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

Rebel soldier, killed in the trenches of Fort Mahone, called by the soldiers "Fort Damnation"

C.S. soldier killed in the trenches at the storming of Petersburgh (i.e. Petersburg), Va., April. The marks and spots on his face are blood issuing from his mouth and nose. The wound is in the head, caused by a fragment of shell

A dead rebel soldier, as he lay in the trenches of "Fort Hell"

C.S. soldier killed by a shell in the trenches of "Fort Hell" (i.e. "Fort Damnation")

A dead rebel soldier, as he lay in the trenches of "Fort Hell"

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

Soldiers and part of a battery, on the battlefield of Bull Run

Breastworks on the left wing, Battle of Gettysburgh

Soldiers' graves, Bull Run Battlefield, Va.

On the battlefield at Stone River

On the battlefield at Stone River

Where General McPherson was killed

Where General McPherson was killed

Wounded trees at Gettysburg

Wounded trees at Gettysburg

Fort McAllister, on the Ogechee (i.e. Ogeechee) River, Ga.

Rebel fortifications, Atlanta, Ga.

Rebel fortifications, north side of the city, Atlanta, Ga.

Bomb-proof quarters of Major Strong, at Dutch Gap, Va., July, 1864

Bomb-proof restaurant on the Petersburg line

Bomb-proof restaurant on the Petersburg line

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

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

Interior of Fort Sedgwick

The Union line before Petersburg

The Thirteen-Inch Mortar "Dictator"

Making coffee. On the lines before Petersburg, Va., 1864

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

Fortifications and bomb-proofs, in front of Petersburgh (i.e. Petersburg), Va