These died, that our Nation might live. We were driven from this field (Wilderness) before we could gather our wounded or bury our dead. This is the way we found the field covered when we returned some months later

Dead Confederate soldier in the trenches

Dead Confederate soldier in the trenches

Dead Confederate soldier in the trenches

Dead Confederate soldier in the trenches

Confederate dead at Fort Robinette, Corinth

Embalming building near Fredericksburg, Va.

Embalming building near Fredericksburg, Va.

Dead Confederate soldier in the trenches

Dead Confederate soldier in the trenches

Dead Confederate soldier in the trenches

Dead Confederate soldier in the trenches

The "Sunken Road" at Antietam

Where Sumner's Corps charged at Antietam

Bringing in the wounded

Confederate dead on the battlefield

Unburied dead on battlefield

Collecting remains of the dead

Unburied dead on battlefield

Soldiers' graves near the General Hospital, City Point, Va.

A rebel soldier, killed in the trenches before Petersburgh (i.e. Petersburg) [...]

[Dead soldiers lying side by side in a field]

[Confederate dead gathered for burial at the southwestern edge of the Rose woods, Gettysburg, Pa., July 5, 1863]

Union (i.e. Confederate) dead at Gettysburg

The slaughter pen at Gettysburg

On the battlefield at Gettysburg

A dead rebel soldier, inside the Union picket lines

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

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

This view was taken in the rebel trenches, the morning after the storming of Petersburgh (i.e. Petersburg), Va., April 2d, 1865 [...]