Contraband foreground

Christian Commission, at White House, Va.

Preparing the mess

Picket station near Atlanta, Ga.

Comrades will all remember how we made a rush for the old well to fill our canteens, when on the march. This is the way it was

Troops drawn up in Hollow Square to witness an execution

Army Blacksmith and Forge, Antietam, Sept., 1862

Non-commissioned Officers' Mess, Co. "D", 93d New York Infantry

"Hard Tack"

"Hard Tack"

A battery of "Quaker Guns"

A battery of "Quaker Guns"

Soldiers' winter quarters, Army of the Potomac. Inside the first line of fortifications, near City Point, Va.

Headquarters 10th Army Corps, Hatchies Run, Va.

[Union stragglers at makeshift postwar camp]

Camp life

Camp life, Army of the Potomac Taking it easy.

Camp in Monument Garden, Chattanooga

Federal Camp at Johnsonville, Tenn.

Encampment at Cumberland Landing, Va.

Encampment at Cumberland Landing, Va.

Execution of a deserter, Alexandria, Va.

Burial of the Union dead at Fredericksburg, December 15, 1862 (i.e. May 19 or 20, 1864. Working within the Confederate lines under a flag of truce. Our army had retreated, leaving our dead on the field

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

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

Rebel fortifications, Atlanta, Ga.

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

The Thirteen-Inch Mortar "Dictator"

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"