. The photographic history of the Civil War : thousands of scenes photographed 1861-65, with text by many special authorities . i S. Grant. John Howard Jewett, for Those Rebel Flags. w ill. mi Gordon McCabe, for Christmas Night of 62, and Dreaming in the Trenches. Di Edward Mayes, foi texl ol Lamars Eulogy oi Sumnei Mrs. Eva M, OConnor, for The < lenerals Death, bj Joseph OConnor. Mrs. W illiam John w illiamson Palmer. General Horace Porter, foi the Eulogj oi l lyases S. Grant. Wallace Rice, for Wheelers Brigade at Santiago. John Jerome Roonej. for Joined the Blues. Clinton Scollard, for Th


. The photographic history of the Civil War : thousands of scenes photographed 1861-65, with text by many special authorities . i S. Grant. John Howard Jewett, for Those Rebel Flags. w ill. mi Gordon McCabe, for Christmas Night of 62, and Dreaming in the Trenches. Di Edward Mayes, foi texl ol Lamars Eulogy oi Sumnei Mrs. Eva M, OConnor, for The < lenerals Death, bj Joseph OConnor. Mrs. W illiam John w illiamson Palmer. General Horace Porter, foi the Eulogj oi l lyases S. Grant. Wallace Rice, for Wheelers Brigade at Santiago. John Jerome Roonej. for Joined the Blues. Clinton Scollard, for The Daughter of the Regiment, from Ballads r Alberl Sidney Johnston, and Thomas al Chickamauga. I i ■ ■ siori. ard, for iver then I \t&\ es Will Henry Thompson, for The High Tide at Gettysburg. Horace Traubel, for Bivouac on a Mountainside, Cava! a Ford, 0 Captain! Mj Captain/ from 1 . ■ ass, by Walt Whitman. Robert Hum- Wilson, for Such ia the Death the. Soldier Dies. 2]. IN VIRGINIA 1865 WHAT THE WAR BROUGHT TO THE SOUTH RUINS ] rERSBURU JUST MTKIfTHE CAPTURE OF THE TOWN BY GRANTS \K To study this scene a1 the close of the war reveals the spiril of this volume. Within the stone wallsof 1 Ik- woolen mill that now nape empty to Heaven, many a gray blanket and uniform ha<l been wo\ enfor Lees devoted army. Many a wheel had been turned by the stream thai now plays but an idle pailin the dreamy landscape. Ve1 tin- magnificent Army of the Potomac, as it rushed through the cityin hot pursuit of the men soon to wear gray no longer, brought in its train an enduring a century later. Petersburg, with thousands of other cities in Virginia and its sister SouthernStates once trampled by armies, hummed again with induslry under the very flag once borne againstthem. North and South had learned the lasting meaning of Blue and Gray symbols of principleand love of home, emblems of the heroism proclaimed by poets and oratorsphotographichist09mill


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Keywords: ., bookauthormillerfrancistrevelya, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910