Credit: | unknown photographer |
---|---|
Date: | 1861 |
Negative Size: | stereo |
Equipment: | bayonet; crate; long gun; Sibley tent |
Military Units: | 71st New York Infantry; 71st New York Infantry (Company G); US Army |
Sources: | Library of Congress; USAMHI – MOLLUS collection |
$6.99
File Details: AKRZm, 1400 DPI, TIFF, Original Negative, 48.8 Mb
Image ID: AKRZ
Photographic War History. The War For The Union. 1861-1865. No. 2413. Near view of a “Sibley” tent. Early in the war the soldiers were much more comfortably sheltered than they were as the war progressed. This view shows a “Sibley” tent mess; these “Sibley” tents were nice large tents, and could comfortably hold from ten to fifteen men. When the Army moved up the Penninsula [sic] from Camp Winfield Scott, before Yorktown, early in the Spring of 1862, we bade farewell to our comfortable large tents, and thereafter each soldier carried his house on his back. From the Spring of 1862 till the end of the war we lived in “dog tents” or shelter (?) tents as the government miscalled them. [Taylor & Huntington stereo card]
Library of Congress says: Group of soldiers of Co. G., 71st New York Volunteers, posed in front of tent.
Library of Congress says: Group of soldiers of Company G, 71st New York Vols. In front of ‘Sibley” tent. 1861.
Anthony No. 2413.
Etched onto negative: 2413.