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Bird’s-eye view of Andersonville Prison from the south-east



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  • Union prisoners confined in Camp Sumpter, near Andersonviile, GA

    Union prisoners confined in Camp Sumpter, near Andersonviile, GA

    Visual Materials

    Image of an aerial view of Camp Sumpter Confederate military prison (Andersonville Prison) located near Andersonville, Georgia, during the American Civil War; densely packed tents and soldiers surrounded by stockade walls and barricades manned by artillery; sites on map numbered 1-18 with key printed in bottom margin.

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  • Andersonville Prison

    Andersonville Prison

    Visual Materials

    Image of an elevated view of the Andersonville prison, a Confederate prisoner-of-war-camp in Georgia, with prisoners clustered in groups around tents in the central image; surrounded by twenty-two vignettes including a portrait of Sergeant Leroy Key, Captain Henri Wirz, scenes of prison life, prisoner escapes, and sick and dying prisoners; vignettes are numbered with key in bottom margin.

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    Andersonville Prison : Georgia

    Visual Materials

    An uncolored view print of 33,000 Union soldiers imprisoned in Andersonville Prison, a Confederate prisoner-of-war camp. The foreground includes an image of Captain Henry Wirz, shown on horseback escorting a prisoner dressed in tattered clothes to the stockade. Inside the wooden fenced camp, prisoners are depicted in densely packed and cramped enclosures, shown either in acts of labor or carried out on stretchers. The prison is surrounded by armed guards, barren trees, and a forest in the background. The print is labeled with a number key identifying eight scenes; the key reads: "1. Upper Cook - house; 2. Barracks for the sick; 3. Fort of Six Guns; 4. Rebel Sutler's Tent; 5. Swamp within the prison; 6. Bake House; 7. Capt. Wirz taking a prisoner to the Stocks; 8. Meat Wagon." The title is printed in the lower center and reads, "Andersonville Prison: Georgia. Representing the imprisonment of 33,000 Union Soldiers during the months of June, July, and August 1864." Signed and dated by artist John B. Walker in lower left. Signed by lithographer T. Sinclair in lower right. Signed in stone by artist Anton Hohenstein in the image's lower right corner. The top of the print reads "No 1. North View."

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  • From the old to the new world--German emigrants for New York embarking on a Hamburg steamer

    From the old to the new world--German emigrants for New York embarking on a Hamburg steamer

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    Image of a densely packed group of people in Hamburg, Germany, boarding a steamship bound for New York City; men, women and children carry baggage, say farewells, and board the ship as sailors and the captain look on.

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  • Birds-eye view of the camp of the army of occupation, commanded by Gen'l Taylor

    Birds-eye view of the camp of the army of occupation, commanded by Gen'l Taylor

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    Image of an aerial view of the military camp for the army brigades commanded by General Zachary Taylor early in the Mexican-American War hostilities; dozens of military tents spread out in rows across the beach along Corpus Christi Bay, Texas; soldiers in formation or engaged in activities in camp visible throughout area; ships in the water off the coast at left.

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  • Fort Mitchell

    Fort Mitchell

    Visual Materials

    Image of Fort Mitchell, Kentucky, during the American Civil War; view inside barricades of fort with cannons and soldiers overlooking the surrounding landscape.

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