Credit: | by OSullivan (Timothy H.) |
---|---|
Date: | 1863.11 |
Negative Size: | 8 in. x 10 in. |
Equipment: | Sibley tent; wall tent; wedge tent |
Locations & Lines: | Culpeper VA; Virginia |
Military Units: | US Military Railroads (USMRR); US Army |
Transports: | boxcar |
Sources: | Cowan Auctions; Library of Congress; National Archives |
$6.99
File Details: AILCm, 750 DPI, TIFF, Original Negative, 42.1 Mb
Image ID: AILC
Gardners Photographic Sketch Book Of The War. Vol. 1, No. 48. Culpeper, Virginia. November [sic], 1863.
The village of Culpeper is situated on the Orange and Alexandria Railroad, about seventy-five miles from Washington. Sheltered by the Blue Ridge the surrounding country was very productive, and after the establishment of railroad communication, the place rapidly grew in size and importance. Both armies alternately occupied it, and cavalry repeatedly fought about it, till the village, once the pride of its district, became a ruin, and the fruitful fields an area of desolation. Reviews, with all their pomp and circumstance, made brilliant days for its memories, and weeks are numbered in the sorrowful periods when the requiem for the dead sounded continually over its new-made graves. History weaves a garment about it more glorious that romance. The pulsations of battle at Bull Run, and Rappahannock, and Brandy Station; at Chancellorsville, Bristoe, and Groveton, have throbbed through its streets. Cedar Mountain, blazing with conflict, looked down upon it, and Grant in the Wilderness, shook its spires with the roar of his guns. The altars of its churches are stained with heroic blood; all along the highways slumber those whose names can never pass away, and in the vacant camp-grounds cluster recollection fast blending into traditions, that shall grow dearer as they grow old.
Another year, and peace will have hidden the scars that now so sadly mar its beauty. Nature cannot be wholly defrauded of her blossoms, or prevented from drawing her mantle over the deserts that mankind may make. Already Culpeper has commenced a new adornment, and must soon resume her station, Queen of the fairest plains of Virginia. Imbued with new incentives, her returning people are making pleasant places of their homes, and launching into the enterprises of a brighter dawn, promise for themselves a further prosperity that shall prove more than compensation for troubles past.
Library of Congress incorrectly says: Culpeper, Virginia, August 1862.
Etched onto negative: 30, 2197 [both crossed out]. 937.