Same gun, as shown in no. 1015, with Hurdle Revertment (i.e. revetment) and Epaulement - unfinished battery

View on battle field of Antietam where Sumner's Corps charged the enemy. Scene of terrific conflict

Burnside Bridge, eastern view

Army guards Hdqtrs at Manassas

Laid out for burial at Antietam

Northeast view of Battery no. 1, at Farnhold's house, York River, mounting one 200 pound & five 100 pound rifled guns

Crew of Monitor, Hampton Roads, Va. 1862

[Three soldiers posing by a mounted cannon with a wall of sandbags behind them]

Dunkers (i.e. Dunker) Church, battle field of Antietam. After battle, how dead were laid out

[Tending wounded Union soldiers at Savage's Station, Virginia, during the Peninsular Campaign]

Bridge on the Boonsboro Pike, Antietam, Md.

Three fourths rear view of the same gun a shown in No. 1040. Fort Darling on the right of the picture

Same gun, as shown in no. 1020, with magazine traverse

Libby Prison

Continuation of view no. 1009, showing rear of Battery Dantzler, (Howlett's) with view of Howlett's house. Taken with instrument on top of high magazine, shown in extreme distance of no. 1009

Ordnance Depot at Broadway Landing

[Rear view of a cannon with a soldier sitting adjacent to it facing forward]

15-inch (i.e. 13-inch) mortar, "Dictator" in the works in front of Petersburg, Va. View from the north, September 1, 1864

Knapp Pa. Battery, Fair Oaks, Va

Rear view of the same gun, as shown in no. 1001. This view shows its range of fire down James River

Massaponax Church, Headquarters U.S. Army, 21st May, 1864

War effect of a shell on a Confederate soldier at battle of Gettysburg

[Grand review of the great veteran armies of Grant and Sherman at Washington, on the 23rd and 24th May, 1865]

View of breastworks on Round Top - the hill which formed our extreme left at the battle of Gettysburg

Lacy house, Falmouth, Va., March, 1863

C[i]ty Hospital, Richmond

Rear view of the same gun, as shown in no. 1001. This view shows its range of fire down James River

Eight inch Brooke rifled gun, weighing 21,987 lbs., in unfinished battery wood-hurdle revertment (i.e. revetment), anchored by grape vines

Burnside Bridge, from the south-east

Part of Federal Line of Works showing bombproof tents occupied by U.S. Colored Troops in front of Petersburg, Va., Aug. 7, 1864