (1830-1886) was a novelist, historian, lawyer, and Confederate Army Officer, of Millwood (Clarke Co.), Va. We present here 33 of his works in PDF format. <<<Book List>>>

# 29

The Army in the Civil War. All 13 volumes in PDF format. <<<Book list with Authors>>>

# 28

The Journal of the Congress of the Confederate States of America, 1861-1865. At the conclusion of the Civil War, the United States Department of War seized the journals of the Confederate Congress. A Senate Resolution dated January 28, 1904, directed the secretary of war, Elihu Root, to transmit to the U.S. Senate a copy of the Journal of the Provisional Congress and of the 1st and 2nd Congresses of the Confederate States of America. The Journal of the Congress of the Confederate States of America, 1861-1865 was printed in a seven-volume set between 1904 and 1905. The Journal of the Congress of the Confederate States of America is a transcript of the Civil War time proceedings of the Provisional Congress, House and Senate, of the Confederate States of America. Included are ordinances of secession from state legislatures; lists of delegates and their credentials; proceedings of open and secret sessions; texts of bills and resolutions; records of votes cast; communications to and from the Congress, including those relating to Jefferson Davis and his cabinet; and a record of the Confederate States of America Constitutional Convention. 5,700 pages of the Journal of the Congress of the Confederate States of America, 1861-1865. The general index has the names of approximately 14,000 individuals.  <<<Volume List and Contents>>>

# 27

Edwin Forbes - Life Studies of the Great Army - A Civil War Artist at the Front. This folio contains 38 copper plate etchings illustrating Army life during the Civil War, which Forbes composed as an artist-reporter for "Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper." These etchings are derived from his original pencil sketches made while he followed the Army of the Potomac, which were compiled into a folio and published in 1876. The views offered in these prints cover a wide range of themes, including battle scenes, troop movements, soldiers taking breaks, meal preparation, camp life, and sweeping landscape views. The prints are individually titled, with sometimes-sarcastic commentary. <<Sample>>>

# 26

Campaigns of the American Civil War. Atlas of 45 maps drawn by Gustav Joseph Fiebeger, West Point, U.S.M.A. Companion atlas to the U.S.M.A textbook on the battles of the Civil War.  <<<Map Gallery>>>

# 25

The American Civil War Book and Grant Album. A Portfolio of half-tone reproductions from rare and costly photographs designed to perpetuate the memory of General Ulysses S. Grant. Depicting scenes and incidents in connection with the Civil War.   <<Sample Pages>>

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Lloyds Battle History of the Great Rebellion, H.H. Lloyd & Co., 1866. Complete, from the capture of Fort Sumter, April 14, 1861, to the capture of Jefferson Davis, May 10, 1865, embracing General Howard’s tribute to the volunteer, 268 battle descriptions, 39 biographical sketches, 49 portraits of generals, 17 maps of battle-fields, 13 battle pictures, and a general review of the War for the Union. <<<Cover>>> <<<Table of Contents>>>

# 23

Abraham Lincoln: The War Years. Four-volume biography by Carl Sandburg, published in 1939. It was awarded the 1940 Pulitzer Prize for history. After the success of Sandburg’s 1926 biography, Abraham Lincoln: The Prairie Years, Sandburg turned to Lincoln’s life after 1861, devoting 11 years to research and writing.                                                         <<<Foreword>>> <<<Table of Contents>>>

# 22

Personal War Sketches by Grand Army of the Republic. This is a special book containing the narrations of the military service of each of the members of Post 415 of the Grand Army of the Republic. There is a list at the beginning of the book which lists the name of the member and the page which contains the member's handwritten narration. <<<Cover>>> <<<Sample>>>

# 21

Annals Of The Army Of The Cumberland. Comprising Biographies, Descriptions of Departments, Accounts, Expeditions, Skirmishes, and Battles; also the Police Record of Spies, Smugglers, and Prominent Rebel Emissaries. Together with Anecdotes, Incidents, Poetry, Reminiscences, etc. And Official Reports of the Battle of Stone River And of the Chickamauga Campaign. <<<Preface and Table of Contents>>>

# 20

New York in the War of the Rebellion, 1861 to 1865 (6 volumes). This set, compiled by Frederick Phisterer, provides detailed information on various aspects of New York State's role in the Civil War and is an important resource for conducting research into New York State regiments during the Civil War.  Each regimental history in this set includes information on when and where a regiment was recruited, the names of its officers, the battles in which the regiment participated, and the casualties suffered. <Sample Pages>>

# 19

Campaigns of the Army of the Potomac. A Critical History Of Operations In Virginia, Maryland And Pennsylvania From The Commencement To The Close Of The War, 1861-1865.  <<<Preface and Table of Contents>>>

# 18

The Annals of The War. Written By The Leading Participants North And South. Originally Published In The Philadelphia Weekly Times, furnishing the most valuable contributions to the future historian which have yet been given to the world. They are far from being perfect ; but they have elicited the truth to a degree that no other means could have accomplished. They are from the pens of a number of the most honored, intelligent and impartial of the immediate actors in the scenes they portray. They embrace in the list of authors men of high rank in military circles on both sides, and statesmen and historians of great trust and attainments, who favored the cause of both the Blue and the Gray. <<<Preface and Table of Contents>>>

# 17

Seven Days' battles, Virginia, June 25-July 1, 1862. Set of 10 maps made from data compiled by officers of the Federal Army during the war. Shows troop positions and fortifications in the Richmond region and names of some residents. Relief shown by contours. <<< Map Sample - Battle of Gaines' Mill, Va., June 27,1862 >>>

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Maps for history of 20th Army Corps, June 1864-May 11, 1865. Set of 28 maps. Maps show General Sherman's march south through Georgia then north to Virginia. Relief shown by hachures. Pen and ink, colored ink, and pencil on paper and tracing cloth. <<<Sample>>>

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History of the Pennsylvania Volunteers, 1861-1865 by Samuel Bates. This 5 volume series written in 1869 is considered the standard reference for Pennsylvania’s Civil War regimental rosters and histories. <<<Sample>>>

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Histories of the Several Regiments and Battalions from North Carolina in the Great War, 1861-1865. This 5 volume set was edited by Walter Clark, a brigadier general who served for the North Carolina militia during the Civil War. The books were published in 1901 by E.M. Uzzell in Raleigh, North Carolina after the state provided funds for publication. The books contain first-hand accounts of those who served in North Carolina regiments during the Civil War. <<<Sample>>>

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Massachusetts Soldiers, Sailors, and Marines in the Civil War. The complete set (9 volumes) contains the names of all the men who served in Massachusetts units during the Civil War (1861 - 1864). The details for each man are: full name, rank, town/state from, age, occupation, date of service and discharge, and reason for discharge. There is approximately 140,000 individuals in the complete set which are all men who served in Massachusetts units during the Civil War. <<<Sample>>>

# 12

Battle of Spottsylvania Courthouse, May 8-21, 1864 between Lee (50,000) and Grant (110,000), immediately following the Wilderness Battle. A series of 32 pen and ink maps drawn by Robert E. L. Russell.                                                <<<Cover>>> <<<Sample>>>

# 11

Farrow's Military Encyclopedia was compiled as a labor of love by Edward S. Farrow, an instructor at West Point. Designed to be a complete reference of hard to find information covering all aspects of military and many other subjects in one set of books. Three volumes of military knowledge illustrated with maps and about three thousand wood engravings by Edward S.Farrow, U.S.Army. A assistant instructor of tactics at the United States Military Academy. West Point, New York]. <<<Preface and Table of Contents>>>

# 10

Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper - Jan 7, 1860 to  Sept 15, 1866. Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper was an American illustrated literary and news magazine founded in 1855 and published until 1922. It gave a vivid picture of typical American life during the decades of its publication. <<Sample Pages>>

# 9

Barnard's Photographic Views of the Sherman Campaign, ca. 1866. Embracing scenes of the occupation of Nashville, the great battles around Chattanooga and Lookout Mountain, The Campaign of Atlanta, March to the Sea, and the Great Raid through the Carolinas from negatives taken in the field George N. Barnard. <<<Sample>>>

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Civil War Photograph Album - Alice Mason. Alice Mason’s album of Civil War photographs is a comprehensive, personal representation of the war. The circumstances of the creation of Alice Mason’s album of Civil War photographs are unclear. There is no way of knowing whose eye and experience informed the selection of these views, whether they were chosen and arranged by Alice Mason herself, or by someone else. Probably assembled in Washington after the conclusion of the war, the album opens with portraits of the defenders of the Union, arranged in order of precedence. <<<Sample>>>

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Gettysburg Map Collection. Over 80 maps of the Gettysburg campaign from cartographers such as Jedediah Hotchkiss, Robert Knox Sneden and others.  <<<Sample>>>

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Battles and Leaders of the Civil War - 4 volumes. Battles and Leaders of the Civil War is recognized as the outstanding history of the War between the States to come out of the 19th century. This series was originally conceived in 1883 by the editors of Century Company, who set out to provide an accurate, unbiased account of the war.
Being for the most part contributions by Union and Confederate Officers based upon "The Century War Series" edited by Robert Underwood Johnson and Clarence Clough Buel, of the editorial staff of "The Century Magazine". Each volume contains several maps, illustrated by various artist and engravers including Thomas Moran, Winslow Homer, Joseph Pennell, Rufus F. Zogbaum, and others, The last volume contains an extensive index with a supplemental index.     SEARCHABLE across all four volumes at once.

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History of the Confederate States Navy. From its organization to the surrender of its last vessel.
Its stupendous struggle with the great navy of the United States; the engagements fought in the rivers and harbors of the South, and upon the high seas; blockade-running, first use of iron-clads and torpedoes, and privateer history.
By J. Thomas Scharf. <<<Preface and Table of Contents>>>

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History of the Second Army Corps in the Army of the Potomac. A history of the II Corps written by the assistant Adjutant General of the Corps, Francis A. Walker. <<<Preface and Table of Contents>>>

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The Army of the Potomac from 1861 to 1863. An inside view of the history of the Army of the Potomac and its leaders as told in the official dispatches, reports and secret correspondence, from the date of its organization under General George B. McClellan in 1861, until the supersedure of General Hooker, and the assignment of General Meade to its command in 1863. <<<Preface and Table of Contents>>>

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The Military Annals of Tennessee. Confederate. First series. Embracing a review of military operations, with regimental histories and memorial rolls. <<<Preface and Table of Contents>>>

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The Annals of the Army of Tennessee and early western history, including a chronological summary of battles and engagements in the western armies of the Confederacy. <<<Preface and Table of Contents>>>

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The Military History of Wisconsin. A record of the civil and military patriotism of the state, in the war for the union, with a history of the campaigns in which Wisconsin soldiers have been conspicuous, regimental histories, sketches of distinguished officers, the roll of the illustrious dead, movements of the Legislature and state officers, etc.                        <<<Preface and Table of Contents>>>

# 57

The Rebellion Record- a Diary of American Events, by Frank Moore (1861-1863).  A twelve-volume set (eleven volumes and a supplement to the first volume) that created a history of the American Civil War while the war was still being fought. It was published during the Civil War and in the three years following. SEARCH across all 12 volumes at once or each volume individually. <<<Table of Contents - All Volumes>>>

# 56

Confederate Veteran Magazine A forty-volume set, The Confederate Veteran was originally started in 1893 by Sumner A. Cunningham (1843-1913). These magazines provide the largest collection of personal experiences, anecdotes, battle footnotes, tall tales, and biographical sketches for the Confederate side
 
SEARCH across all 40 volumes at once or each volume individually.
<<<Sample Pages>>>

# 55

Life and Works of Abraham Lincoln, Centenary Edition, in 9 volumes. v. 1. Lincoln the citizen, February 12, 1809, to March 4, 1861 -- v. 2. Early speeches, 1832-1856 -- v. 3. Speeches and debates, 1856-1858 -- v. 4. Speeches and debates, 1858-1859 -- v. 5. Speeches and presidential addresses, 1859-1865 -- v. 6. State papers, 1861-1865 -- v. 7. Letters and telegrams, Adams to Garrison -- v. 8. Letters and telegrams, Gasparin to Meade -- v. 9. Letters and telegrams, Meredith to Yates.  SEARCH across all 9 volumes at once or each volume individually.

# 54

History of the Army of the Potomac, by James Henry Stine. A critical history of operations in Virginia, Maryland and Pennsylvania, from the commencement to the close of the war. SEARCHABLE.

# 53

Confederate Military History is a 12-volume series of books written and/or edited by former Confederate Brigadier General Clement A. Evans that deals with specific topics related to the military personalities, places, battles, and campaigns in various Southern United States states, including those of the Confederacy. SEARCH across all 12 volumes at once or each volume individually. <<Collection description>> <<Tables Of Contents>>

#52

The History of the Navy during the Rebellion.  A history of the Union Navy during civil war detailing important battles, strategy as well technical developments. 2 Volumes. The whole material for the work has been drawn from documents in possession of the Navy Department, so that its narrative rests upon the highest possible authority. SEARCHABLE.

# 59

Maps illustrating General Sherman's March to the Sea and through the Carolinas and Virginia.   Part 1: Maps showing positions of 20th Corps on march from Chattanooga, Tenn. to Atlanta, Ga. with dates and Union and Rebel defenses. Part 2: Maps showing the campaign of the 20th Corps from Atlanta to Savannah with the dates [and] Union and Rebel defenses, 1864. Part 3: Campaign maps exhibiting the line of march of the 20th Corps from Savannah, Ga. to Goldsboro, N.C. with the plans of the battle fields of Averysboro and Bentonsville, 1865. Part 4: Campaign maps exhibiting the line of march of the Army of Georgia, commanded by Maj. Genl. H.W. Slocum, from Goldsboro, N.C. to Martha's Vineyard, N.C., 1865. Part 5: Maps showing the line of march of the Army of Georgia, commanded by Maj. Genl. H.W. Slocum, from Raleigh, N.C. to Alexandria, Va., 1865.                  < Sample >

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Union and Confederate Campaigns in the Lower Shenandoah Valley illustrated. Twenty-six maps show positions of Federal and Confederate armies. Includes maps of the battles of Winchester: Opequon, Fisher's Hill, and Cedar Creek.       < Sample Map >   < List of Sheridan's and Early's Armies in the Campaign of 1864 >

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The Medical and Surgical History of the War of the Rebellion. The six volumes included numerous statistical summaries relating to diseases, wounds, and deaths in both the Union and Confederate armies, almost all of the material formed from the reports of U.S. Army medical directors, surgeons, doctors, and hospital staff. The accounts are a basic source for medical data on the War and also comprise an important source of information relating to individual soldiers. The names of the surgeons who submitted these case studies are almost always included, so the books can be helpful in tracking where an individual surgeon was at various times. Hundreds of etchings, wood engravings, charts, and tables, as well as many photographs and color plates (lithographs, chromolithographs, albumen photographs, heliotypes, and woodburytypes) accompany the approximately 3,000 pages of densely printed text. < Index >

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Maps of the March of the 1st Brigade, 1st Cavalry Division. Fifty-five maps drawn in pencil of the March of the 1st Brigade, 1st Cavalry Division, Department of Cumberland on the Stoneman expedition through Tenn., Va., N.C., S.C., Geo., & Ala., March to June 1865. < Sample Map > < Sample Map >

# 63

The Secret Service in the War of the Rebellion. This collection contains the following books in PDF format:

  • The Secret Service of the Confederate States in Europe or, How the Confederate Cruisers were equipped, vol.1 (1883).
  • The Secret Service of the Confederate States in Europe or, How the Confederate Cruisers were equipped, vol.2 (1883).
  • Capturing a Locomotive - A History of the Secret Service in the Late War.
  • The Army Detective - A story of the Secret Service during the Rebellion (1886).
  • The War Detective, or, Secret Service in the Rebellion - A story of Booth's Great Conspiracy , 1887.
  • The Secret Service, the Field, the Dungeon, and the Escape (1865).
  • Between the lines - Secret Service Stories told Fifty Years After (1911).
  • Running the Blockade; or, U. S. Secret Service Adventures (1875).
  • History of the United States Secret Service, 1867.
  • The Secret Service in the late war - comprising the author's introduction to the leading men at Washington, with the origin and organization of the detective police, and a graphic history of his rich experiences.

# 64

The Signal Corps in the War of the Rebellion. This collection contains the following in PDF format:

  • The First Signal Message – It was sent at Bull Run by General E.P. Alexander, C.S.A.
  • The Signal Corps, U.S.A. in the War of the Rebellion (1896).
  • Visiting War Scenes - Reminiscences of a United States Signal Corps Man.
  • Unites States Signal Corps – History of this important branch of the War Department.
  • The Signal Corps - Union officers reading Confederate signals, by C.H. Fish.
  • Hold the Fort - Signal messages between Kenesaw and Allatoona.
  • Reminiscences of the Signal Service in the Civil War.
  • Roster of Signal Corps, U.S.A. 1861-1865, issued by the U.S. Veteran Signal Corps Association.
  • Under Fire with Farragut - The Signal Boy's Story, 1919.
  • Code of Flotilla and Boat Squadron Signals for the United States Navy (1861).
  • A Manual of Signals - for the use of signal officers in the field, and for military and naval students.(1868).
  • The Last Signal Message - Flashing the magic word Peace.

# 65

Civil War Art Volume 1. This collection has 190 images from our archives. All the images have been processed with image enhancing software to give you the best quality. If you like Civil War Art, look no further.

Civil War Art Volume 1 - Image List     Civil War Art Volume 1 - Thumbnail Image Gallery

# 66

Civil War Art Volume 2. This collection has 200 images from our archives. All the images have been processed with image enhancing software to give you the best quality. If you like Civil War Art, look no further.

Civil War Art Volume 2 - Image List     Civil War Art Volume 2 - Thumbnail Image Gallery

# 67

Civil War Art Volume 3. This collection has 200 images from our archives. All the images have been processed with image enhancing software to give you the best quality. If you like Civil War Art, look no further.

Civil War Art Volume 3 - Image List     Civil War Art Volume 3 - Thumbnail Image Gallery

# 68

Civil War Art Volume 4. This collection has 200 images from our archives. All the images have been processed with image enhancing software to give you the best quality. If you like Civil War Art, look no further.

Civil War Art Volume 4 - Image List     Civil War Art Volume 4 - Thumbnail Image Gallery

# 69

Civil War Art Volume 5. This collection has 300 images from our archives. All the images have been processed with image enhancing software to give you the best quality. If you like Civil War Art, look no further.

Civil War Art Volume 5 - Image List     Civil War Art Volume 5 - Thumbnail Image Gallery

# 70

Military Maps of the Armies of the Potomac and James.  Seventeen Military Maps Illustrating the Operations of the Armies Of The Potomac & James May 4th 1864 to April 9th 1865 including Battlefields of the Wilderness, Spottsylvania, North Anna, Totopotomoy, Cold Harbor, The Siege Of Petersburg And Richmond Battle-fields of Five Forks. Maps partially prepared by order of Lieut. Genl. U.S. Grant. Surveys and Maps were executed under the direction of Bvt. Brig. Genl. N. Michler and Bvt. Lieut. Col. P.S. Michie prepared for publication by Bvt. Brig. Genl. N. Michler under the authority of the Hon. Secretary of War. The Surveys and Maps relating to the Battle-fields under orders of Brig. & Bvt. Maj. Genl. A.A. Humphreys.    < Thumbnail Image Gallery >

# 71

Map of the Tennessee River for the use of the Mississippi Squadron in the Civil War. The Mississippi River Squadron was a Union military unit established in 1861 that operated vessels along the Mississippi River and its tributaries. Operating under both Federal army and navy command during the Civil War, boats of the unit saw action in and near Arkansas for much of the war. Sixteen maps plus notes.    < Thumbnail Image Gallery >

# 72

The Retreat from Petersburg, April 2-9, 1865. A series of 32 pen and ink maps picturing the progress of Lee's retreat and Grant's pursuit from Petersburg to Appomattox Courthouse, approximately 100 miles, (with descriptive notes) divided into three phases. < Thumbnail Image Gallery >

# 73

The Private and official correspondence of General Benjamin F. Butler, during the period of the Civil War. All five volumes in PDF format. SEARCH across all 5 volumes at once or each volume individually.                                                   Volumes 1-5 [ALL INDEXES]

# 74

The Confederate Records of the State of Georgia. Volumes 1,2,3,4,6 in PDF format. Volume 5 was never published. SEARCH across all volumes at once or each volume individually.         Indexes to All Volumes

# 75

Civil War Guns. The complete story of Federal and Confederate small arms: Design, manufacture, identification, procurement, issue, employment, effectiveness, and postwar disposal.   < Table of Contents >     < Sample Pages >

# 76

Hand Book of the United States Navy - Being a Compilation of all the Principal Events in the History of every Vessel of the United States Navy. (1864) “ In compiling this Hand Book it it has been the author's aim to give those interested in the naval history of the United States a well-arranged sketch of the doings of each vessel, with the date of all important events connected with her individual history, thus enabling all to see at a glance what each has accomplished. ” - Bradley S. Osbon                                                      < Sample Pages >

# 77

Our Navy in the War of the Rebellion - Heroes and Battles of the War 1861-65. An Authentic Account Of Battles And Sieges, Adventures And Incidents, Including Biographies Of The Prominent Naval Heroes Who Were Instrumental In Bringing The Civil War To A Triumphant Close.   < Table of Contents and Sample Pages >

# 78

Our Army in the War of the Rebellion - Heroes and Battles of the War 1861-65. An Authentic Account Of Battles And Sieges, Adventures And Incidents, Including Biographies Of The Prominent Generals Who Were Instrumental In Bringing The Civil War To A Triumphant Close.    < Table of Contents and Sample Pages >
 

# 79

Complete Regular Army Register of the United States for One Hundred Years (1779 to 1879).      Complete regular army register of the United States for one hundred years together with the volunteer general staff during the War with Mexico, and a register of all appointments by the President of the United States in the volunteer service during the rebellion, with the official military record of each officer ; also, a military history of the Department of War, and of each staff Department of the Army ; with various tables relating to the Army and other important military information, compiled from the official records.     < Index of Names >

# 80

Official Army Register of the Volunteer Force for the years 1861-65. Part 1. New England states. Part 2. New York and New Jersey. Part 3. Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland, District of Columbia. Part 4. West Virginia, Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Florida, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, Texas, Arkansas, Tennessee, Kentucky. Part 5. Ohio, Michigan. Part 6. Indiana, Illinois. Part 7. Missouri, Wisconsin, Iowa, Minnesota, California, Kansas, Oregon, Nevada. Part 8. Territories of Washington, New Mexico, Nebraska, Colorado, Dakota; Veteran reserve corps, U.S. veteran volunteers (First army corps), U.S. volunteers.                            < Sample Pages >

# 81

The Civil War Through the Camera - Hundreds of Vivid Photographs actually taken in Civil War times, in 16 parts:

     < Collection Description >           < Sample Pages >                         < Image Gallery >

# 82

Lincoln Reference Collection. From our archives:

  • Complete Works of Abraham Lincoln - 12 Vols., John G. Nicolay and John Hay, eds. [ Memorial Edition no.467 ].
  • Life and Works of Abraham Lincoln, Vols 1-9, Marion Miller, ed. [Centenary Edition, 1907].
  • The Works of Abraham Lincoln, Vols. 1-8, John Clifford and Marion Miller, eds.[ University Society Edition,1908]
  • The Writings of Abraham Lincoln, Volumes 1-8,  Arthur Brooks Lapsley ,ed.1905.

# 83

General Register of the United States Navy and Marine Corps for One Hundred Years (1782 to 1882). Containing he names of all officers of the Navy commissioned, warranted, and appointed; including volunteer officers, who have entered the service since the establishment of the Navy department in 1798; showing the dates of their original entry, of their progressive rank. and in what manner they left the service, if not now in it,  together with a sketch of the Navy from 1775 to 1798: and a list' of all midshipmen and cadet engineers at the naval academy since its establishment.  Compiled from the original manuscript records of the Navy department, by permission of the honorable secretary of the Navy.  < Sample Index >

# 84

Peabody Record of Names of Soldiers and Sailors in the Civil War, 1861-1865. Complete Record of the Names of all the Soldiers and Officers in the Military Service and of All The Seamen  and Officers in the Naval Service of the United States from: During the Rebellion Begun in 1861 together with Authentic Facts Relating to the  Military or Naval Career of Each Soldier, Seaman, and Officer. Made out, with Additions from time to time, In Conformity with the Statutes of  the Commonwealth , Approved March 7, 1863, and April 29, 1836. The years covered in this volume are the years of 1861-1865, and includes soldiers and officers and seamen and officers.  < Sample Pages >

# 85

The Naval History of the Civil War by Admiral David Dixon Porter. An authoritative 19th-century history, based on official records and other documents, chronicles the navy's role in the war from the opening shots to the desperate final months. Highlights include the fight between the Monitor and the Merrimac, the capture of Fort Henry and Fort Donelson, the Red River Expedition, and much more. Numerous illustrations. < Table of Contents >

# 86

The Military and Naval History of the Rebellion in the United States with biographical sketches of deceased officers, 1865. Complied during the war and written and published in 1865 by William J. Tenney, a professional encyclopedist, the book covers all battles and major skirmishes on land and sea, related political events, and inventions in military and naval science. Key events were reviewed and verified by actual participants. It is one of the best collections of original source materials available on the Civil War. Fully indexed. A must for historians, researchers, libraries, and those who like to read about the Civil War.    < Table of Contents >

# 87

The Southern Historical Society Papers. The Southern Historical Society was an organization founded by Confederate Major General Dabney Herndon Maury in 1868-1869 that documented Southern military and civilian viewpoints from the American Civil War. These were compiled into the Southern Historical Society "Papers". They were published in the late 19th Century, comprising 44 volumes of articles written by Southern soldiers, officers, politicians, and civilians.   SEARCH across all 44 volumes.  < Tables of Contents >

# 88

Frank Leslie's Soldier in Our Civil War - in 2 volumes. A pictorial history of the conflict, 1861-1865, illustrating the valor of the soldier as displayed on the battle-field. From sketches drawn by Forbes, Waud, Taylor, Hillen, Becker, Lovie, Schell, Crane, Davis, and other eye-witnesses. Edited by Paul F. Mottelay and T. Campbell-Copeland, assisted by the most notable generals and commanders of both sides. With an introd. by Robert B. Beath. History of the Grand Army of the Republic, by Paul Vandervort. History of the Confederate Veterans' Association, by I. W. Avery. History of the Sons of Veterans, by A. P. Davis and Frank P. Merrill. Includes a Chronological list of events (1860-1863) and miscellaneous statistics.                                                                                                                                                                < Thumbnail Image Gallery - Volume 1 >       < Thumbnail Image Gallery - Volume 2 >

# 89

Source Book of the Peninsula Campaign in Virginia, April to July, 1862.  This source book contains a series of extracts from documents relating to the Peninsula Campaign of 1862, assembled for use of students studying that campaign, and brought together for avid researchers. It is especially intended for the Staff School during the course on Military History, to place before them in convenient form, copies of original sources of information, to supplement the invaluable Official Records of the War of the Rebellion.         < Table of Contents >

# 90

Andrew J. Russell Civil War Photographs. ( 354 images) Andrew Joseph Russell, a captain in the volunteer infantry, became a photographer during the American Civil War. As photographer-engineer for the United States Military Railroad Construction Corps, he was assigned to photograph battlefields and campsites in Virginia. He also photographed engineering projects and contributed images to what was probably the world's first technical manual illustrated with photographs. Perhaps the most prominent photographer to document the building of the transcontinental railroad. Russell learned the medium as a volunteer officer in the Union Army during the Civil War. A portrait and landscape painter in New York, Russell was commissioned as a photographer for the United States Military Railroad Construction Corps under General Herman Haupt in 1863.            < Thumbnail Image Gallery  >

# 91

History of the Ram Fleet and the Mississippi Marine Brigade in the War for the Union on the Mississippi River and its tributaries. The story of the Ellets and their men. The Mississippi Marine Brigade was a Union Army unit raised during the American Civil War as part of the United States Ram Fleet. These soldiers acted as marines aboard United States Army rams patrolling the Mississippi River. The unit was commanded by members of the Ellet family and was organized as part of the Regular Army instead of a State unit. <<Sample Pages>>

# 92

Report of the U.S. Congress Joint Committee on the Conduct of the War. On Sunday, July 21, 1861, several members of Congress journeyed from Washington, D.C., to Centreville, Virginia, to watch the Union Army march into battle. On a hill overlooking Bull Run Creek, lawmakers, joined by journalists and other curious civilians, ate picnic lunches as they watched the battle (thus known as the "Picnic Battle"). As journalist Benjamin Perley Poore commented, spectators gathered "as they would have gone to see a horse-race or to witness a Fourth of July procession." The Union Army performed well in the morning, but by early afternoon the Confederates had turned the tide with reinforcements. When Union generals finally called retreat around 4:00 p.m., the frightened soldiers fled for their lives, sweeping up civilians in their retreat back to Washington. Read More >>

SEARCH across all volumes at once or each volume individually.

# 93

An Artist's Story of the Great War by Edwin Forbes, 3 Volumes. Told and Illustrated with relief etchings after Sketches in the Field and 20 Half-Tone Portraits from Original Oil Paintings. Art Portfolio of events during the American Civil War. Edwin Forbes witnessed the battles he sketched unlike many other artists of the time. < Sample Pages >

# 94

Confederate States Document Collection. This archive of 170 documents is fully searchable through one pdf file of approximately 13,000 pages. An archive of the single documents is also included. See document list below for more info.  < Document List >

# 95

Rifle and Light Infantry Tactics in the Civil War by W.J. Hardee. In 1853, then-Secretary of War Jefferson Davis ordered Hardee to write an updated manual on the use and tactics of the new weapons available, percussion rifles, which would be used throughout the Civil War. The book was finished by 1855, and became the standard manual on March 20 of that year. The manual has had multiple different prints, the most common of which being in 1861 and 1862. At that time, Hardee had joined the Confederate Army and held the rank of lieutenant general. The manual was in use with the United States Army as well as the Confederate States Army during the war. We have collected the best of the digital editions available in the public domain. Explore...Discover...Enjoy !  <<Book List>>

# 96

Military maps illustrating the operations of the armies of the Potomac and James against Richmond, May 4th, 1864 to April 9th, 1865 : including battlefields of the Wilderness, Totopotomoy, North Anna, Spottsylvania, Cold Harbor, the movements north of the James River, Siege of Petersburg, battlefields of Five Forks, Sailor's Creek, Farmville & Appomatox Court House, and also the routes of march of the opposing armies.  <<Sample>>

# 97

Encyclopedia of Civil War Shipwrecks by W. Craig Gaines. Many years in the making, W. Craig Gaines's Encyclopedia of Civil War Shipwrecks is the definitive account of more than 2,000 of these American Civil War–period sunken ships. From Alabama's USS Althea, a Union steam tug lost while removing a Confederate torpedo in the Blakely River, to Wisconsin's Berlin City, a Union side-wheel steamer stranded in Oshkosh, Gaines provides detailed information about each vessel, including its final location, type, dimensions, tonnage, crew size, armament, origin, registry (Union, Confederate, United States, or other country), casualties, circumstances of loss, salvage operations, and the sources of his findings. Organized alphabetically by geographical location (state, country, or body of water), the book also includes a number of maps providing the approximate locations of many of the wrecks—ranging from the Americas to Europe, the Arctic Ocean, and the Indian Ocean. Also noted are more than forty shipwrecks whose locations are in question. <<Table of Contents>>

# 98

Robert E. Lee - A Biography. Douglas Southall Freeman's Pulitzer-Prize-winning biography of Robert E. Lee was greeted with critical acclaim when it was first published in 1935. Chronicling all the major aspects and highlights of the general's military career, from his stunning accomplishments in the Mexican War to the humbling surrender to Appomattox. (4 Volumes, PDF format)

# 99

Roster and Record of Iowa Soldiers in the War of the Rebellion. Roster and record of Iowa soldiers in miscellaneous organizations of the Mexican War, Indian campaigns, War of the Rebellion and the Spanish-American and Philippine wars; together with historical sketches of volunteer organizations. v.1. 1st-8th regiments - infantry.--v.2. 9th-16th regiments - infantry.--v.3. 17th-31st regiments - infantry.--v.4. 1st-9th regiments - cavalry, and two independent companies - cavalry.--v.5. 32d-48th regiments - infantry, 1st regiment African infantry and 1st-4th batteries light artillery.- v.6. Miscellaneous.  <<Sample Pages>>

# 100

Records of Louisiana Confederate soldiers and Louisiana Confederate commands. In 1920, Andrew B. Booth, the Commissioner of Louisiana Military Records, published his multi-volume set, "Records of Louisiana Confederate Soldiers and Louisiana Confederate Commands". Even more than eighty years later, it remains an invaluable source in searching for documentation of Louisiana Confederate soldiers. Not every Louisiana Confederate soldier who served is listed; other sources verify the Confederate military service of many Louisiana men who, for various reasons, Booth's index does not list. <<Sample Pages>>

# 101

Record of Service of Michigan Volunteers in the Civil War, 1861-1865.This forty-six volume set is a compilation of the military history of each soldier of the Civil War who was a resident of the State of Michigan at the time of enlistment.  <<Sample Pages>>

# 102

Hotchkiss Map of the Shenandoah Valley. Jedediah Hotchkiss was tasked by Stonewall Jackson to  “make me a map of the Valley, from Harper’s Ferry to Lexington, showing all the points of offense and defense in those places.”   The completed Shenandoah Valley map, preserved in the Library of Congress, is a masterpiece of detail and artistry. Completed in sections and drawn on tracing linen in a scale of 1:80,000, or slightly more than one mile per inch, the full map spans an impressive 8 feet x 3.5 feet. This high resolution copy displays the skills of the young Civil War Cartographer. <<Map Detail # 1>>   <<Map Detail # 2>>   <<Map Detail # 3>>

# 103

Roster of North Carolina Troops in the War Between the States (4 volumes). A Roster of North Carolina Troops in the War between the States, by Confederate veteran John Wheeler Moore, was an undertaking by the state of North Carolina in 1881 to publish a list of its Confederate soldiers. The four volumes of Moire’s Roster, as it came to be called, include the names of 106,498 soldiers-about 70 percent of the state's Confederate troops-and are arranged by military unit. The last volume, after identifying the regiments and separate battalions, lists general and staff officers or North Carolinians in the Confederate navy and elsewhere. For each individual recorded, the roster generally gives rank, date, and county of enlistment. Remarks about promotions, desertions, injuries, capture, and death in battle are sometimes noted.     <<Sample>>

# 104

Roster of the Soldiers of the State of Ohio in the War of the Rebellion, 1861-1866 (12 volumes). Official roster of the soldiers of the State of Ohio in the War of the Rebellion, 1861-1866, and in the War with Mexico, 1846-1848. It includes names of Ohio sailors and of her soldiers who served in Kentucky and West Virginia regiments.  <<Sample>>

# 105

H.L. Hunley Site Assessment. In April1996, the National Park Service Submerged Cultural Resources Unit was tasked by Director Kennedy to conduct an archeological investigation of the submerged remains of a vessel in outer Charleston Harbor believed to be the Civil War submarine H.L. Hunley. The research was carried out at the request of the Director of Naval  History, Dr. William Dudley and Senator Glenn McConnell of the South Carolina Commission. Field operations took place in May and June of the same year and a series of interim reports were generated to satisfy immediate needs of the Navy  and the Commission. All  work  was conducted in cooperation with the South Carolina Institute of Archaeology and Anthropology and the Naval Historical Center (NHC). This monograph is the final report of the 1996 field operations and a series. of analyses that were carried out by private laboratories and consultants on samples of metal, associated sediments and other materials through 1997. It includes conclusions and recommendations of the survey team. <<Table of Contents>>

# 106

The Roster of Wisconsin Volunteers, War of the Rebellion, 1861-1865, 2 volumes. This resource lists all the soldiers known to have participated in Wisconsin's Civil War regiments. These two volumes were compiled in 1886 from original archival records and their alphabetical index was published in 1914. <<Sample Pages>>

# 107

History and Roster of Maryland Volunteers, War of 1861-5. The first of the original two volumes which were published under the authority of the General Assembly of Maryland in 1898 and are the standard reference for determining the unit or units in which a Marylander served in the Union Army or Navy. Taken from muster rolls of the office of the Adjutant-General of Maryland. This volume contains the history and list those who served in the Army. Volume two (T0135) lists those who served in the Navy, Marine Corps. <<Sample Pages>>

# 108

Civil War Stereograph Collection. Stereography, an early form of three-dimensional photography, was a major vehicle for popular education and entertainment in the latter part of the nineteenth century. Otherwise known as the stereogram, stereopticon, or stereo view, the stereograph was a nineteenth-century form of in-home entertainment often used in social settings. We present here a collection of 1,280 Civil War Stereographs: One folder with single images and a PDF file with all the images.  <<Thumbnail Gallery>>

# 109

Civil War Poster Collection. The Civil War Posters presented here, 303 posters primarily recruiting posters, but they also include auction and meeting advertisements. They date from the earliest days of the war through March 1865. The posters were published in Maine, Massachusetts, New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Rhode Island. Most come from New York, with New Jersey and Pennsylvania also well represented. One military unit with a large number of posters was the 104th Pennsylvania Infantry Regiment, (Ringgold Regiment), whose commanding officer, W.H.H. Davis, was also the printer of the posters. New York units that are well represented include the 132nd and 139th New York Infantry Regiments. The recruiting posters enticed men with patriotic appeals, enlistment bonuses, and promises of well supplied units with experienced officers. Patriotic imagery contributed to the appeal, and included eagles with wings spread, a cavalry officer with raised sword, a horrific battle scene contrasted with a peaceful scene in a northern village, and images of George Washington and other patriotic figures. Some posters were designed to appeal to certain segments of the population, and include posters in German, or with harps and shamrocks to appeal to an Irish constituency. <<Thumbnail Gallery>>

# 110

Alfred Waud - Civil War Illustrator ( 600 drawings). Alfred R. Waud, in full Alfred Rudolph Waud, (born October 2, 1828, London, England—died April 6, 1891, Marietta, Georgia, U.S.), British-born American illustrator whose lively and detailed sketches of scenes from the Civil War, which he covered as a press correspondent, captured the war’s dramatic intensity and furnished him with a reputation as one of the preeminent artist-journalists of his era.                         <<Thumbnail Gallery>>

# 111

Civil War Line Art Collection. This collection of over 1,000 drawings from the best artists of the day. Many of these were published in various newspapers and magazines during and after the war.      

               <<Sample Image>> <<Sample Image>> <<Sample Image>> <<Sample Image>>

# 112

Civil War Photograph Album, ca. 1861-65. Cartes de visite, miniature portraits used as calling cards, were extremely popular during the American Civil War. These 55 photographic calling cards, approximately 2˝ x 4 inches in size, had been invented in France in the early 1850s, and their popularity quickly spread throughout Europe and eventually to the United States, where the corollary development of the photograph album spurred a collecting craze in the 1860s that became known as Cartomania. In  addition to assembling albums of family photographs, the public sought to collect images of celebrities and views of favorite places and sites.

                   <<Sample Image>>       <<Sample Image>>       <<Sample Image>>     <<Sample Image>>

# 113

# 114

Frank Leslie's Incidents of the Civil War in America. Embellished with 40 illustrations beautifully drawn and engraved. : Heroic incidents, personal adventures and anecdotes of the Civil War in America. Being a collection of the most interesting and exciting events of the present remarkable crisis in our history. This volume, which is elegantly printed, is intended to preserve in the recollection of the nation those numerous acts of heroic daring and endurance which have already made the present unhappy war so notable ... This is, par excellence, a book for summer traveling---the incidents being told in simple language, without the slightest attempt at that great disfigurement to all history, sensational writing, and every incident bears upon its face the stamp of undoubted truth. - Frank Leslie, 19 City Hall Square, N.Y.   <<Sample Pages>>

# 115

Civil War Railroad Image Collection ( 520 images plus five large maps) .The Civil War is the first war in which railroads were a major factor. The 1850s had seen enormous growth in the railroad industry so that by 1861, 22,000 miles of track had been laid in the Northern states and 9,500 miles in the South. ... The railroads existed, they believed, solely to get cotton to the ports.   <<Thumbnail Image Gallery>>

# 116

Order of Battle - Union Army. Compiled from the Official Records. ( 300 PDF files)    <<List>> <<Sample>>

# 117

Order of Battle - Confederate Army. Compiled from the Official Records.  ( 480 PDF files<<List>>   <<Sample>>

# 118

Gilmer Civil War Maps Collection (250 maps). Jeremy Francis Gilmer was a United States Army Engineer, 1839-1861, and Confederate Chief of Engineers. Born in Guilford County, N.C., on 23 February 1818, he entered the U.S. Army as a Second Lieutenant of Engineers in July 1839 after graduating from the United States Military Academy. He constructed fortifications and conducted surveys until 1861, when he resigned in support of the southern cause. In September 1861, Gilmer was appointed Major of Engineers in the Confederate States of America Army and served as Chief Engineer of the staff of General A. S. Johnston until the general's death at the battle of Shiloh on 6 April 1862, where Gilmer was also severely wounded. In August 1862, he was assigned to the Office of Chief of Engineer Bureau in Richmond, Va., and promoted to the rank of Colonel of Engineers. In August 1863, he was promoted to Major General and ordered to Charleston, S.C., to direct the defense of the city. He returned to Richmond in June 1864, where he directed the Engineer Bureau until the end of the War. After the war, he was a director of the Georgia Central Railroad and president of the Savannah Gas-Light. He died on 1 December 1883.                                                                <<Thumbnail Image Gallery>>

# 119

Civil War Richmond - Map Collection ( 105 Maps). Richmond, Virginia, was the capital of the Confederate States of America during the American Civil War (1861–1865). It also served as the capital of Virginia, although when the city was about to fall to Union armies in April 1865, the state government, including the governor and General Assembly, moved to Lynchburg for five days. Besides being the political home of the Confederacy, Richmond was a center of rail and industry, military hospitals, and prisoner-of-war camps and prisons, including Belle Isle and Libby Prison. We present here a selection of maps focused on Richmond . <<Thumbnail Gallery >>

# 120

Charles Wellington Reed - Civil War Soldier and Artist (1841-1926) . This collection principally documents Reed's wartime experiences. Many letters, especially those written to his mother, Roxanna Reed, and sister, Helen Reed Tilton, describe in detail his activities while serving as a bugler in the Ninth Independent Battery. The letters are often prefaced by drawings which further illustrate not only the rigors of military life, but also the amusing and mundane aspects. The contents of the letters and corresponding sketches well document the ways in which soldiers adapted to seasonal changes in the weather, how they amused themselves, and the routines of camp life. Reed particularly illustrated his letters when stationed in or near Washington, D.C., in 1862, and when his unit was not actively campaigning. <<Content List>>   <<Sample Pages>>

# 121

Mary Ann Bickerdyke. Nurse, agent for the United States Sanitary Commission, and pension attorney. Correspondence, lists, draft memoirs, printed matter, and other papers relating to Bickerdyke's family, her work as a Civil War nurse and agent for the United States Sanitary Commission, and her activities on behalf of Civil War veterans in the years following the war.  <<Content List>>   <<Sample Pages>>

# 122

Jubal Anderson Early Papers. United States and Confederate Army officer, lawyer, and state legislator of Virginia. Correspondence, diaries, military papers, speeches and articles, clippings, a scrapbook, printed matter, and maps dated largely after the Civil War. << Content List >>

# 123

Clara Barton Papers. Clara Barton is one of the most-recognized heroes of the American Civil War. She began her illustrious career as an educator but found her true calling tending wounded soldiers on and off bloody Civil War battlefields. When the war ended, Barton worked to identify missing and deceased soldiers, and eventually founded the American Red Cross. Her life was dedicated to the care of others, and Barton had a crucial and long-lasting impact on caregiving and disaster relief in America and throughout the world.  << Content List >>

# 124

Civil War Novels: Tales of the War of the Rebellion vol. 1.  Among the most overlooked and underappreciated area of Civil War studies, this collection of stories showcases the enormous body of work produced during and after the Civil War by writers such as John Esten Cooke, Harry Castlemon, Louisa May Alcott, Oliver Optic and many others. 126 Books in PDF format. <<Title List>>   ** Scroll down for addittional volumes

# 125

Bachelder Gettysburg Map. John Bachelder's most noted work, which would occupy a good portion of the remainder of his life, was after the Battle of Gettysburg, July 1–3, 1863. He studied the terrain via horseback and drew an isometric map of the battlefield. He visited field hospitals, interviewed wounded soldiers of both armies, and determined the position on his map of every unit engaged in the battle. That fall he published a panoramic view of Gettysburg. During visits to the Army's winter quarters, he claims to have interviewed the commanders of every regiment and battery in the Army of the Potomac. He later organized reunions on the field and accompanied veterans over the terrain and placed wooden stakes into the ground to identify important points of the battle. Collection includes other Gettysburg maps by Bachelder and Gettysburg. Description of the painting of the repulse of Longstreet's assault painted by James Walker. << Map Detail >>   << Image Gallery >>

# 126

Army and Navy Journal and Gazette of the Regular and Volunteer Forces. (3 vols.) The publication was a weekly newspaper printed in New York City. The first issue was published on August 29, 1863,[4] with this motto: "Established in obedience to an insistent demand for an official organ for members of the American Defense and those concerned with it." The paper included news of the Civil War, then in its third year, along with "important official reports, lists of promotions, discussions upon the various appliances and methods of war, editorial comments upon the various naval and military questions of the day.                                                                                                                           << Sample Pages Vol 1 >>       << Sample Pages Vol 2 >>       << Sample Pages Vol 3 >>

# 127

Selected Civil War Maps  reproduced from originals made by the U.S. Coast Survey, 1861-65. Throughout the war, the Coast Survey plant in Washington printed most of the maps used by the Union forces. Many original field surveys and manuscript maps were prepared in the field by Coast Survey Assistants who were attached as civilian technicians to various militant arms of the Union forces . The maps contained in this folio are black and white reproductions of a few such maps which have been in the Coast and Geodetic Survey files now for a century and have seldom been in public view.

<< About this Folio of Maps >>         << Full Size Map >>           << List of Plates >>

# 128

American Campaigns by Matthew Forney Steele (2 volumes). He served as an instructor at the U.S. Army Command and Staff College, Fort Leavenworth, Kansas and at the War College, Washington, D.C. from 1903 until 1909. During this period he authored a collection of books on the American Civil War entitled The American Campaigns.               << Volume 1 TOC >>         << Volume 2 TOC >>     << Sample full size map >>

# 129

Civil War Thesis Papers. A Collection of 133 papers from the Defense Technical Information Center covering many aspects of the American Civil War.       << Papers List >>       << Sample Paper >>

Civil War Maps from the Office of Coast Survey (333 maps). Office of Coast Survey's Historical Map & Chart Collection covers the land and waters of the United States of America, including territories and possessions (past and present).  << Thumbnail Image Gallery >>  

# 131

Civil War Ephemera (1,811 objects). Photographs, manuscripts, ephemera, and miscellaneous objects acquired by the Liljenquist Family while building a large collection of cased photographs and donated to the Library of Congress between 2010 and 2019. The photographs show enlisted soldiers and others, including nurses, who participated in the American Civil War, as well as later photographs of veterans. The manuscript letters, photographs on paper, and certificates include some items associated with the subjects shown in the cased photographs, including Cornelius V. Moore, R. Cecil Johnson, and Hiram L. Barett (hymn book, sewing kit, snuff box, handkerchief, and milk delivery tickets). Patriotic envelopes are illustrated with decorative symbols, often in color, and bear addresses and postage stamps. The objects include lace and flag fragments, a belt buckle, and a pocket-sized New Testament.     << Image gallery >>

# 132

James E. Taylor Collection -Scrapbooks. Collection of 3 disbound scrapbooks of Civil War photographs, clippings, and some original artwork compiled by illustrator and Civil War correspondent James E. Taylor (1839-1901), presumably in the mid 1880s. The scrapbooks contain over 1,530 items including images from noted Civil War photographers Mathew Brady, Alexander Gardner, Timothy O'Sullivan, George N. Barnard, Andrew J. Russell, and others, as well as handwritten annotations by Taylor and supplementary ephemera and clippings from contemporary newspapers and magazines. Some of the photographic prints are possibly one of a kind. The scrapbooks focus on the Eastern Theater of the war, primarily depicting locations and events in Virginia, Maryland, and Pennsylvania. Included in the scrapbooks are views of battlefields, street views of towns, buildings and ruins, military camps, field hospitals, portraits of Civil War generals and soldiers, and images of casualties and battle scenes. There are several loose pencil and pen-and-ink sketches by Taylor located at the end of volume 2. <<Page samples>>
            

# 133

William Mcilvaine Collection. This collection consists of 116 watercolor and pencil drawings of Civil War scenes done by William McIlvaine, Jr. in the 1860s. This volume includes camp scenes illustrating various structures, like the post office tent and officers quarters; views of forts; everyday activities of soldiers between battles; and panoramic landscapes. Some of the watercolors are very detailed, others quite rough; all illustrate the lives of soldiers during campaigns, and the movement of troops from place to place. Many of the views in this collection are representations of the company's movements through Maryland and Virginia. William McIlvaine, Jr. was a watercolorist who earned a degree from the University of Pennsylvania in 1832. He traveled throughout Europe, and took some of his imagery from his travels in California and Mexico. He published "Sketches of Scenery and Notes of Personal Adventures in California and Mexico" in 1850. His work was exhibited at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, the National Academy of Design and the Brooklyn Art Association. McIlvaine served in the New York 5th Regiment of Volunteers during the Civil War.     << Image gallery >>        

# 134

Report of the Adjutant General of the State of Illinois (1900-1902). The histories of Illinois Civil War regiments and units are included in the eight volumes of the publication, Report of the Adjutant General of the State of Illinois (1900-1902). The histories, some written shortly after the war's end, are the work of numerous authors throughout the intervening years. The 1886 version of the Adjutant General's Report included regimental histories compiled by that office which had not previously been published. The final 1900-1902 republication of the report incorporated revisions and corrections to the histories. In recognition of the service of Illinois' six regiments during the Mexican War, the assignment of regimental numbers for infantry began with seven. << Sample Pages >>

# 135

Civil War Map Collection - Vicksburg. Over 70 maps of the Vicksburg campaign from cartographers such as Jedediah Hotchkiss, Robert Knox Sneden and others. <<<Sample>>>

# 136

Confederate States Medical and Surgical Journal. During the period of the Civil War, a vast amount of medical and surgical data accumulated in the northern states, but relatively little has come down to us about medicine in the Confederate states. Thanks to the New York Academy of Medicine, we now have available the reprinting of an extremely rare journal, Confederate States Medical and Surgical Journal. This had a relatively short life during the tragic terminal part of the Civil War. The first volume comprised 12 monthly issues starting with January 1864. Volume 2 began bravely in 1865, with good prospects and considerable self-congratulation for having done so well in the preceding year. But after two issues, the journal permanently suspended publication. Thus, only 14 issues were published altogether.        <<Sample Issue>>

# 137

Pennsylvania at Gettysburg ( 2 Volumes). Ceremonies at the dedication of the monuments erected by the commonwealth of Pennsylvania to Major General George G. Meade, Major General Winfield S. Hancock, Major General John F. Reynolds and to mark the positions of the Pennsylvania commands engaged in the battle. By John P Nicholson; Pennsylvania. Gettysburg Battle-field Commission. <<Sample Pages>>

# 138

Report of the Adjutant General of New York 1860-1870. Each volume includes rosters of soldiers in the Civil War and, depending upon the year, the volume may include documents and reports of federal agencies, photographs, notes on flight and ground training, personnel, and organizational charts. Volumes from the Civil War era are prolific and particularly interesting with statistical tables, battle reports, and telegraph transcripts. Names of and information for soldiers and officers abound in every volume within the series.    <<Sample Pages>>

# 139

Marshall Dunham photograph album, ca. 1861-1865 ( 188 photos). This photograph album was compiled by Sgt. Marshall Dunham of the New York 159th regiment and consists of photographs taken in Louisiana during the Civil War.  <<Sample Photo>>

# 140

NEW..Civil War Rosters. A collection of 82 Civil War Rosters from our archives.

  <<Sample>>   <<List>>

# 141

Robert Knox Sneden Papers. The majority of Sneden's narrative chronicles his wartime experience in Washington, D.C., and Virginia from the summer of 1861 until the fall of 1863, including his enlistment, service as a topographical engineer, and capture by John Singleton Mosby (1833–1916) in November 1863. Sneden's subsequent life as a prisoner of war is chronicled in great detail, including his seven-month imprisonment at Andersonville Prison, ending with his exchange in December 1864 and discharge in January 1865. <<Sample Pages>>

Volume 1, 1861 April 12–1862 May 5.
Volume 2, 1862, May 5–June 28. Destroyed in a fire in the late nineteenth century.
Volume 3, 1862 June 29–October 25
Volume 4, 1862 October 26–1863 November 7.
Volume 5, 1863 November 9–1864 August 10.
Volume 6, 1864 September 1–1865 May.
Volume 7, Thoms Prentice Kettrell's History of the Great Rebellion.

# 142

Robert Knox Sneden Artwork Gallery (400+ images). Through the watercolors he painted, Robert Knox Sneden takes us to the front lines of the Civil War through detailed paintings of Civil War battlefields, landscapes, and prisons.    <<Gallery Samples>>          

# 143

The Lost Army by Thomas W. Knox (Illustrated Edition, 1894). Thomas W. Knox (1835-96) was a journalist, author and traveller best-known for his work as a correspondent for the New York Herald during the American Civil War and his series of travel adventure stories for boys. This story first published in 1894 is set during the Civil War and describes the exploits of two young friends who enlist in the First Iowa Infantry and see action at Wilson's Creek and Pea Ridge, both of which Knox covered as a journalist. <<Sample Pages>>

# 144

Civil War Ordnance. A collection of titles from our archive.  <<Book List>>

# 145

Pennsylvania Deserters. The Descriptive List of Deserters from Pennsylvania Military Units During the Civil War was printed in September 1866 by the Provost Marshal General’s office in Washington D.C. at the request of the Pennsylvania Legislature. The document contains physical, military and demographic information for over 24,000 Pennsylvanians who enlisted in the Union army and later failed to report for duty and were subsequently cited as deserters. The roster was compiled from unit and regimental lists of men who were recorded as having failed to report for duty. Compiled monthly, these lists were submitted to the Provost Marshal and Adjutant General between 1861 and 1865. The roster lists deserters by unit and contains a wealth of descriptive and demographic data, including places and dates of enlistment and desertion, rank, physical description, country of origin (for those born outside of the US), birthplace, age and occupation.  <<Sample Pages>>

# 146

The Messages and Papers of the Confederacy, including diplomatic correspondence, 1861-1865. 2 vols Edited/compiled by James D. Richardson.  <<Sample Vol 1>>         <<Sample Vol 2>>

# 147

Jefferson Davis. A collection of speeches, biographies, Presidential messages etc. from our archives.                   102 documents in PDF format.           <<Document List>>

# 148

Notes on the Rebel Invasion of Maryland and Pennsylvania and the Battle of Gettysburg by M. Jacobs. The account of the battles at Gettysburg, prepared by the Rev. Dr. Jacobs, Professor of Mathematics in Pennsylvania College, will take a place among historical documents of high permanent value. It is the record of an eye-witness, made, in large part, while the scenes he describes were passing before him. The author is distinguished as an acute observer, as a man of clear judgment and of great conscientiousness, who is not only scrupulous as to the substance of his statements, but cautious in their tone and coloring. His chronicle will be found a chronicle of facts. What he knows is carefully sifted from what he conjectures: of the former we have much, of the latter almost nothing. The sequence of parts, and the internal relations of the terrible struggle at Gettysburg, are presented by Professor Jacobs with a fidelity and simplicity which render his narrative pre-eminent among the very many accounts of the battles which have been written. <<Sample Pages>>

# 149

Jacob's Souvenir Album of the Gettysburg battlefield (1889). Souvenir Album of the Gettysburg Battlefield, published in Gettysburg by G. E. Jacobs in 1889. It has images that include scenes of the town of Gettysburg, battlefield monuments, and battle locations.   <<Sample Pages>>

# 150

Southern History of the War. Official Reports of Battles. Published by order of The Confederate Congress, Richmond, 1862. <<Index>>

# 151

Edward Alfred Pollard Civil War Collection. Edward A. Pollard emerged as one of the South's best known commentators on Confederate leadership and military strategy during the Civil War. As the editorial page editor of the Richmond Examiner, Pollard's harsh criticism of Confederate president Jefferson Davis and other political leaders turned him into one of the South's most controversial writers.  Eight books in pdf format. <<Book List>>
 

# 152

A Confederate Desperado by W. B. W. Heartsill. This Handwritten manuscript tells the story of J. J. Cox, a lieutenant in the Confederate States of America Army who deserted his post while serving with the 1st Louisiana Infantry Regiment in 1862. The narrative begins with Cox's arrest and imprisonment in the Castle Thunder Prison in Richmond, Va. The narrative details Cox's escape from prison and his many subsequent escapes from military custody. After Cox's escape from military guard in Bristol, Tenn., W. B. W. Heartsill was charged with investigating the escape and with finding Cox. Upon his recapture, Cox was sent to Heartsill's office in Bristol, and Heartsill worked to secure Cox's release as part of the general amnesty offered to Confederate deserters by Jefferson Davis on 1 August 1863. Heartsill went on to advocate on Cox's behalf in two subsequent incidents: once when Cox was arrested on a theft charge, and again when Cox was arrested on the old desertion charge. Meanwhile, Heartsill left his position as Chief of Police in March 1864 and became a scout, eventually joining Osborne's Scouts in May of that year. The narrative details various missions and engagements with Federal forces undertaken by Heartsill, sometimes accompanied by Cox. The narrative ends with the conclusion of the war and a brief account of Cox's life after the war, ending with his death in a cholera epidemic in 1866. Heartsill's opinion of Cox throughout the book was very positive; he lauded Cox's courage, good humor, and resourcefulness, and sought to disavow his reputation as a "desperate character."   <<Sample Pages>>

# 153

Bits of Camp Life, by C. W. Reed and Louis K. Harlow, c1888. Handsome illustrated volume containing the titlepage, U.S. Army Corps badges, and six chromolithographs of Union Army life together with six lithographed leaves of songs with music and lyrics. A beautiful illustrated souvenir commemorating the Union soldier. <<Sample Pages>>

# 154

New York Times - New York Herald Civil War Maps. Issues of the New York times and the New York herald published between Sept. 5, 1861 and June 28, 1862, each with a front page map depicting a Civil War battle, campaign, or other related military event. Some issues have 2 maps on the front page or maps on other pages. Descriptive articles relating to the maps are printed on the sheets with the maps.   <<Sample Pages>>

# 155

Frank Leslie's War Maps and Companion to the Newspaper. Frank Leslie's War Maps, and Companion to the Newspaper. Second edition, published by Frank Leslie. The front cover features three maps: Hilton Head Island; Port Royal (the order of battle); and Fort Walker, Port Royal, all South Carolina. Maps of the southern coastal states are found on pages two and three. Pages four and five feature a large fold out "Map of the Southern and Border States." Page six contains the following: Siege operations in Charleston harbor; the junction of the Mississippi and Ohio rivers; Fort Pickens and part of the southern coast of Florida; Battle of Belmont [Missouri], Forts Defiance, Smith, and Macallister [sic] near Cairo, Illinois. A map of the Potomac from the Rappahannock river to Harper's Ferry is shown on page seven. Page eight features parts of Virginia and North Carolina from Wilmington to Fortress Monroe.

 <<Map Descriptions>>   <<Map Gallery>>   <<Map Detail>>

# 156

The  Chart History of the Civil War, 1861-1865.  With numerous shaded maps showing the progress of the union armies in different campaigns, complete with over a dozen detailed maps, A Chart History of the Civil War, 1861-1865 features information on the direct causes of the Civil War, the participation of slaves in battles, the organisation of armies and General Robert E. Lee's surrender. Comes with a separate high resolutiuon Atlas of the maps.

<<Sample Pages>>   <<Sample Map>>

# 157

Leslie Artwork Collection. A collection of 463 images from various Frank Leslie publications.

<<Image Gallery>>  

# 158

Civil War Map Collection - Antietam . Over 30 maps of the Antietam campaign from cartographers such as Jedediah Hotchkiss, Robert Knox Sneden and others. <<Map Gallery>>

# 159

Civil War Map Collection - Atlanta . Over 150 maps of the Atlanta campaign from cartographers such as Jedediah Hotchkiss, Robert Knox Sneden and others. <<Map Gallery>>

# 160

Civil War Map Collection - Battle of the Wilderness. Over 30 maps of the Battle of the Wilderness from cartographers such as Jedediah Hotchkiss, Robert Knox Sneden and others. <<Map Gallery>>

# 161

Civil War Map Collection - Cedar Run to Second Manassas. Over 50 maps of Cedar Run to Second Manassas from cartographers such as Jedediah Hotchkiss, Robert Knox Sneden and others. <<Map Gallery>>

# 162

Civil War Map Collection - Chancellorsville . Over 40 maps of Chancellorsville from cartographers such as Jedediah Hotchkiss, Robert Knox Sneden and others. <<Map Gallery>>

# 163

Civil War Map Collection - Chickamauga . Over 60 maps of Chickamauga from cartographers such as Jedediah Hotchkiss, Robert Knox Sneden and others. <<Map Gallery>>

# 164

Civil War Map Collection - Fredericksburg. Over 40 maps of Fredericksburg  from cartographers such as Jedediah Hotchkiss, Robert Knox Sneden and others. <<Map Gallery>>

# 165

Civil War Map Collection - Gettysburg. Over 40 maps of Gettysburg  from cartographers such as Jedediah Hotchkiss, Robert Knox Sneden and others. <<Map Gallery>>

# 166

Civil War Map Collection - The Peninsular Campaign. Over 80 maps of The Peninsular Campaign from cartographers such as Jedediah Hotchkiss, Robert Knox Sneden and others. <<Map Gallery>>

# 167

Civil War Map Collection - Petersburg. Over 100 maps of The Petersburg Campaign from cartographers such as Jedediah Hotchkiss, Robert Knox Sneden and others. <<Map Gallery>>

# 168

Civil War Map Collection - Shenandoah Campaign - 1862. Over 40 maps of The Shenandoah Campaign from cartographers such as Jedediah Hotchkiss, Robert Knox Sneden and others. <<Map Gallery>>

# 169

Civil War Map Collection - Shenandoah 1864 - The Valley Campaigns. Over 80 maps of The Shenandoah 1864 - The Valley Campaigns from cartographers such as Jedediah Hotchkiss, Robert Knox Sneden and others.                     <<Map Gallery>>

# 170

Civil War Map Collection - Shiloh. Over 50 maps of The Shiloh Campaign from cartographers such as Jedediah Hotchkiss, Robert Knox Sneden and others. <<Map Gallery>>

# 171

Civil War Map Collection - Stone’s River. Over 30 maps of The Stone’s River Campaign from cartographers such as Jedediah Hotchkiss, Robert Knox Sneden and others. <<Map Gallery>>

# 172

Civil War Map Collection - War on the Mississippi. Over 160 maps of War on the Mississippi from cartographers such as Jedediah Hotchkiss, Robert Knox Sneden and others. <<Map Gallery>>

# 173

Civil War Map Collection - Vicksburg Campaign. Over 65 maps of The Vicksburg Campaign from cartographers such as Jedediah Hotchkiss, Robert Knox Sneden and others. <<Map Gallery>>

# 174

Civil War Novels: Tales of the War of the Rebellion vol. 2.  Among the most overlooked and underappreciated area of Civil War studies, this collection of stories showcases the enormous body of work produced during and after the Civil War by writers such as John Esten Cooke, Harry Castlemon, Louisa May Alcott, Oliver Optic and many others. 100 Books in PDF format. <<Title List>>

# 175

Civil War Novels: Tales of the War of the Rebellion vol. 3.  Among the most overlooked and underappreciated area of Civil War studies, this collection of stories showcases the enormous body of work produced during and after the Civil War by writers such as John Esten Cooke, Harry Castlemon, Louisa May Alcott, Oliver Optic and many others. 100 Books in PDF format. <<Title List>>

# 176

Civil War Novels: Tales of the War of the Rebellion vol. 4.  Among the most overlooked and underappreciated area of Civil War studies, this collection of stories showcases the enormous body of work produced during and after the Civil War by writers such as John Esten Cooke, Harry Castlemon, Louisa May Alcott, Oliver Optic and many others. 100 Books in PDF format. <<Title List>>

Civil War Envelope Collection. Dating from the Civil War years. these 690 envelopes, measuring approximately 3 x 5 1/2 inches, are printed or embossed with caricatures, allegories, slogans, portraits, etc. relating to Civil War events and personalities. The vast majority is Union-oriented; most were produced by New York printers ca. 1861-65. Some are quite crude; others are beautifully designed and executed, many in color, some gilt.   <<Image Samples>>        

# 177

The Lincoln Family Album.  Like many middle-class women of her era, Mary Todd Lincoln kept a photograph album.  The introduction of small, inexpensive carte-de-visite photographs and the specially constructed albums to hold them had made collecting photographs popular and affordable by 1860, and Mary collected photographs of her famous contemporaries as well as pictures of her family and friends.  Her album was passed down to Robert Todd Lincoln and his descendants, with each generation adding family photographs. The Lincoln Family Album Collection contains more than 500 photographs collected by four generations of the Lincoln family.   <<Sample pages>>

# 178

The Life of Abraham Lincoln by Ida Tarbell. Drawn from original sources and containing many speeches, letters, and telegrams hitherto unpublished, and illustrated with many reproductions from original paintings, photographs, etc., Ida Minerva Tarbell (1857-1944) shows a softer side as she traces, with a laudatory and admiring spirit, the development of the character and  morals of Abraham Lincoln. Begun as a project by McClure's Magazine to  collect and preserve the reminiscences of friends and acquaintances of  Abraham Lincoln while they were still alive, the project grew into a  series of articles for the periodical, and then finally this two-volume spiritual biography of the great man, which draws on firsthand memories and other material, including original sources such speeches, letters, and telegrams. Appendix includes "letters, telegrams and speeches of Abraham Lincoln [that] have been collected by the author in the course of the work of preparing this Life of Lincoln, [and] none of these documents appear in Lincoln's "Complete works" edited by Nicolay and Hay or in any other collection of his writings.” <<Sample pages>>
 

# 180

Abraham Lincoln: The Prairie Years by Carl Sandberg - 2 vols. Abraham Lincoln was a lifelong fascination for Sandburg, who collected information about the iconic President for decades before he began writing about him. These first two volumes, The Prairie Years, were published in 1926, a 344,000-word study covering Lincoln’s life up to his move to Washington to become the President of the United States. <<Sample pages>>

# 179

Civil War reminiscences by soldiers and sailors in Central Park Hospital, New York, N.Y., 1864-1865 by William Oland Bourne. During the Civil War, Bourne served as a chaplain at Central Park Hospital, a military hospital in New York City where he collected three autograph books of reminiscences by patients. He began Volume I on September 16, 1864; Volume II on January 11, 1865; and Volume III on May 2, 1865. The reminiscences generally include information concerning places and dates of enlistment, descriptions of major battles, wounds suffered, and the dates and circumstances of the patients’ admittance to the hospital. Some of the patients included in these autograph books had lost their right arms during the war and wrote with their left hands, pre-dating the Left-Hand Penmanship Contest entries that comprise the majority of the collection. <<Sample pages>>

# 181

Bultema-Williams Collection of Ulysses S. Grant Photographs and Prints. This collection of over 190 postcards and photographs of Ulysses S. Grant and his family, colleagues, and homes was donated by Chief Justice (ret) Frank J. Williams, President of the Ulysses S. Grant Association, and Virginia Williams.  There are two gallery files: one with photos and another with high resolution copies. <<Sample pages>>

# 182

The Camden Confederate. The Camden Confederate (1861-64) captured life in the community of Camden, South Carolina, in times of affluence, prosperity, desolation, and recovery. Significant events covered by the newspaper included the destruction and subsequent occupation of Camden by Union Army soldiers in 1865. The complete run from 1861-64 and sample articles.    <<Sample1>>     <<Sample2>>     <<Sample3>>     <<Sample4>>

# 183

Herbert Eugene Valentine's Sketches of Civil War Scenes. This series consists of 26 watercolors painted by Herbert Eugene Valentine while serving in the Union Army during the Civil War. Documentation relating to the War Department's acquistion of the Valentine sketches was not located. The sketches were probably collected, however, by the Army War College, Historical Section. An annotation on item two in the series indicates that the sketches were received in 1923 from H. E. Valentine, 141 Milk Street, Boston, Massachusettes. Pictured in the Valentine watercolors are the Beaufort, South Carolina harbor; forts; guardhouses and guardposts; an army hospital; the steamers Convoy, Escort, and Champion; gunboats running the rebel batteries; a railroad station; graves of soldiers; and army headquarters and field offices at St. Helena, South Carolina, Petersburg and Bermuda Hundred, Virginia, and New Berne, North Carolina. Of the 26 pictures, half show scenes in North Carolina, seven in South Carolina, five in Virginia and one in Annapolis, Maryland.          <<Sample1>>     <<Sample2>>

# 184

Alexander Gardner at Antietam. When war threatened the nation in the spring of 1861, thousands of soldiers flocked to Washington, D.C., to defend the capital. Photographers followed in their footsteps capturing camp scenes and portraits of untested, jubilant greenhorns in their new uniforms. It so happened that Alexander Gardner had just opened a new studio in the capital for the most notable photographer of his era - Mathew Brady. Gardner also took advantage of the coming storm to increase his business. All of the early war photographs were taken in studios or tents. No one had produced images in the field. It wasn’t until September of 1862 that the first true images of war were produced. Antietam was the first battle to depict the grim and bloody truth of civil war through the lens of photographer Alexander Gardner and his assistant James Gibson. Gardner made two trips to Antietam. The first was just two days after the battle, the second, two weeks later when President Abraham Lincoln visited the battlefield.       <<Sample1>>   <<Sample2>>

# 185

NEW..Original photographs taken on the battlefields during the Civil War of the United States. This bookcollection contains rare reproductions of photographs taken during the American Civil War. It is believed to be the first time that the camera was used so extensively on the battle-field. It is the first known collection of its size on the Western Continent and it is the only witness of the scenes enacted during the greatest crisis in the annals of the American nation. It records a tragedy that neither the imagination of the painter nor the skill of the historian can so dramatically relate. These rare shots were taken in the middle of the battlefield during the earliest days of photography. Selected from a collection of seven thousand original negatives, these historic photos capture nearly every aspect of Civil War life. Among these photos are images of camps sprawling across acres, soldiers at their battlements, firing of heavy artillery, the aftermath of battle, and the terror that these young men faced. See first-hand of Union and Confederate officers strategizing their next moves, and Abraham Lincoln addressing his Union commanders. <Sample>>

# 186

NEW..Robin G. Stanford Collection of  rare Civil War Photographs. The Library of Congress has acquired hundreds of rare stereographic views from Robin G. Stanford, a Houston woman whose collection focuses on the Civil War era and the South during and after the period it practiced slavery. Stanford, who began collecting stereographic views as a hobby in the 1970s, acquired many images depicting planter society and the everyday lives of slaves, Confederate rebels in action, Charleston before its destruction, the early days of emancipation, and President Lincoln’s funeral obsequies. The Library of Congress purchased approximately 500 images from Stanford’s larger collection, choosing subjects previously unrepresented in its extensive holdings. Stanford’s collection is a windfall to the millions of Americans who avidly study those heart-wrenching and momentous times. (546 images)            <<Sample1>>     <<Sample2>>     <<Sample3>>     <<Sample4>>

# 130

# 187

NEW..Civil War Views by Orlando M. Poe. Photographs show ruins and surviving structures in sections of Charleston; houses along the Battery; street views, one taken at Vendue Range another at Meeting Street; churches, including Catholic Cathedral and Circular Congregational Church; cemeteries; ruins of a railway depot. Also includes exterior and interior views of Fort Sumter and Fort Moultrie; one view of Fort Beauregard (taken from Fort Moultrie) and one of Fort Johnson. Includes views of Lookout Mountain; Umbrella Rock and Pulpit Rock; Rock Creek Falls; one view of Orlando Poe and O.E. Babcock at Ft. Sanders, Knoxville, Tenn. Views of Atlanta include Union and Confederate fortifications and entrenchments; also some ruins of buildings; railroad facilities; the site where General McPherson was killed; two views of Fort McAllister. Also includes one photograph of a grove of oak trees at Bonaventure Cemetery, Savannah, Ga. (83 images )
                                                                      
<<Sample1>>     <<Sample2>>     <<Sample3>>     <<Sample4>>

# 188

NEW..Civil War officer groups in the field, formal groups, camp life and incidents. Officer groups in the field. Formal groups. Camp life and incidents. Includes officers and noncommissioned staff of Thirteenth New York Cavalry on Prospect Hill, near Washington; Maj. H.W. Sawyer and staff at Camp Stoneman, Washington. Officer groups of the Thirty-third New York Infantry, Camp Granger, near Washington; Fourth U.S. Colored Infantry, Fort Slocum, Washington; Eighth New York State Militia, Arlington; Fourth New York Heavy Artillery, Fort Corcoran, Virginia; Fifth U.S. Cavalry, near Washington; 3d Massachusetts Artillery, Fort totten; Company F and Company K, Third Battalion, New York Light Artillery, Fort Duncan, near Washington; Sixty-ninth New York State Militia, Fort Corcoran, Virginia. Officers' quarters, with officers, at Fort Lincoln..    (193 images).                                     <<Sample1>>     <<Sample2>>     <<Sample3>>     <<Sample4>>

# 189

NEW..Matthew Brady’s Photo Album. This group of Civil War photographs published as cards shows primarily views of Antietam. There are also views of Fair Oaks, Hampton, Yorktown and sites near Richmond. Images show dead Confederate artillerymen at Antietam; President Lincoln with Gen. McClellan and others; the military bridge at Chickahominy, Va.; ruins of Hampton church; outdoor group portraits of Union officers, and other subjects.   (50 images).   <<Sample Images>>    

# 190

NEW..The War for the Union. Photographic War History. This is a series of stereo view cards that was released about 25 years after the United States of America's Civil War. The negatives were found in a building that Alexander Gardner once used, a company bought them from the buildings owner and began to publish the images as The War Photograph & Exhibition Company, and Taylor & Huntington. In this collection however the negative are mostly from M. B. Brady, Alexander Gardner.    (936 images)                                    <<Sample1>>   <<Sample2>>     <<Sample3>>     <<Sample4>>

# 191

NEW..Civil War Stereographs, 1861-1865. This collection of Civil War 731 stereographs covers the entire period of the Civil War, from the first Battle of Bull Run through the surrender at Appomattox, and the triumphal parade of Union forces in Washington D.C. Most of the images were made in the eastern theatre of the war, with a majority of scenes from Virginia. Compelling images of death on the battlefield and the destruction of cities, railroads and bridges show the devastating effects of the war. Individual and group portraits of participants are included, along with images of soldiers relaxing in camps, drilling in the field, and preparing for attack in trenches and other fortifications.  <<Samples>>

# 192

NEW..Civil War Naval Vessels and Naval Personnel Groups. Photographs show Civil War naval vessels and naval personnel groups. Includes views of a Brazilian steam frigate at the Washington Navy Yard (January 1863); U.S. Steam Sloop of War Pensacola (eighteen guns) off Alexandria, Virginia; and U.S.S. Polaris, at the Washington Navy Yard. One stereograph by Bell and Brother of the rebel ram Stonewall, probably in the Potomac River, copyright by F. Bell in 1867. <<Samples>>

# 193

NEW..Formal portrait groups of Civil War Generals and Staff, 1861-1865. Photographs show formal portrait groups, partially identified. Standard bearer, flag bearer, etc. (35 images) <<Samples>>

# 194

NEW..Philadelphia in the Civil War 1861-1865. The city of Philadelphia played a major role in the Civil War as a manufacturing base, naval port, arsenal, financial and transportation center, and supplier of thousands of troops for the Union cause. Richly illustrated with rare images, the book describes every detail of the region's response to the war, ranging from accounts of each of the military units that served, medicine and medical staffs, and the city's defense measures to lists of information, such as regiments losing fifty or more men, officers who gained the rank of general, recruiting stations, and famous songs. (424 p., illustrated)  <<Samples>>

# 195

NEW..Views of Civil War fortifications, gun emplacements, breastworks, with and without personnel. Includes views
of Fort Stevens, and a house near Fort Stevens that shows the effect of cannon fire; Fort Slemmer, Arlington Heights; Fort Richardson; Battery Rodgers, Potomac River, near Alexandria; Fort Ellsworth, near Alexandria; Fort Richardson, near Fair Oaks Station; Virginia; Fort Gaines; Fort Totten, near the Soldiers' Home in Washington; Fort Corcoran; Fort Woodbury; Fort Whipple, Virginia; Fort C.F. Smith; Fort Carroll; Fort Lincoln; the Battery at Chain Bridge; and the Washington Arsenal. ( 600 images)                                                                                                                                                                  <<Samples>>

# 196

NEW..Group portraits of Civil War Generals with their staffs in the field. Curated by the Library of Congress, group portraits of generals with their staffs in the field. Occasional informal groups with civilian visitors. Includes portraits of Gen. A. McD. McCook and staff, Brightwood, Washington; Maj. Gen. C.C. Augur and staff, Washington; Brig. Gen. William Hawley and staff, Washington; Brig. Gen. M.D. Hardin and staff at Fort Slocum, Washington; Brig. Maj. W. Hoffman at Office of Commissary General of Prisons; Gen. S.P. Heintzelman and group of convalescent camp near Alexandria and with staff at Arlington House. (179 images)
                               <<Sample1>>     <<Sample2>>   <<Sample3>>     <<Sample4>>

# 197

NEW..Civil War views of headquarters in the field.  Curated by the Library of Congress, views of headquarters in the field. Permanent buildings with or without surrounding temporary structures. Occasional distant groups of personnel. Includes views of the Headquarters of Defenses of Washington, south of the Potomac River; headquarters of Gen. W.F. Bartlett, near Washington; officer's quarters at Signal Corps Camp, near Georgetown; headquarters at Fort Slocum; headquarters of General M.D. Hardin at Fort Slocum; and headquarters of Lowell's Cavalry Brigade, in Vienna, Virginia. Most of these views are dated February 1864 and summer 1865. (75 Images)                    <<Sample1>>     <<Sample2>>     <<Sample3>>     <<Sample4>>

# 198

NEW..Civil War views of Richmond, Virginia. Curated by the Library of Congress, Photographs show views in Richmond, Va., mainly of the city in ruins after the fire of 1865. Incidental details; canal basin; railroads and factories. (55 Images)                                                                                        <<Sample1>>     <<Sample2>>     <<Sample3>>     <<Sample4>>

# 199

NEW..Stereographs of United States Civil War. Stereographs of United States Civil War related views taken in Virginia, West Virginia and South Carolina. Photographs show soldiers of the 5th New York Infantry (Duryee's Zouaves) in activities at Fortress Monroe, Virginia, including views of the fort walls, moat and artillery. This group also has photographs of Charleston, S.C., including ruins of the Circular Church, Southern Military Academy, an orphan asylum and Fort Sumter. Other subjects depicted include a military camp at Hamilton, near Fort Monroe, Virginia; views of Harpers Ferry, West Virginia, (two show John Brown's fort); views of Mount Vernon Estate, Virginia; one of Chambersburg, Pennsylvania, showing the aftermath of fires set by Confederate troops, July 1864.  (70 Images)                                           <<Sample1>>     <<Sample2>>     <<Sample3>>     <<Sample4>>

# 200

NEW..Civil War field artillery installations, mainly static groups. About this collection: Field artillery installations, mainly group photographs. Two batteries in action. Details of ordnance, Fort Sumner, Fair Oaks, Virginia; Gibson's Battery of the Horse Artillery, near Fair Oaks; Seventeenth New York Battery Artillery Depot, Camp Barry, near Washington; First New York Artillery Battalion, and Benson's and Robertson's Horse Battery, near Fair Oaks; Wiard guns at the Washington arsenal; troops drilling near Washington. Officers, Battery C, Third U.S. Artillery; officers, Battery A, Second U.S. Artillery; and officers, Battery B, Second U.S. Artillery; all near Fair Oaks, Virginia. Also, the Keystone Battery of Pennsylvania.
 (72 Images)                                           <<Sample1>>     <<Sample2>>     <<Sample3>>     <<Sample4>>

# 201

NEW..Carte de visite album associated with Mary A.E. Keen, nurse at Seminary Hospital, Washington, D.C., and Chesapeake Hospital, Fort Monroe, Virginia. Civil war era carte de visite album includes 100 albumen cartes de visite showing portraits of nurses, doctors, soldiers, family members, others associated with Keen.                                                                                                                           <<Sample1>>     <<Sample2>>     <<Sample3>>     <<Sample4>>

# 202

NEW..Carte de visite album associated with Dr. Charles J. Russell, surgeon at Chesapeake Hospital, Fort Monroe, Virginia.  Civil war era carte de visite album includes ninety-seven albumen cartes de visite and one albumen print showing portraits of soldiers, doctors and chaplains associated with Chesapeake Hospital (also known as the Officer's General Hospital), Fort Monroe, Virginia. Most images of military personnel depict officers from the eastern states with many from the United States Colored Troops regiments. Many of the officers were wounded in battle. Also included are one image depicting the exterior of the hospital with tents and an image of Union soldiers outside the hospital chapel.  <<Sample>>    

# 203

NEW..Carte de visite album presented to Mrs. M.J.A. Kellogg by the patients of General Hospital, Camp Butler, Illinois, on March 6, 1865. Civil War era carte de visite album includes 85 albumen and tintype cartes de visite showing portraits of famous Civil War leaders; doctors, nurses, and patients at General Hospital, Camp Butler; associates and relatives of M.J. Amanda Kellogg; and religious and allegorical illustrations.   <<Sample>>    

# 204

NEW..Carte de visite album of doctors, nurses and others associated with the Mansion House Hospital (General Hospital), Alexandria, Virginia, presented to Surgeon James B. Bellangee by Captain Louis Wagner. Civil war era carte de visite album includes 56 albumen cartes de visite and 1 tintype showing portraits of nurses, doctors and family members, some associated with Mansion House Hospital (General Hospital) in Alexandria, Virginia. Some images also depict Mansion House Hospital and other buildings in Alexandria including Lyceum Hospital, Wolfe Street Hospital and Christ Church, Alexandria.
                                                                           <<Sample>>    

# 205

NEW..Carte de visite album associated with Colonel Charles Edward Griswold of 22nd Massachusetts Infantry Regiment and 56th Massachusetts Infantry Regiment. Civil war era carte de visite album includes 60 albumen cartes de visite showing portraits of soldiers who served in the 22nd Massachusetts Infantry Regiment, 56th Massachusetts Infantry Regiment, and other Massachusetts regiments; the soldiers were associated with Colonel Griswold; also includes portraits of civilians and a portrait of Major General Ambrose Burnside. Griswold was killed on May 6, 1864, at Wilderness, Virginia.
                                                                           <<Sample>>    

# 206

NEW..Civil War Broadsides Volume 1 ( 310 images). Broadsides are single sheets of paper, printed on one side only. Often quickly and crudely produced in large numbers and distributed free in town squares, taverns, and churches or sold by chapmen for a nominal charge, broadsides are intended to have an immediate popular impact and then to be thrown away. The broadside was an easily produced and highly visible way for individuals or groups to show their support for a cause. Broadsides were meant to communicate issues of immediate interest to the public. They were posted on walls in central locations so many people would see them. By the end of the Civil War thousands of broadsides had been printed throughout the Confederacy. <<Sample>>

# 207

NEW..Civil War Broadsides Volume 2 ( 310 images). Broadsides are single sheets of paper, printed on one side only. Often quickly and crudely produced in large numbers and distributed free in town squares, taverns, and churches or sold by chapmen for a nominal charge, broadsides are intended to have an immediate popular impact and then to be thrown away. The broadside was an easily produced and highly visible way for individuals or groups to show their support for a cause. Broadsides were meant to communicate issues of immediate interest to the public. They were posted on walls in central locations so many people would see them. By the end of the Civil War thousands of broadsides had been printed throughout the Confederacy. <<Sample>>

# 208

NEW..Civil War Broadsides Volume 3 ( 310 images). Broadsides are single sheets of paper, printed on one side only. Often quickly and crudely produced in large numbers and distributed free in town squares, taverns, and churches or sold by chapmen for a nominal charge, broadsides are intended to have an immediate popular impact and then to be thrown away. The broadside was an easily produced and highly visible way for individuals or groups to show their support for a cause. Broadsides were meant to communicate issues of immediate interest to the public. They were posted on walls in central locations so many people would see them. By the end of the Civil War thousands of broadsides had been printed throughout the Confederacy. <<Sample>>

# 209

NEW..Civil War prisoners of war and prison camps (237 images) Photographs show Civil War prisoners of war and prison camps. Examination of released emaciated soldiers. Copies of overall views of Andersonville prison, probably by a Southern photographer. Execution by hanging of Capt. Henry Wirz, C.S.A., in Washington; newspaper reporters viewing execution.                                                                        <<Sample1>>     <<Sample2>>     <<Sample3>>     <<Sample4>>

# 210

NEW..Civil War stereographs from the collection of William A. Pinkerton (49 images). Stereographs show sites of battlefields and structures in Antietam and Gettysburg, Md., as well as sites in Virginia including Richmond, and the vicinity of Dutch Gap Canal on the James River. Images show cannons and other artillery in Confederate fortifications. Groups of people shown in three stereos include secret service agents and fugitive slaves.
                                                                     <<Sample1>>     <<Sample2>>     <<Sample3>>     <<Sample4>>

# 211

NEW..Civil War Missouri. During the American Civil War, Missouri was a hotly contested border state populated by both Union and Confederate sympathizers. It sent armies, generals, and supplies to both sides, maintained dual governments, and endured a bloody neighbor-against-neighbor intrastate war within the larger national war. We present here a colllection of maps, books, photos, drawings, articles and extracts from the Official Records from our archives.         <<Collection Guide>>    

# 212

NEW..General Court Martial Orders. Court-martial case files may include any or all of the following: Documents describing the organization and personnel of military courts; Charges and specifications against defendants; Pleas and arraignments of defendants;  Papers and exhibits submitted for the consideration of the courts; Proceedings, findings, and sentences of the courts; Reports of reviewing authorities; Statements of action by the Secretary of War and the President; Related correspondence.   <<Sample>>

# 213

NEW..Documentary photographs of the Civil War. Encampment at Brandy Station, Virginia. (92 images) Photographs show views and activities in the encampment at Brandy Station, Va., in the spring of 1864.     <<Sample1>>     <<Sample2>>

# 214

NEW..Documentary photographs of the Mississippi River fleet during the Civil War. (43 images). Photographs show vessels  of the Mississippi River fleet--gunboats at various points on tributary rivers.  <<Sample1>>     <<Sample2>>

# 215

NEW..Carte de visite album associated with the 48th New York Infantry Regiment. (47 images) Civil War era carte de visite album presented to Luther B. Wyman, supporter and patron of the 48th New York Infantry Regiment (the Continental Guards of Brooklyn), includes 47 albumen and tintype cartes de visites showing soldiers who served in the regiment; also includes 4 pages of manuscripts, two newpaper clippings, and a carte de visite portrait of an unidentified woman. No photographs were in the window slots of the last 38 pages. The dedication letter, written at Fort Pulaski, Georgia, on April 8, 1863, praises Wyman "for his many acts of kindness" and has the signatures of 37 officers.                 <<Sample1>>     <<Sample2>>

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# 216

NEW..Trip through West Virginia, Maryland and Pennsylvania, Biscoe, T. Dwight. In 1884 two academics from Ohio journeyed through the Civil War battlefields of West Virginia and Maryland. An interesting Civil War album containing 129 photographs made by brothers T. Dwight Biscoe (1840-1930) and Walter S. Biscoe (1853-1933) on a post-Civil War trip through Virginia, West Virginia, Maryland and Pennsylvania primarily of Civil War battlefields and cemeteries. Mounts include detailed descriptions about the battles: the battlefields of Fisher's Hill, Cedar Creek near Winchester, Virginia, Harper's Ferry, Antietam and Hagerstown, Maryland.  <<Sample1>>     <<Sample2>>

# 217

NEW..Photographs of Fort Fisher, N.C., 1865. (38 images) Interior views with traverses showing artillery, ammunition, the debris after a bombardment, etc. Men congregated around the depot commisary; general exterior views of the fortifications, etc.
                                                                                                           <<Sample1>>     <<Sample2>>

# 218

NEW..The Pictorial Book of Anecdotes and Incidents of the War of the Rebellion by Frazar Kirkland. The Pictorial Book of Anecdotes And Incidents of the War of the Rebellion, embracing the most brilliant and remarkable anecdotal events of the Great Conflict In the United States : Heroic, Patriotic, Political, Romantic, Humorous And Tragic, in presence of the Original Secession Conspirators, To the Assassination of President Lincoln, And the End of the War. With Famous Words And Deeds of Woman, Sanitary And Hospital Scenes, Prison Experiences, etc. Exquisitely illustrated with over 300 engravings.
                                                                                                       <<Sample1>>     <<Sample2>>  

# 219

NEW..Civil War Fortifications. Maps, plans , charts of forts showing defenses and fortifications. Includes a 3,000 page document archive for your reading pleasure.     <<Sample1>>     <<Archive Sample>>

# 220

NEW..Delaware Regiments - Volunteers Service Records, 1861-1864. These 15 volumes are a record of each soldier who served in Delaware regiments. They may include such information as a soldier's name, rank, age, birthplace, residence, occupation, enlistment date and location, muster-in date and location, mustering officer, term of enlistment, pay dates and amounts, transfer and promotion data, and date of discharge. They also list those soldiers who deserted, were killed, ill, or discharged.
                                                                                         <<Sample1>>     <<Sample2>>

# 221

NEW..Photographing the Civil War by Henry Wysham Lanier (4 volumes). With the outbreak of the Civil War in 1861, Matthew Brady endeavored to record the progress of the war with his camera. He and his associates, notably Alexander Gardner, George Barnard, and Timothy O'Sullivan, traveled throughout the eastern part of the country and photographed many of the battlefields, towns, and people touched by the war. In addition, Brady photographed many of the distinguished political and military personalities who found time to stop by his Washington, DC studio. The result was a collection of images which comprises a rich visual document of the Civil War period.                                                  <<Sample1>>     <<Sample2>>

# 222

NEW..Civil War Graphics and Ephemera Collection - Civil War Campaigns & Battles. Views of camps and battle scenes, with 27 lithographs printed by the Philadelphia printer L.N. Rosenthal and New York firm Currier & Ives as well as a small number printed on textiles by Boston Chemical Printing Company.                                                 <<Sample>>  

# 223

NEW..Civil War Graphics and Ephemera Collection - Civil War Envelopes & Stationery. Over 300 Civil War envelopes collected by John A. McAllister. Issued by stationers, printers, and publishers, the envelopes contain patriotic designs and slogans to promote support for the war. Predominately published in the Northern states between 1861 and 1862, a small number of envelopes with anti-Union designs printed in the Confederate states circulated as well. The designs depict portraits of historic and prominent military figures, military scenes, state seals, cartoons, Liberty, American eagles, flags, and other military and patriotic emblems.                                                                                                                                                <<Sample>>  

# 224

NEW..Civil War Graphics and Ephemera Collection - Civil War Illustrations. 1859-1865. The collection consists of 140 illustrations, primarily wood and line engravings, which were cut from serials published in Philadelphia and New York, such as Harper's Weekly, Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper, the New York Picayune, and The Phunny Phellow; very few of the pieces have dates, source citations or explanatory text beyond the published captions. Included are camp and battle scenes, basic maps meant to help readers understand military strategies, and caricature portraits of generals and politicians.                                                                                                                                            <<Sample>>  

# 225

NEW..Civil War Graphics and Ephemera Collection - Civil War Military Camps. The collection consists of 34 illustrations, primarily lithographs of Camp Scenes by the artists of the period.               <<Sample>>  

# 226

NEW..Civil War Graphics and Ephemera Collection - Civil War Paper Soldiers Collection. Collection containing cut-outs of and uncut sheets of Civil War era paper soldiers. Soldiers depicted with guns, knapsacks, drums, on horseback, carrying flags, during charges, and on the march.               <<Sample>>  

# 227

NEW..Civil War Graphics and Ephemera Collection - Civil War Playbills. Collection 0f over 400 playbills from the Civil War years.                <<Sample>>  

# 228

NEW..Civil War Graphics and Ephemera Collection - Civil War Recruiting Posters. Collection 0f over 400 playbills from the Civil War years.                 <<Sample>>  

# 229

NEW..Civil War Graphics and Ephemera Collection - Civil War scrapbook of envelopes and portraits. Scrapbook containing portraiture, predominately patriotic envelopes, of Civil War military and political figures. Majority of the envelopes issued by prolific New York publisher Charles Magnus.                <<Sample>>  

# 230

NEW..Civil War Graphics and Ephemera Collection - Civil War Volunteer Saloons and Hospitals Ephemera Collection. 1861-1868. The Civil War Volunteer Saloons and Hospitals Ephemera Collection holds  ephemera and a few pieces of correspondence (including letters to and from Samuel Bradford Fales, William M. Cooper,  and Arad Barrows) that illustrate and describe the workings of the Cooper Shop Volunteer Refreshment Saloon, the Union Volunteer Refreshment Saloon, and both of their hospitals.               <<Sample>>  

# 231

NEW..Civil War Graphics and Ephemera Collection - Confederate States of America Ephemera Collection, 1861-1865. The collection contains financial instruments, forms, and ephemera that  emanated from the South during the Civil War. The material was once kept in a folio album, and some of the  documents, particularly the currency and newspaper clippings, remain attached to their album pages.               <<Sample>>  

# 232

NEW..Civil War Graphics and Ephemera Collection - Ribbons & Textiles Collection 1832-1880. Holds campaign, commemorative, and mourning ribbons for a variety of politicians, celebrations, organizations, and people and holds printed and woven commemorative ribbons printed to be worn in honor of events, societies, and  men.             <<Sample>>  

# 233

NEW..Civil War Graphics and Ephemera Collection - Sanitary Fairs Collection, 1749-1867. The Sanitary Fairs Collection consists largely of ephemera and manuscripts documenting the efforts made by citizens to raise awareness and funds for the United States Sanitary Commission.  Most of the material is from the Great Central Fair held in Philadelphia in June 1864, and includes circulars letters, forms, handbills, correspondence, and miscellaneous printed material                 <<Sample>>  

# 234

NEW..Confederate Maps. This series consists of maps created or collected by the Confederate States of America during the Civil War. The War Department acquired these maps by capture or surrender at the close of the War or by donation or purchase after the War. Included are manuscript and annotated published maps and drawings of campaigns and fortifications in various states. Most of the maps are untitled.   Image Gallery>>>

# 235

NEW..Civil War Defenses of Washington. ( 572 items). The Civil War Defenses of Washington refers to a series of forts and smaller earthworks that ringed the city of Washington, DC during the Civil War. These were designed to protect the nation’s capital from attacks by Confederate forces. There are for some better-known forts like Fort Stevens, Fort Totten (near the Fort Totten Metro Station), Fort Ward, and Fort DeRussy (in Rock Creek Park), but also for many smaller and lesser-known fortifications scattered throughout the surrounding areas.    Image Gallery >>

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