Civilwar
20 creative works found
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This image was captured at a US Civil War reenactment last spring in Port Gamble, WA. From the reactions of the horse and rider I don’t believe that this fall was part of the show—but it did add realism. Both got up after the tumble shook themselves off and continued the show no worse for the experience.
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This photograph was taken on the battlefield named for “Picketts Charge”. / This field has alot of controvercial history to it. Many men died on this field in July of 1863.
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This train cuts across one of the many battlefields of Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. / October 2008
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I took this shot just as dusk was descending on Lookout Mountain, Chattanooga, Tennessee
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I took this whilst visiting Monassas in the USA. / This was the battlefield for the famous “Battle of Bull Run”. =================== Click here! if you want to read about the history of Bull Run. Framed / ============ Click here if you want to see all of the images in the USA portfolio so far.
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Head stone of my great great grandfather Captain Oliver Chas Ludlow, Company G of the 122 United States Colored Infantry of Kentucky. /
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These two took their part very seriously and stayed in characture all day. I liked the shape made by the hats.
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I took this beauty while walking along a pathway near Petersburg National Battlefield Park, Petersburg, Virginia. The sun was at just the right angle to make it almost glow. Notice how the detail is portrayed!
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Featured Work
by Mike GriffithsImagine my complete and utter amazement last Sunday, when I submitted my “In Memorial” photo to the professional “Spring & Summer in the …
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Near Winchester, Virginina. Site of Rose Hill Battlefield, property owned by the Museum of the Shenandoah.
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I took this while on my way to visit Fort Wool in the Chesapeake Bay harbor, in Chesapeake, Virginia. The sky was very dark and cloudy, but just as I prepared to take this shot, the clouds started to part and the sun began peering ever so slightly through.
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This is a composition of images taken a a Civil War reenactment at Port Gamble, Washington. The image in the center is of my great great grandfather Oliver C. Ludlow, Captain 122 Kentucky colored infantry, company G. /
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A lone civil war stone.
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The view from the historic estate of Confederate Civil War general Robert E. Lee (his wife’s, actually), overlooking the Kennedy graves and Washington DC at Arlington National Cemetery, Virginia.
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Civil war grave site near Andersonville, Georgia. / Photographed in 1999 using 35mm inferred b/w film.
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Photographed in 1997 at the Gettysburg Military Park, Gettysburg Pennsylvania using 35 mm inferred b/w film. from the National Parks website.. 2.9-inch (10-pounder) Parrott Rifle. This iron cannon was rifled and fired an elongated shell made specifically for the gun. Designed before the war by Captain Robert Parker Parrott, this gun was longer than a Napoleon, sleeker in design, and distinguishable by a thick band of iron wrapped around the breech. The Parrott design went through several improvements during the war and was changed in 1863 to a larger 3-inch bore and matching Parrott shell. The 3-inch Parrott was standardized the following year and most 2.9-inch guns were withdrawn from service. Parrott Rifles were manufactured by the West Point Arsenal in Cold Spring, New York and also made in 20 and 32-pounder sizes. The 10-pounder Parrotts used during the Gettysburg Campaign had an effective range of over 2,000 yards. The 5th New York Battery was composed of six 20-pounder Parrotts. / Confederate copies of the Parrott Rifle were produced by the Noble Brothers Foundry and the Macon Arsenal in Georgia.
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Photographed at Gettysburg National military Park using 35mm inferred b/w film. This photo shows the famous Trostle’s Barn that during the Battle of Gettysburg one of the cannon volleys hit the side of the building which you can plainly see in this photo.
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A Seacoast cannon at Fort Morgan, Alabama taken in 2002 using 35mm film.
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Photographed at Fort Morgan Alabama in 2002 using 35mm film.
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