Landscapes of the Civil War

Exhibit Information

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General Samuel Crocker Lawrence's Collection

Additional photos from the collection. Return to the main Civil War Photos page.

Ruined Roundhouse, Atlanta
Ruined Roundhouse, Georgia Railroad, Atlanta, l866.

Locomotives parked surrealistically amid the shattered remnants of Atlanta's Georgia Railroad roundhouse testify to the devastation wrought by Sherman's relentless campaign. Before embarking on his March to the Sea, Sherman ordered the evacuation of Atlanta's civilian population and destroyed the city's transportation infrastructure.

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Confederate Cannon
Cannon in Former Confederate Works, Atlanta.

Positioned in the embrasure of a former Confederate earthwork, a Union cannon guards an encampment of General Sherman's victorious Yankees following the capture of Atlanta, Georgia. The fallen city is visible in the left background of George N. Barnard's photograph.

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Railway Trestle
Trestle Bridge at Whiteside, Tennessee.

In 1864, Union engineers spanned the vally of Running Water Creek near Whiteside, Tennessee, with a 780-foot-long railrood trestle. Photographer George, N. Barnard, who was employed by General Sherman's chief engineer, made this view of the delicate-looking structure.

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Locomotive on bridge over Bull Run
U.S. Locomotive on bridge over Bull Run at Union Mills.

The orange and Alexandria Railroad bridge over Bull Run at Union Mills was destroyed by Confederate forces and rebuilt by the Union several times during the course of the war.

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Laborers at Alexandria Wharf
Laborers at the Alexandria Wharf.

The contribution of African-Americans to the Union war effort was substantial. While nearly two hundred thousand black soldiers and sailors served in uniform, many others worked on the wharves and at the railroad depots that supplied Norther forces in the field.

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Arlington Heights, Virginia
Camp McDowell, Arlington Heights, Virginia.

In the Summer of 1861, military engineers of Company R, Eighth New York State Militia, gathered in front of their captain's tent at Camp McDowell, Virginia. Like many other Federal militia units, the Eighth New York marched to war clad in uniforms of gray.

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Text is from Landscapes of the Civil War. Edited by Constance Sullivan. Published by Alfred A. Knopf, New York 1995.