E. & H.T. Anthony & Co.

Providence, looking towards the Bay.

Capitol Hill area. Whites moving into city

Views in Washington City, D.C.--the Post Office

Office of Clerk of the Senate

Gen. French's rooms [in the] Senate

U.S. Capitol from Maryland Ave, (Distant View)

New York City and vicinity

[Gifford Pinchot, half-length portrait, seated]

War views. No. 2404 or 2406, Tent life of the 31st Pennsylvania Regiment

War views. No. 2041, Bounty brokers looking out for substitutes

War views. No. 2042, Bounty brokers looking out for substitutes

Torpedo boat "Spuyten Duyvil"

Gen. Ferrero and staff, Petersburgh (i.e. Petersburg), Va.

Dutch Gap Canal. Taken after the bank was blown out

Captured rifled steel breach-loading Whitworth Gun, Richmond, Va.

General hospital wharf. Army of the Potomac, City Point, Va.

Captured siege guns, at Rocketts, Richmond, Va.

Park of captured guns at Rocketts, Richmond, Va.

Captured siege guns, at Rocketts, Richmond, Va

Captured siege guns, at Rocketts, Richmond, Va.

Anthony's stereoscopic views. No. 1471, Three drummer boys (now at Ft. Hamilton) who have been in 9 battles of the rebellion

War views. No. 1501, Camp life, Army of the Potomac - writing to friends at home

War views. No. 1500, Camp life, Army of the Potomac - basking in the sunshine

A dead rebel soldier, barefooted, killed by a shell, which tore his side out. The entrails are portruding from his side

A dead rebel soldier, inside the Union picket lines

This view was taken in the trenches of the rebel Fort Mahone, called by the soldiers "Fort Damnation," the morning after the storming of Petersburgh (i.e. Petersburg), Va., April 2d, 1865 [...]

A dead rebel soldier, as he lay in the trenches of Fort Mahone, called by the soldiers "Fort Damnation"

Interior of the Union Fort Sedgwick, called by the rebel soldiers "Fort Hell," showing Union soldiers on the breastworks

Bomb proof quarters at Ft. Burnham. The sides and top are 7 feet thick, contains two rooms, sleeping and cooking

Bomb-proofs in the Union Fort Sedgwick, called by the rebel soldiers "Fort Hell"