| In front of the parapet, Fort McAllister | 
					
				| [Man standing under a tree on the Rebel Barnwell place in Beaufort County, South Carolina] | 
					
				| Mission House, Hospital, no. 11, Beaufort, S.C. | 
					
				| Interior of Fort Gregg [i.e. Fort Putnam], Folly [i.e. Morris] Island, S.C. | 
					
				| Interior of Masonic Hall, Folly Island, S C. | 
					
				| Interior view of Fort Gregg [i.e. Fort Putnam], | 
					
				| Live oak arch at Barnwell Plantation, Port Royal Island, S.C. | 
					
				| Headquarters of Gen. Gilmore (i.e. Gillmore), Folly Island, S.C. | 
					
				| Alligator pond near Beaufort, S.C. | 
					
				| General Isaac I. Stevens' brigade - 15th (i. e. 50th) Penn. at an old colonial mansion near Hilton Head, S.C. | 
					
				| A general view of Ft. McAllister, GA. | 
					
				| Gun at Ft. McAllister | 
					
				| Beaufort, S.C. | 
					
				| Gen'l Gillmore's head quarters, Folly Island, S.C. | 
					
				| Headquarters at Morris Island of Lt. Col. Hall, provost marshall general of the Department of the South | 
					
				| Fort McAllister, looking at Union troop encampment | 
					
				| Fort McAllister - Savannah, Ga. | 
					
				| Fort Wagner | 
					
				| Free South office, Beaufort, S.C. | 
					
				| Freedman's school | 
					
				| Fuller House, Beaufort, S.C. | 
					
				| Garrison of Fort Wagner, Morris Island, having a dress parade inside the fort | 
					
				| [Group portrait of a Union general with his staff gathered around him] | 
					
				| 100th New York Regt (i.e. Regiment) camp, Morris Island, S.C. | 
					
				| Date tree, Jacksonville, Fla. (i.e. Florida) | 
					
				| Ditches that confronted Sherman's troops before Fort McAllister | 
					
				| Dock at Hilton Head, S.C. | 
					
				| Edmond Rhett House, Beaufort, S.C. | 
					
				| The first 300 pound Parrott gun. The gun is named Col. Brayton. It throws its shell into Fort Sumpter (i.e. Sumter) | 
					
				| Fort Gregg, Morris Island, S.C. This is a mortar battery, and this view shows the detachments at the mortars, ready to "load." |