La Verna and Edwin Davis
Pix # Date of Pix Size of Pix No. of Pix Kind of imageNegative
1 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The war in America: Arrival of a federal steamer with
flag of truce at Madisonville, Lake Pontchartrain. Caption on back of picture: Confederate
exiles arriving at Madisonville under flag of truce. Appeared in Illustrated London News, April 11, 1863, pg. 401.
2 1866 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Sunday amusements in New Orleans–A Creole Night at the
French Opera House. Sketched by our special artist, A. R. Waud. Caption on back of
picture: The New Orleans opera season of 1860-61 “promised to be a notable one and
the audiences had never been excelled.” Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, July 21, 1866, pg. 452
3 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The Canal at Lake Providence. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, March 21, 1863, Pg. 180.
4 1862 11×14 3 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture on first two copies): The City of New Orleans, Louisiana,
taken by the Union Forces, April 24, 1862. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, May 10, 1862, Pg. 292. Caption on front of picture (Copy 3): The City of New Orleans
(this picture shows more of New Orleans.) Appeared in Harper’s Pictorial History of the Civil War, Pg. 271.
5 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The War in Louisiana–Signaling from the Catholic Church,
Vermilionville (Lafayette), from a sketch by our special artist, C. E. H. Bonwill.
Caption on back of the picture: Federal troops signaling from St. John’s Catholic
Church in Lafayette (Vermilionville) during the fall of 1863. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Weekly, November 28, 1863, Pg. 165.
6 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Triumphal Procession of Colonel Grierson, Commanding
Sixth and Seventh Illinois Cavalry, Through Baton Rouge, May 2, 1863, from a sketch
by Mr. J. R. Hamilton. Caption on back of picture: Parade of Colonel B. H. Grierson
and his command on Front Street, Baton Rouge, after the raid from Tennessee across
Mississippi and southeastern Louisiana. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, June 6, 1863, Pg. 356.
7 1864 11×14 2 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The War in Louisiana–Landing supplies at Grand Ecore,
from a sketch by our special artist, C. E. H. Bonwill. Caption on back of picture:
During the Red River Campaign Federal Admiral David D. Porter established a supply
base at Grand Ecore. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Weekly, May 21, 1864.
8 1862 11×14 4 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The City of Baton Rouge, Louisiana, sketched by Mr. Theodore
R. Davis. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, August 30, 1862, Pg. 556. Also appeared in Harper’s Pictorial History of the Civil War, Pg. 279.
9 1862 11×14 3 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Panoramic view of New Orleans with the National fleet
at anchor. Caption on back of picture: New Orleans, April 24, 1862, afternoon, “A
scene of terrible destruction and conflagration, . . . nothing of value had been left
for the invaders. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Weekly, May 24, 1862, Pg. 88.
10 1861 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Pilot Town. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, December 7, 1861, Pg. 774.
11 1862 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Fort Pike, LA. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, May 10, 1862, Pg. 294.
12 1862 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Interior of Fort St. Philip. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, May 24, 1862, Pg. 326.
13 1866 11×14 4 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, September 8, 1866, Pg. 564.
14 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Burning of the State-House, Baton Rouge, on Sunday, December
28, 1862, from a sketch made at the time. Appeared in Battle and Leaders, Vol. III, Pg. 585
15 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Scene on the Levee, At New Orleans.
16 1864 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on back of picture: Alexandria. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Weekly, April 30, 1864, Pg. 89. Scene of the river with boats on it and the riverbank with
houses.
17 1855 11×14 5 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: View of Baton Rouge, La. Appeared in Ballou’s Pictorial, Vol. VIII.
18 1864 11×14 2 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture (Copy 1): Porter’s Fleet Passing the Dam at Alexandria.
(Copy 2) Porter’s Gun-Boats Passing the Dam in the Red River, Near Alexandria, sketched
by Mr. George Slater. Appeared in Harper Pictorial History of the Civil War, May 1864, Pg. 590 and Harper’s Weekly, June 18, 1864, Pg. 385.
19 1859 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Room in which Dickinson Died. Appeared in Weekly, January 8, 1958, Pg. 21.
20 1868 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Duel between colored men near Savannah, Georgia. Appeared
in Harper’s Weekly, June 27, 1868, Pg. 404.
21 1866 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Sunday Amusements in New Orleans–the Cockpit, sketched
by our special artist, A. R. Waud. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, July 21, 1866, Pg. 452
22 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The Iron-Clad “Barrataria” Snagged in Amite River, LA,
Attacked by Rebel Guerrillas, from a sketch by Mr. F. H. Schell. Caption on back of
picture: Federal Iron-Clad Barrataria in Amite River attacked by Confederate soldiers. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, May 9, 1863, Pg. 292.
23 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The great naval battle on the Mississippi–First days
bombardment–Federal schooners off Forts and St. Philip, Commanding the passage of
the river. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, Pg. 132.
24 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Scene at the City Hall–Hauling Down the State Flag.
Appeared in Battles and Leaders, Vol. II, Pg. 94.
25 1862 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Interior of Fort Jackson. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly , May 24, 1862, Pg. 326.
26 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Captain Theodorus Bailey and Lieutenant George H. Perkins
on their way to demand the surrender of New Orleans. Appeared in Battles and Leaders, Vol. II, Pg. 92.
27 1862 11×14 2 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Landing of Captain Bailey and Lieutenant Perkins on the
Levee, New Orleans, with a flag of truce, to demand the surrender of the city to the
federal government, from a sketch by our special artist, Wm. Waud. Caption on back
of picture: Captain Theodorus Bailey and Lieutenant George Perkins landing at New
Orleans to demand the surrender of the city. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated, May 24 or 31, 1862, Pg. 120.
28 1866 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The excitement in New Orleans–view on St. Charles Street.
Caption on back of picture: Federal troops, St. Charles Street, New Orleans. Appeared
in Harper’s Weekly, August 18, 1866, Pg. 516.
29 1862 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Death of General Thomas Williams. Appeared in Harper’s Pictorial History of the Civil War, August 1862, Pg. 442.
30 1862 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Recapture of Baton Rouge, LA, December 17, 1862–Federal
troops under General Grover, occupying the city. Caption on back of picture: Federal
troops landing at Baton Rouge, December 17, 1862. Official Portfolio, Pg. 174.
31 1862 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The Steamer “Brazil,” Fired upon by Guerrillas on the
banks of the Mississippi. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, January 23, 1864, Pg. 60.
32 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The War on the Mississippi–Sudden and daring attack
by Rebel Guerillas, led by Capt. Talbot, on the Sugar Steamer Empire Parish, at the
landing, 44 miles below Baton Rouge, from a sketch by our special artist, Mr. F. H.
Schell. Caption on back of picture: Federal steamer Empire Parish, loading confiscated sugar at a landing below Donaldsonville, attached by Confederates.
Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, January 31, 1863, Pg. 289.
33 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The fight at Corney’s Bridge, Bayou Teche, Louisiana,
and destruction of the Rebel Gun-Boat “Cotton,: January 14, 1863, sketched by our
special artist. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, February 14, 1863, Pg. 101.
34 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The campaign in Louisiana–Battle of Irish Bend, sketched
by William M. Hall, 22d Maine. Caption on back of picture: Battle of Franklin (sometimes
called Battle of Irish Bend or Battle of Newson’s Woods). Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, May 16, 1863, Pg. 716.
35 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Triumphal entry of the army of Major-General Banks into
Alexandria, Louisiana, May 4, 1863, from a sketch by Mr. J. R. Hamilton. Caption on
back of picture: Federal troops entering Alexandria, May 4, 1863. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, June 20, 1863, Pg. 388 and Harper’s Pictorial History of the Civil War, April 1863, Pg. 461.
36 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Opening of the Mississippi–View of the Rebel batteries
at Port Hudson, from a sketch by our special artist, Fred. B. Schell. Appeared in
Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, August 15, 1863, Pg. 328.
37 1863 11×14 2 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture (Copy 1): Grand assault of General Augur’s Division on
the Fortifications of Port Hudson, May 27, 1863, sketched by Mr. J. R. Hamilton. Caption
on back of picture (Copy 1): On May 27, 1863, General Banks ordered a series of “Grand
Assaults” against Port Hudson, which were repulsed with heavy losses. Appeared in
Harper’s Weekly, June 27, 1863, Pg. 413. Caption on front of picture (Copy 2): The Assault on Port
Hudson, May 27, 1863. This copy is a closer view and appeared in Harper’s Pictorial History of the Civil War, May 1863, Pg. 473.
38 1863 11×14 2 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture (Copy 1): The siege of Port Hudson–Birds-Eye view of
the great river battery, three hundred yards from the Rebel Citadel, sketched by Mr.
J. R. Hamilton. Caption on back of picture: Federal “Great River Battery” at Port
Hudson. The Confederate earthworks in the background are only about three hundred
yards distant. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, July 25, 1863, Pg. 476. Caption on front of picture (Copy 2): Same as above, plus
“reproduced by Committee for Preservation of the Port Hudson Battlefield.” This view
also shows a little more of the picture.
39 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Capture of Rebel rifle-pits, three-fourths of a mile
from Fort Hudson, Louisiana, by General Grover’s Division, May 24, 1863, sketched
by Mr. J. R. Hamilton. Caption on back of picture: On May 24, 1863, the Federals unsuccessfully
attacked the Confederate rifle-pits, Port Hudson. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, June 27, 1863, Pg. 412.
40 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Scene of General Paine’s assault on Port Hudson, on June
14, 1863–carrying off our dead and wounded under a flag of truce. Caption on back
of picture: Federals carrying off their dead and wounded at Port Hudson after the
failure of the “Grand Assaults” of June 14, 1863. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, July 18, 1863, Pg. 452.
41 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The formal surrender of Port Hudson, drawn by Mr. J.
R. Hamilton. Caption on back of picture: Formal surrender of Port Hudson July 9, 1863.
General Franklin Gardner offered his sword to General George L. Andrews, but it was
refused. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, August 8, 1863, Pg. 497.
42 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The War in Louisiana–The army of General Banks crossing
Vermilion Bayou, October 10, from a sketch by our special artist, C. E. H. Bonwill.
Caption on back of picture: Federal troops under the command of General William B.
Franklin crossing Bayou Vermilion, October 10, 1863.
43 1863 11×14 2 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The War in Louisiana–Battle of Grand Coteau, LA, November
3–Furious Rebel attack on the 60 th Indiana, Col. Owen, from a sketch by our special artist. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, December 12, 1863, Pg. 188 and also Leslie’s Illustrated History, Pg. 341.
44 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The attack on Sabine Pass, September 8, 1863, sketched
by an eye-witness. Written above caption is: Rebel Battery; Clifton; Transport General
Banks; Sachem; and Arizona. Caption on back of picture: In September 1863, a Federal
expedition to occupy southwestern Louisiana was repulsed at Sabine Pass. Appeared
in Harper’s Weekly, October 10, 1863, Pg. 652.
45 1863 11×14 2 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture (Copy 1): Disabling and capture of the federal gunboats
“Sachem” and “Clifton” in the attack on Sabine Pass, Tex. September 8 th 1863. Caption on back of picture: At Sabine Pass, Lieutenant Richard W. Dowling disabled
and captured the Federal gunboats Sachem and Clifton. Appeared in Leslie’s Illustrated History, Pg. 381. Caption of front of picture (Copy 2): The War in Texas–Disabling and capture
of the Union gunboats Sachem and Clifton in the attack on Sabine Pass, Texas, September
8. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, October 10, 1863, Pg. 41. This view shows less of the picture than Copy 1.
46 1860 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: View of one of the cotton presses in New Orleans, photographed
by E. H. Newton, June., New Orleans. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, April 21, 1860, Pg. 330.
47 1866 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Sugar Plantation on the Bayou Teche, Louisiana, sketched
by A. R. Waud. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, December 8, 1866, Pg. 781.
48 1862 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Slidell’s House in Louisiana, sketched by a naval officer.
Appeared in Harper;s Weekly, December 13, 1862, Pg. 796.
49 1864 11×14 3 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture (Copies 1 and 3): General Dick Taylor, April 9, from a
sketch by our special artist, C. E. H. Bonwill. Caption on back of picture (Copy 1):
General Taylor caught the retreating Federal army at Pleasant Hill about twenty miles
south of Mansfield, on the afternoon of April 9. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, May 14, 1864, Pg. 121. (Copy 2) doesn’t have anything written on it and it is a
smaller picture.
50 1864 11×14 3 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture (Copy 1): The nineteenth army corps crossing Cane River,
Louisiana. Caption on front of Picture (Copies 2 and 3): General Banks crossing Cane
River. Appeared in Harper’s weekly, May 7, 1864, Pg. 300 and Harper’s Pictorial History of the Civil War, April 1864, Pg. 589. (Copy 1) has more of the picture.
51 1861 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: First Blood–The Sixth Massachusetts Regiment fighting
their way through Baltimore, April 19, 1861. Caption on back of picture: Northern
troops moving southward–they are attacked by the Baltimoreans”– Daily Crescent headline, April 20, 1861. Appeared in Harper’s Pictorial History of the Civil War, Pg. 85
52 1862 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The Civil War in America: Jefferson Thompson’s Guerrillas
Shooting at Federal Boats on the Mississippi, from a sketch by our special artist.
Caption on back of picture: M. J. Thompson’s soldiers firing on a Federal Mississippi
River supply steamer. Appeared in Illustrated London News, January 14, 1862, Pg. 599.
53 1866 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The riot in New Orleans–The Freedmen’s procession marching
to the institute–The struggle for the flag. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, August 25, 1866, Pg. 536.
54 1862 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: John Morgan’s highwaymen sacking a peaceful village in
the West. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, August 30, 1862, Pg. 548.
55 1863 11×14 3 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The War in Louisiana–Skirmish at Cretien’s Plantation,
near Carrion Crow Bayou, the Rebels shelled and driven from their position by the
116 th New York, Col. Love, from a sketch by our special artist. Caption on back of picture:
In middle October 1863, General Richard Taylor fought a rearguard skirmish at Cretien’s
Plantation, near Bayou Carencro. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, November 28, 1863, Pg. 156.
56 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Destruction of the Queen of the West by Calhoun, Grand
Lake, LA, from a sketch by our special artist, F. H. Schell. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, May 23, 1863, Pg. 132.
57 1864 11×14 2 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The War in Louisiana–The Corps D’Afrique (3 rd Engineers) Entre C___G on Vermilion Bayou, from a sketch by our special artist, C.
E. H. Bonwill. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, June 11, 1864, Pg. 188.
58 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The War in Louisiana–Arrival of the steamer A. G. Brown
at Tarleton Plantation, Bayou Teche, with supplies for Gen. Weitzer, from a sketch
by our special artist, C. E. H. Bonwill.. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, November 7, 1863, Pg. 108.
59 1862 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Religious services in Camp of 61 st N. Y. volunteers. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, May 3, 1862, Pg. 281.
60 1865 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Flight of President Jefferson Davis and his ministers
over the Georgia Ridge, Five days before his capture, from a sketch by our special
artist. Appeared in Illustrated London News , July 1, 1865, Pg. 624.
61 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Departure of General Bank’s Troops from Simmesport, Louisiana,
May 21, 1863, sketched by Mr. J. R. Hamilton. Caption on back of picture: Federal
troops under command of General Nathaniel P. Banks embarking from Simmesport for Port
Hudson, May 21, 1863. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, June 20, 1863, Pg. 389.
62 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Cutting away the dam at the head of the Vicksburg Canal.
Caption on back of picture: Grants Canal, opposite Vicksburg, January 1863. The canal
attempt failed. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, April 4, 1863, Pg. 209.
63 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Destruction of the “Queen of the West” by Union Gun-Boats.
Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, May 30, 1863, Pg. 340.
64 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The siege of Port Hudson–Head-quarters of General Bank
at Riley’s Plantation. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, July 11, 1863, Pg. 437.
65 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The capture of Vicksburg–Arrival of Admiral Porter’s
Fleet at the Levee on Fourth July 1863, sketched by Mr. Theo. R. Davis. Appeared in
Harper’s Weekly, August 1, 1863, Pg. 492.
66 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The War on the Mississippi–Fort Adams, Miss., from a
sketch by our special artist. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, August 29, 1863, Pg. 360.
67 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Army of Gen. Banks–Landing of the 116 th N. Y. V. at Winter’s Plantation, near Port Hudson, from a sketch by G. R. W. Berger,
116 th N. Y. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, July 4, 1863, Pg. 228.
68 1863 11×14 2 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture (Copy 1): The loss of the “Queen of the West,” sketched
by Mr. M’Cullagh. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, March 21, 1863, Pg. 181. Caption on front of picture (Copy 2): Loss of the “Queen
of the West.” Appeared in Harper’s Pictorial History of the Civil War, February 1863, Pg. 450.
69 1864 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Catholic Church at Opelousas, LA–from a sketch by our
special artist, C. E. H. Bonwill. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, February 13, 1864, Pg. 325.
70 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Funeral of the late Captain Cailloux, First Louisiana
Volunteers (colored), sketched by a native guard. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, August 29, 1863, Pg. 549.
71 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Revival of the old slave laws of Louisiana–A scene in
New Orleans:–Arrest of contrabands on the night of January 30. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, March 7, 1863, Pg. 381.
72 1862 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Flat-Officer Farragut’s Gulf Squadron, and Commodore
Porter’s mortar fleet, from a sketch by our special artist on board the flag ship.
Above the caption is the names of the ships: Pensacola, Colorado, Flag-ship Hartford,
and Octorora. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, May 10, 1862, Pg. 293.
73 1861 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: First Blood–The Sixth Massachusetts Regiment fighting
their way through Baltimore, April 19, 1861. (Different view than Picture No. 51).
Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, May 4, 1861, Pg. 283.
74 1864 11×14 2 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The War in Louisiana–Admiral Porter’s Fleet above the
rapids of Red River, from a sketch by our special artist, C. E. H. Bonwill. Appeared
in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, June 18, 1864, Pg. 205.
75 1863 11×14 2 B&W copy print none
Caption on front: The War in La.–The 3 rd Engineers (Corps D’Afrique), Col. G. D. Robinson, Removing Obstructions from the
Bayou Teche, at Cornie’s Bridge, September 25, by our special artist, C. E. H. Bonwill.
Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, Nov. 7, 1863, Pg. 108.
76 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Great Government sale of confiscated blooded stock, New
Orleans, March 2 & 5, 1863. Caption on back of picture: The Federal confiscation Act
of 1862 was placed in effect in New Orleans and other occupied areas in the fall of
that year. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, June 6, 1863, Pg. 172.
77 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The War in the Southwest–Adjutant-General Thomas addressing
the Negroes in Louisiana on the duties of freedom. Caption on back of picture: Federal
General Lorenzo Thomas addressing Negroes on the duties of freedom. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, November 7, 1863, Pg. 721.
78 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The soldier’s dream. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, November 7, 1863, Pg. 709.
79 1861 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Campement de troupes fédérales Baltimore–D’aprés les
croquis de M. Stephenson. (Voir la page suivante.) Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, 1861, Pg. 357.
80 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The siege of Port Hudson–General Paine’s Head-quarters
at Chamber’s Sugar-House. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, July 11, 1863, Pg. 437.
81 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Franklin, LA. Caption on back of picture: Federal troops
marching through Franklin, April 15, 1863, after General Richard Taylor’s withdrawal
following the Battle of Irish Bend. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, November 21, 1863, Pg. 132.
82 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on back of picture: Destruction of the U. S. S. Mississippi by the Port Hudson
batteries, March 14, 1863. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper , April 18, 1863, Pg. 54.
83 1862 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Scenes on the field after the Battle. There are two scene–one
has at the fence and the other has burying the dead. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, September 1862, Pg. 401.
84 1860 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Terrible modes of punishment on board our national ships
of war–the “Bucking and Gagging” torture. appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, April 14, 1860, Pg. 310.
85 1862 11×14 2 B&W copy print none
Caption on back of picture: Richmond. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, May 31, 1862, Pg. 345 and Harper’s Pictorial, Pg. 123. (Copy 2 shows more of the town)
86 1866 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Pictures of the South–Gathering moss on Berwick Bay,
Louisiana, sketched by A. R. Waud. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, September 15, 1866.
87 1861 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front: Prevailing fashions for the winter season–morning, evening and
out-door costumes. Caption on back of picture: New Orleans, winter, 1860-61; “the
drawing rooms, salons and ballroom were crowded. . . .” Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, January 5, 1861, Pg. 101.
88 1865 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption of front of picture: Surrender of General Lee at Appomattox Court-Room, Virginia,
April 9, 1865, sketched by Frank Beard. Appeared in Officers and Soldiers, Pg. 245.
89 1860s 11×14 2 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Fort Sumter seen from the rear at low water. Appeared
in Harper’s Pictorial History of Civil War. Pg. 32.
90 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Contrabands coming into camp in consequence of the proclamation,
drawn by Mr. A. R. Waud. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, January 31, 1863, Pg. 68.
91 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Etats-Unis: Bombardement Du Fort Sumter, Charleston.
Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, December 1863, Pg. 404.
92 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Fort Sumter, December 9, 1863, Vie from South West Angle.
Also written on front: (Bottom Left) To Lt. Col. Step. Elliott, P.A.C.S. Artillery,
comdg. Fort Sumter with Compliments of Gen. Beauregard. (Bottom Right) Hdqrtrs. Dept.
S.C., Ga. & Fa. Charleston, S. C., April 9, 1864, Approved G. T. Beauregard, Genl.
Comdg.
93 1861 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Bombardement du-fort Sumter–Diapr s un croquis de notre
correspondent, M. Saintin. (Voir la Revue-de la semaine.) Caption on back of picture:
Bombardment of Fort Sumter, in Charleston Harbor, South Carolina. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, May 18, 1861, Pg. 313.
94 ca. 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Interior of Fort Sumter, from the Parapet, drawn by an
officer of Major Anderson’s Command.
95 1864 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on back of picture: Federal headquarters, Alexandria, March 1864. Appeared
in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, April 30, 1864, Pg. 89.
96 ca. 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Montgomery, Alabama: First seat of the Rebel government.
Appeared in Harper’s Pictorial History of Civil War, Pg. 115.
97 18603 11×14 2 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The War in Louisiana–Towing the wounded Union soldiers
down the bayou on a raft, on the night of January 14, 1863, after the Battle Bayou
Teche, LA, from a sketch by our special artist. Appeared in Leslie’s Illustrated History, Pg. 362.
98 1864 11×14 2 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture (Copy 1): Capture of Fort De Russy, LA. on the 14 th of March, 1864 by the Federal forces under General Andrew Jackson Smith. Appeared
in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, April 9, 1864, Pg. 41. Caption on front of picture (Copy 2): The War in the Southwest-Capture
of Fort De Russy, LA, on the 15 th of March, by the United States forces under Gen. Andrew Jackson Smith. Caption on
back of picture (Copy 2): Charge of the Federal troops at Fort De Russy. Appeared
in Leslie’s Illustrated History , Pg. 399.
99 ca. 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Title page of the play Uncle Tom’s Cabin or Life Among the Lowly.
100 1864 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Union refugees in the swamps of Louisiana. Appeared in
Harper’s Weekly, May 14, 1864, Pg. 313.
101 1864 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The War in Louisiana–Scene at Tarleton’s Plantation,
Bayou Teche, from a sketch by our special artist. appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, September 10, 1864, Pg. 385.
102 1864 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Repulse of the Rebels at Pleasant Hill, Louisiana. Caption
on back of picture: A Confederate charge at the Battle of Pleasant Hill. Appeared
in Harper’s Weekly, May 7, 1864, Pg. 297.
103 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The tug “Rumsey” accoutred for running the rebel batteries
at Vicksburg. Caption on back of picture: Federal tug Rumsey and barge running past
the Confederate river batteries at Vicksburg, Spring 1863. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, May 30, 1863, Pg. 337.
104 1864 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front: Foraging in Louisiana. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, May 14, 1864, Pg. 316.
105 1862 11×14 2 B&W copy print none
Caption on front (Copy 1): Cotton Hoards in the Swamps. Caption on back: Federal army
and government representatives searched occupied areas for hidden cotton. Caption
on front (Copy 2): Cotton Hoards in Southern Swamps. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, August 16, 1862, Pg. 520.
106 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The War in Louisiana–Scenes in Banks’ Expedition, (Slabtown,
LA) from sketches by our special artist, C. E. H. Bonwill. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, November 21, 1863, Pg. 132.
107 1861 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Light House and West View of the Pass. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, December 7, 1861, Pg. 774.
108 1862 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The War on the Mississippi-View of the quarantine ground
and U. S. Government Store-House, near the captured forts on the Mississippi River,
The First Government property in Louisiana “Repossessed” by the Federal troops, now
the headquarters of Gen. Butler, from a sketch by our special artist, Mr. Wm. Waud.
Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, June 14, 1862, Pg. 172.
109 1861 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Inauguration of President Jefferson Davis of the Southern
Confederacy, at Montgomery, Alabama, February 18, 1861. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, March 9, 1861, Pg. 157.
110 1861 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The Charleston Convention-view of the South Carolina
Institute Building, in Meeting Street, Charleston, S. C., where the Democratic Convention
will hold its meetings during the present month of April, from a sketch by our special
artist. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, April 14, 1860, Pg. 303.
111 1862 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Desperate naval combat between the Confederate iron-plated
ram “Arkansas” and the Federal Gunboat “Carondelet,” at the mouth of the Yazoo River,
Tuesday, July 15, 1862. Caption on back of picture: Engagement between Confederate
iron-clad Arkansas and Federal gunboat Carondelet at the mouth of Yazoo River, July 15, 1862. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated History, Pg. 224.
112 1861 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The Hon. Jefferson Davis, President-elect of the new
Southern Confederacy, addressing the citizens of Montgomery, Ala., from the balcony
of the Exchange Hotel, on the night of February 16, 1861, and previous to his inauguration,
from a sketch by our special artist. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, March 16, 1861, Pg. 257.
113 1861 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The city of Montgomery, Alabama, showing the State House
where the Congress of the Southern Confederacy meets on February 4, 1861. Caption
on back of picture: Montgomery, Alabama, showing the State House, where “the Convention
of seceding States” met to organize the Confederate States of America. Appeared in
Harper’s Weekly, February 9, 1861, Pg. 88.
114 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The Battle at Milliken’s Bend, sketched by Mr. Theodore
R. Davis. appeared in Harper’s Weekly, July 4, 1863, Pg. 428.
115 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Headquarters of the Union Army commanded by Gen. Grant
on the Mississippi, near Vicksburg., from a sketch by our special artist, Henri Lovie.
Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, April 4, 1863, Pg. 29.
116 1861 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The inaugural procession at Washington passing the gate
of the Capitol grounds, from a sketch by our special artist. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, Mary 16, 1861, Pg. 161.
117 1861 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: View of the Capitol, showing the present state of the
dome, taken during the inauguration of Lincoln, Monday, March 4, 1861. Caption on
back of picture: Inauguration of Abraham Lincoln as President of the United States,
March 4, 1861.
118 1861 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Vue Generale de Charleston (Caroline Du Sud). Appeared
in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, 1861, Pg. 84.
119 1861 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The house-tops in Charleston during the bombardment of
Sumter. Caption on back of picture: Charleston citizens watching the bombardment of
Fort Sumter. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, May 4, 1861, Pg. 273.
120 1861 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The Sixth Regiment of Massachusetts Troops firing into
the people at the Kensington Depot, Baltimore, while taking the cars for Washington,
D. C. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, April 30, 1861, Pg. 369.
121 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Occupation of Alexandria. Appeared in Harper’s Pictorial History of the Civil War, April 1863, Pg. 461 and Harper’s Weekly., June 20, 1863, Pg. 388.
122 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The Union forces entering the breast-works to take possession
of Port Hudson, July 9, 1863, from a sketch by Mr. J. R. Hamilton. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, August 8, 1863, Pg. 501.
123 1861 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Vue de Richmond (Virginie). Caption on back of picture:
Richmond, Virginia, the capital of the Confederate States of America. Appeared in
Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, 1861, Pg. 20.
124 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Departure of registered enemies of the United States
from Port Hickok, to Madisonville, LA, sketched by our special artist. Caption on
back of picture: “Registered enemies of the United States” being loaded on steamer
at Port Hickok, New Orleans, for transportation to Madisonville. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, March 7, 1863, Pg. 156.
125 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Southern refugees encamping in the woods near Vicksburg,
from a sketch by our special artist. Caption on back of picture: Refugee encampment.
“all have lost heavily.”
Appeared in Illustrated London News, August 29, 1963, Pg. 216.
126 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of (copy 1): Extempore musical and terpsichorean entertainment at
the United States Arsenal, Baton Rouge, La., under the patronage of the Forty-First
Massachusetts, the One Hundred and Thirty-First New York and the Twenty-Fifth Connecticut
volunteers-contraband children dancing the breakdown. Appeared in Leslie’s Illustrated History, 1863, Pg. 288. Caption on front of (copy 2): “The Banks expedition-Musical and Terpsichorean
Entertainment at the United States Arsenal, Baton Rouge, under the patronage of the
41 st Massachusetts, the 131 st New York and the 35 th Connecticut volunteers-contraband children dancing the breakdown, from a sketch by
our special artist, F.H. Schell. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, January 31, 1863, Pg 292
127 1865 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Assassinat du President Lincoln, drawn by M. W. Scott.
Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, May 1865, Pg. 283.
128 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Captions on front of picture: Wrecks of Confederate river fleet. Mortar-fleet in the
distance. Mortar-steamers attacking water-battery, Fort Jackson. “Richmond.” “Manassas,”
Confederate. Fort Jackson. “Iroquois.” “McRae,” Confederate. Caption on back of picture:
Battle of Forts Jackson and St. Philip, looking down-river, Fort Jackson is at the
right. Appeared in Century, Pg. 99
129 1864 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The Paris fashions for February 1864. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, February 27, 1864, Pg. 141.
130 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The War in Louisiana–The wreck of the gunboat Cotton
in the Bayou Teche. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, November 14, 1863, Pg. 125.
131 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The War in Louisiana–Battle of Grand Coteau, LA, Nov.
3-Capture of the 67 th Indiana by the Texas Mounted Infantry, from a sketch by our special artist, C. E.
H. Bonwill. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, December 12, 1863, Pg. 189.
132 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The Battle of Fredericksburg: Assault of the Federals
on Marye’ Hill and the Battery of the Washington Artillery. Caption on back of picture:
Federal charge against the Louisiana sector of the Confederate line on Marye’s Hill
at the Battle of Fredericksburg. Appeared in the Illustrated London News, January 31, 1863, Pg. 117.
133 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The Battle of Gettysburg–attack of the Louisiana Tigers
on a battery of the Eleventh Corps. Caption on back of picture: Charge of the Louisiana
Tigers against a battery of the Federal Eleventh Corps at the Battle of Gettysburg.
Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, August 8, 1863, Pg. 508.
134 1862 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Naval combat off Fort Wright, in the Mississippi River,
May 8, 1862. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, May 31, 1862, Pg. 341.
135 1864 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Confederate land attack on Porter’s Fleet. Appeared in
Harper’s Weekly, April 1864, Pg. 588.
136 1864 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The War on the Red River–Admiral Porter’s Fleet passing
through Colonel Bailey’s Dam, above Alexandria, May 1864. Caption on back of picture:
Admiral Porter’s fleet passed through Colonel Joseph Bailey’s wing dams at Alexandria
between May 8 and May 13, 1864. Appeared in Leslie’s Illustrated History, Pg. 402.
137 1864 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Guerre Des Estats-Unis: La Flotte De L’Amiral Porter
Passant Les Rapides de la Riviere Rouge. Appeared in Leslie’s Illustrated History, April 1864, Pg. 101.
138 1864 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front: The War in Louisiana–Destruction of the U. S. Transport John Warner
by Confederate Batteries on Red River, May 4. Caption on back: On May 5, 1864, the
Confederates captured the transport John Warner and the gunboat Signal at Wilson’s Landing, about thirty miles below Alexandria. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, June 18, 1864, Pg. 197.
139 1865 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Foragers “Starting Out” in the morning. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, April 1, 1864, Pg. 204.
140 ca. 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Return of Federal foraging parties into camp, near Annandale
Chapel, VA. Caption on back of picture: Return of Federal Foraging Parties into camp.
Appeared in Official Portfolio, Pg. 48.
141 1865 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Foragers returning to camp at night. Appeared in Harper’s weekly, April 1, 1865, Pg. 204.
142 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The New Orleans market–soldiers exchanging rations for
fruit, etc. Caption on back of picture: Federal soldiers exchanging army commissary
goods for farm produce. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, January 24, 1863, Pg. 49.
143 ca. 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Negres Amenant le Brtail. Caption on back of picture:
Cattle being driven to a meat-packing plant. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, Pg. 89.
144 1863 11×14 4 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture (Copies 1-3): The War in Louisiana–New Iberia, from a
sketch by our special artist, C. E. H. Bonwill. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, November 14, 1863, Pg. 113. Caption on front of picture (Copy 4): The War in Louisiana–New
Iberia. Appeared in Leslie’s Illustrated History, Pg. 413. (This copy shows more of the picture).
145 1863 11×14 3 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The War in Louisiana–Brashear, LA, from a sketch by
our special correspondent, F. C. H. Bonwill.. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, October 24, 1863, Pg. 76.
146 1855 11×14 2 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Flower girls at New Orleans. Appeared in Ballou’s Pictorial, 1855.
147 1863 11×14 2 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture (Copy 1): Return of a foraging party of the Twenty-Fourth
Regiment, Connecticut Volunteers, with their spoils, to Baton Rouge, having captured
horses, carts, wagons, mules, contrabands, provisions, etc. Appeared in Leslie’s Illustrated History, Pg. 289. Caption on front of picture (Copy 2): Return of a foraging party of the
Twenty-Fourth Regiment, Connecticut Volunteers, with their spoils, to Baton Rouge,
having captured horses, carts, wagons, mules, contrabands, provisions, etc., from
a sketch by our special artist with Gen. Grover’s division. Caption on back of picture:
Return of a foraging party of the 24 th Regt., Conn. Vol. to Baton Rouge. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, March 14, 1863, Pg. 393.
148 1864 11×14 2 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The War in Louisiana–blowing up the U. S. Gunboat Covington
on the Red River, above Alexandria, May 4, from a sketch by our special artist, C.
E. H. Bonwill. Caption on back of picture: The Federal gunboat Covington was blown up during the engagement at Wilson’s Landing on May 5, 1864. Appeared in
Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, June 18, 1864, Pg. 200.
149 1862 11×14 4 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture (Copies 1 and 2): The Flag-Ship “Hartford” attacked by
the Ram “Manassas” and a fire-raft in the Mississippi. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, June 14, 1862, Pg. 369. Caption on front of picture (Copies 3 and 4): The Hartford
on fire. Appeared in Harper’s Pictorial History of the Civil War, April 1862, Pg. 267.
150 1864 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The War in Louisiana–Banks’s Army in the advance on
Shreveport. Crossing Cane River, March 31. Sketched by our artist. C. E. H. Bonwill.
Caption on back of picture: Banks’s army crossed Cane River at Monett’s Bluff on March
31, 1864. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, May 7, 1864, Pg. 108.
151 1864 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Washington’s birthday in New Orleans–The Masquerade
Ball given by Mrs. General Banks, sketched by C. E. H. Bonwill. Caption on back of
picture: Washington’s birthday ball (1864), given by “Mrs. General Banks,” wife of
the Federal Commander of the Department of the Gulf. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, March 26, 1864, Pg. 12.
152 1864 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Washington’s birthday in New Orleans–The grand concert
in Canal Street, from a sketch by our special artist, C. E. H. Bonwill. Caption on
back of picture: Grand Concert in Canal Street, Washington’s Birthday, 1864. Appeared
in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, March 26, 1864, Pg. 417.
153 1863 11×14 2 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture (Copy 1): The Banks Expedition–scene on the levee, Baton
Rouge–contrabands unloading military stores from the U. S. transport “North Star,”
Capt. Lefevre, over the Mississippi steamer “Iberville.” Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, January 24, 1863, Pg. 284. Caption on front of picture (Copy 2): The Banks expedition–scene
on the Levee, Baton Rouge, LA.–Contrabands unloading military stores from the United
States Transport “North Star” over the Mississippi steamer “Iberville.” Appeared in
Leslie’s Illustrated History, Pg. 378.
154 1862 11×14 2 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture (Copy 1): Feeding the poor at New Orleans. Appeared in
Harper’s Pictorial History of the Civil War, Pg. 277. Caption on front of picture (Copy 2): The starving people of New Orleans
fed by the United States Military authorities. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, June 14, 1862, Pg. 380.
155 1861 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The Southern Confederacy-Senate chamber in the Capitol
at Montgomery, Alabama, during open session–The Hon. Howell Cobb presiding. Caption
on back of picture: Session of the Montgomery Convention in the senate chamber of
the Alabama State Capitol, the Honorable Howell Cobb of Georgia presiding. Appeared
in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, March 2, 1861, Pg. 229.
156 1860 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Assembling of Congress, Hall of Representatives, Washington
City, December 3, 1860. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, December 15, 1860, Pg. 793.
157 ca. 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Scene in New Orleans–The 26 th Mass. Vol., Col. Farr, practicing street firing in Caronlet Street, from a sketch
by our special artist.
158 1866 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front: The riot in New Orleans–siege and assault of the convention by
the police and citizens, sketched by Theodore R. Davis. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, August 25, 1866, Pg. 536.
159 ca. 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Confederate sharp-shooters and swam hunters attaching
mortar-boats. Caption on back of picture: Confederate soldiers attacking a camouflaged
Federal mortar-boat in a south Louisiana bayou. Appeared in Battle and Leaders, Pg. 28.
160 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Registered enemies taking the oath of allegiance at the
office of Gen. Bowen, at New Orleans, from a sketch by Mr. J. R. Hamilton. Caption
on back of picture: New Orleans citizens registering their oath of allegiance to the
United States in order to save their property from Federal confiscation. Appeared
in Harper’s Weekly, June 6, 1863, Pg. 357.
161 1861 11×14 3 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture (Copy 3): The cabinet of the Confederate States at Montgomery.
Left to right: Attorney-General, Judah P. Benjamin; Secretary, Stephen M. Mallory;
Alexander H. Stephens, Vice-President; Secretary, Charles G. Memminger; Secretary,
LeRoy P. Walker; Jefferson Davis, President; Postmaster-General, John H. Reagan; Secretary
of State, Robert Toombs. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, June 1, 1861, Pg. 340 and Harper’s Pictorial History of the Civil War, Pg. 210.
162 1866 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Crevasse on Chim’s Plantation, West Baton Rouge, Louisiana.
Caption on back of picture: Crevasses were numerous during the war years, for levees
could not be kept in good repair. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, May 26, 1866, Pg. 329.
163 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Pickets of the first Louisiana “Native Guard” guarding
the New Orleans, Opelousas and Great Western Railroad. Caption on back of picture:
Pickets of the Federal First Louisiana `Native Guard’ guarding the New Orleans, Opelousas
and Great Western Railroad. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, March 7, 1863, Pg. 369.
164 1864 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The Grandmothers. Caption on back of picture: Poverty
was everywhere. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, December 24, 1864, Pg. 825.
165 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The War in Louisiana–Centreville, LA, occupied by the
116 th N. Y., Col. Love, September 28, from a sketch by our special artist, C. E. H. Bonwill.
Caption on back of picture: “Centreville” during the pillage of St. Mary Parish, Fall
1862. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, November 7, 1863, Pg. 108.
166 1863 11×14 4 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Banks’s expedition-executive officer Parker of the United
States gunboat “Essex,” hoisting the National Standard on the State Capitol, Baton
Rouge, LA, on its occupation by the Federal forces commanded by General Grover, Wednesday,
December 17 th, 1863, sketched by our special artist accompanying the expedition. Caption on back
of picture (Copy 3): The second Federal occupation of Baton Rouge began in middle
December, 1862. The town had been sacked and partially burned the preceding August.
Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, January 24, 1863, Pg. 284 and Leslie’s Illustrated History., Pg. 476.
167 1862 11×14 5 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Baton Rouge, looking inland, showing the best private
residences. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, May 24, 1862, Pg. 85.
168 1862 11×14 6 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Baton Rouge, looking inland-Penitentiary buildings in
the background. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper , May 24, 1862, Pg. 85.
169 1862 11×14 5 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Baton Rouge, looking down the Mississippi River toward
New Orleans. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, May 24, 1862, Pg. 84.
170 1862 11×14 5 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Baton Rouge, looking from the top of the Statehouse,
up the river. Caption on back of picture: Mississippi River Landing at Baton Rouge,
looking up-river from the top of the Capitol. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, May 24, 1862, Pg. 84.
171 ca. 1860s 11×14 3 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Baton Rouge, the Capital of the State of Louisiana. Appeared
in Officers and soldiers, Pg. 91.
172 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Banks’s expedition-burning of the State Capitol of Louisiana,
Baton Rouge, Tuesday Night, December 30 th, 1862. Caption on back of picture: The Capitol was burned in late December 1862,
the fire having been accidentally set by careless Federal troops. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, January 24, 1863, Pg. 228.
173 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Banks landing at Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Appeared in
Harper’s Pictorial History, May 1863, Pg. 459.
174 1862 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The Battle of Baton Rouge, sketched from the camp of
the Indiana Regiment. Caption on back of picture: Battle of Baton Rouge, August 5,
1862. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, September 6, 1862, Pg. 564.
175 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Grierson’s command entering Baton Rouge. Appeared in
Harper’s Pictorial History, April 1863, Pg. 456.
176 1866 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Pictures of the South-Baton Rouge, Louisiana-Scene on
the Levee; Landing Ice, Etc., sketched by A. R. Waud. Caption on back of picture:
Baton Rouge river landing. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, September 8, 1866, Pg. 564.
177 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Sale of confiscated blood-horses at New Orleans, from
a sketch by Mr. Hamilton. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, April 4, 1863, Pg. 221.
178 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Reception of the authorities of New Orleans by General
Butler previous to his departure. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, January 17, 1863, Pg. 44.
179 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The poor of New Orleans applying to Colonel Thorpe for
employment at the city surveyor’s office. Caption on back of picture: New Orleans
citizens registering for employment at the office of Federal Colonel T. B. Thorpe.
Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, March 7, 1863, Pg. 157.
180 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The plantation police or home-guard examining Negro passes
on the levee road below New Orleans. Caption on back of picture: Home-guard examining
slave passes. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, July 11, 1863, Pg. 252.
181 ca. 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front: Repairing the levee at New Orleans. Appeared in Harper’s Pictorial, Pg. 275.
182 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Celebration of May-Day by the Madison Girls’ School in
the City Park, New Orleans-crowning the May Queen, from a sketch by Mr. J. R. Hamilton.
appeared in Harper’s Weekly, June 6, 1863, Pg. 357.
183 1866 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: May-Day Festival at New Orleans, Louisiana. Appeared
in Harper’s Weekly, June 23, 1866, Pg. 393.
184 1864 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The War in Texas and Louisiana-The Union prisoners (19
th Iowa) Recently exchanged, from a photograph taken at New Orleans by M’Pherson & Oliver.
Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, September 10, 1864, Pg. 396.
185 1866 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Sunday Amusements at New Orleans-Duel at the half-way
house, sketched by our special artist, A. R. Waud. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, July 14, 1866, Pg. 445.
186 1859 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The New Orleans Charity Hospital. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, September 3, 1859, Pg. 569.
187 1860 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Inauguration of the Clay statue at New Orleans, from
a photograph by J. D. Edwards, New Orleans. Caption on back of picture: View of Canal
Street, looking away from the Mississippi River, at the time of the dedication of
the Clay Statue, 1860. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, May 19, 1860, Pg. 394
188 1864 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Henry Clay’s Monument, corner of St. Charles and Canal
Streets, New Orleans, LA, sketched by our special artist, C. E. H. Bonwill. Caption
on back of picture: Henry Clay Statute, at the corner of Canal and St. Charles streets,
was dedicated in the spring of 1860. It was later moved to Lafayette Square.
189 1860 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Henry Clay Statute, at the corner of Canal and St. Charles streets, was dedicated
in the spring of 1860. It was later moved to Lafayette Square.
190 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
The Bombardment of Port Hudson-The 100-pound Parrott gun of the “Richmond” at work,
sketched by an officer of the navy. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, July 18, 1863, Pg. 449.
191 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Depot of the Clinton and Port Hudson Railroad, at Port Hudson. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, August 15, 1863, Pg. 336.
192 ca. 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The advance on Port Hudson-The baggage train of Gen.
Augur’s Division crossing the Bayou Montecino, March 13, from a sketch by our special
artist, W. F. Schell. Appeared in Leslie’s Illustrated History , Pg. 315.
193 ca. 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Chemin de fer de Bayonne a Madrid Burgos. Appeared in
Leslie’s Illustrated History, Pg. 316.
194 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Opening of the Mississippi–Interior view of Port Hudson,
from a sketch by our special artist, Fred. B. Schell. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, August 15, 1863, Pg. 329.
195 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: View of Springfield Landing, below Port Hudson, Louisiana-A
depot of supplies for Banks’s Army, from a drawing by Mr. J. R. Hamilton. Appeared
in Harper’s Weekly, July 11, 1863, Pg. 437.
196 1862 11×14 4 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Vue Générale de la Nouvelle-Orléans. Caption on back
of picture: A French artist’s view of New Orleans. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, Pg. 360.
197 ca. 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: New Orleans. Caption on back of picture: A French artist’s
view of New Orleans. Appeared in Rambles, Pg. 158.
198 ca. 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
View of the Mississippi River. Appeared in Official Portfolio, Pg. 291.
199 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on back of picture: General B. F. Butler’s public works program in New Orleans.
Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, March 7, 1863, Pg. 380.
200 1864 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Burning of the coast trader steamboats on the levee at
New Orleans, LA, on the night of May 27, from a sketch by our special artist, C. E.
H. Bonwill. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, June 25, 1864, Pg. 212.
201 1862 11×14 2 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The War on the Mississippi-Burning of the Rebel gunboats
and Rams, etc., at New Orleans and Algiers, on approach of the National Fleet, from
a sketch by our special artist, Mr. Wm. Waud. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, June 7, 1862, Pg. 157.
202 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Arrival of the transport “North Star,” with Major-General
Banks and staff, at the levee at New Orleans. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, January 10, 1863, Pg. 21.
203 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on back of picture: Large numbers of “disloyal” New Orleans citizens were
sent to Forts Jackson and St. Philip, and to Ship Island, off the Mississippi coast.
Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, March 21, 1863, Pg. 184.
204 1860 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: View of the levee at Opelousas Railroad Ferry, Jackson
Square, New Orleans, photographed by E. H. Newton, Jr., New Orleans. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, April 21, 1860, Pg. 330.
205 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The foreign vessels of war at New Orleans; French steamer
Renaudin; French steamer Cattinat; British steamer Vesuvius; British steam-sloop Rinaldo.
Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, February 7, 1863, Pg. 317.
206 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The War in Louisiana-General Franklin’s Army crossing
the prairie in Lafayette Parish, November 16 th, 1863. Appeared in Leslie’s Illustrated History , Pg. 494.
207 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Army of General Banks on the march to Alexandria. Appeared
in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, June 13, 1863, Pg. 188.
208 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: On picket duty in the swamps of Louisiana. Appeared in
Harper’s Weekly, May 9, 1863, Pg. 289.
209 1864 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Union scouts in Louisiana. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, May 7, 1864, Pg. 289.
210 1866 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Acadians hauling boats-A scene on the Bayou Lafourche,
Louisiana, sketched by A. R. Waud. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, October 13, 1866, Pg. 644.
211 1866 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Washing-day among the Acadians on the Bayou Lafourche,
Louisiana, sketched by A. R. Waud. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, October 20, 1866, Pg. 567.
212 1864 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Taking cotton and sugar aboard a steamer at a plantation
on the Bayou Teche, LA, from a sketch by our special artist, C. E. H. Bonwill. Appeared
in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, March 5, 1864, Pg. 372.
213 ca. 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The War in Louisiana-Sharpshooters of the 75 th New York Vol. picking off the gunners on the rebel gunboat J. A. Cotton, in the action
at Bayou Teche, January 14, from a sketch by our special artist. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, February 21, Pg. 337.
214 1859 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Gibraltar-D’apres un dessin de M. d’Hastrel Appeared
in Leslie’s Illustrated History, Pg. 332.
215 1866 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Cypress swamp on the Opelousas Railroad, Louisiana, from
a sketch by A. R. Waud. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, December 8, 1866, Pg. 781.
216 1864 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: County Buildings at Opelousas, LA sketched by our special
artist, C. E. H. Bonwill. Caption on back of picture: St. Landry Parish Courthouse,
Opelousas, temporary capitol of Louisiana, 1862-1863. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, February 13, 1864, Pg. 333.
217 1900s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on back of picture: Governor Moore made the Honere Mouton house his home in
1862 and 1863 when Opelousas was the temporary state capitol. A modern photograph.
218 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Banks’s Army leaving Simmsport. Appeared in Harper’s Pictorial History of the Civil War, May 1863, Pg. 462.
219 1864 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Simmsport, LA, from a sketch by Lieut. S. S. David, 133d
N. Y. Vol. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper , January 9, 1864, Pg. 245.
220 1864 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The War in Louisiana-View of Natchitoches, from a sketch
by our special artist, C. E. H. Bonwill. Appeared in Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, May 7, 1864, Pg. 97.
221 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Brashear City, Berwick’s Bay, LA, base of General Banks’s
Operations, from a sketch by Mr. F. H. Schell. Caption on back of picture: Brashear
City, base of Federal army operations in south Louisiana. appeared in Harper’s Weekly, May 9, 1863, Pg. 292.
222 1866 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Ferry-boat to Brashear City, on Berwick Bay, Louisiana,
sketched by A. R. Waud. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, October 20, 1866, Pg. 664.
223 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: King Cotton captured-The cotton of the Attakapas region
pouring into Brashear City, LA, sketched by Mr. J. R. Hamilton. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, June 13, 1863, Pg. 380.
224 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Landing of registered enemies of the United States at
Madisonville, LA, February 2, 1863. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, March 7, 1863, Pg. 156.
225 1864 11×14 2 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The War in Louisiana-Battle of Mansfield, between Gen.
Banks and General Dick Taylor, April 8. Caption on back of picture: On April 8, 1864,
General Richard Taylor suddenly attacked Banks about three miles south of Mansfield
and decisively defeated him. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, May 14, 1864, Pg. 121.
226 1864 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front: Rebel attack on Gen. Lee’s wagon train at Mansfield, LA, April 8,
from a sketch by our special artist, C. E. H. Bonwill. Caption on back of picture:
General Taylor reported that he had captured 20 guns, thousands of small arms, and
over 200 wagons of much-needed supplies at the Battle of Mansfield. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, May 21, 1864, Pg. 129.
227 1866 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: New Iberia, Louisiana, sketched by our special artist,
A. R. Waud. appeared in Harper’s Weekly, August 11, 1866, Pg. 509.
228 ca. 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Lake Providence, LA, headquarters of Gen. M’Pherson and
the Union Division under his command, sketched by our special artist, Henri Lovie.
Appeared in Leslie’s Illustrated History, P. 315.
229 1864 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Rebel attack on our gun-boats in the Red River. Appeared
in Harper’s Weekly, May 14, 1864, Pg. 305.
230 1862 11×14 2 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Vue Générale de Tol de. Appeared in Leslie’s Illustrated History, March 1862, Pg. 185.
231 1864 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The War in Louisiana-Fort De Russy, Red River, Captured
March 14, from a sketch by Owen G. Long. Caption on back of picture: Fort De Russy
garrisoned by only 260 men, was captured by Federal troops on March 14, 1864. Appeared
in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, April 30, 1864, Pg. 89.
232 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Our colored troops-The line officers of the first Louisiana
native guards. Capt. Charles Sentmanal, Co. D.; 2d Lieut. V. Lavigne, Co. D.; 1 st Lieut. L. D. Larrieu, Co. A; 2d Lieut. J. L. Montieu, Co. A; and Capt. E. Davis,
Co. A. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, February 28, 1863, Pg. 133.
233 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front: Our colored troops at work-The first Louisiana native guards disembarking
at Fort Macombe, Louisiana. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, February 28, 1863, Pg. 133.
234 1865 11×14 3 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Voluntary dispersion of Kirby Smith’s Rebel Army at Shreveport,
LA, May 23. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, July 1, 1865, Pg. 229 and Leslie’s Illustrated History of the Civil War., Pg. 446.
235 1864 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Harry Davis capturing the battle-flag of the Thirtieth
Louisiana Regiment, at the Battle of Ezra Church. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, September 17, 1864, Pg. 593.
236 1864 11×14 2 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The War in Louisiana-The fortifications at Grand Ecore
-The first Missouri Battery, from a sketch by our special artist, C. E. H. Bonwill.
Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, May 21, 1864, Pg. 140.
237 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The War on the Mississippi-Donaldsonville, LA, scene
of the action, June 28, between the forces of Gen. Banks and Gen. Taylor. Appeared
in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper , August 29, 1863, Pg. 360.
238 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Engagement at Butte la Rose. Banks’s campaign in Louisiana,
sketched by Mr. H. Holtz. Caption on back of picture: A combined Federal gunboat fleet
and land force captured Fort Buron at Butte-a-la-Rose on the Atchafalaya River on
April 20, 1863. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, May 30, 1863, Pg. 340.
239 1859 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The Flood in the Mississippi. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, May 14, 1859, Pg. 312.
240 1864 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Admiral Porter’s Flotilla. In early March 1864, Admiral
David D. Porter assembled a strong fleet at the mouth of Red River to assist General
Nathaniel P. Banks in his campaign up the river. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, April 30, 1864, Pg. 277.
241 1862 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Attack upon the Mortar-Fleet by Rebel land forces. appeared
in Harper’s Weekly, July 26, 1862, Pg. 476.
242 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Bayou Navigation in Dixie, from a sketch by Mr. Theodore
R. Davis. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, April 11, 1863, Pg. 225.
243 1860 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Is chief business depot, and extends 143 miles above,
on the banks of the Mississippi, photographed by E. H. Nelson, Jr., New Orleans. Caption
on back of picture: New Orleans water front in 1860. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, April 14, 1860, Pg. 307.
244 ca. 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Skirmishing in the woods on the advance to Vicksburg.
Appeared in Leslie’s Illustrated History, Pg. 327.
245 1864 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Mr. Jefferson Davis signing acts of government by the
roadside. Appeared in Illustrated London News, July 22, 1864, Pg. 65.
246 1864 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Guerrilla Depredations-Seizing Horses. Caption on back
of picture: After July 1863, bands of Federal and Confederate slackers and deserters
operated in several sections of the state. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, December 24, 1864, Pg. 829.
247 1866 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The Lost Found, drawn by A. R. Waud (shows a woman looking
at a grave with two men looking on). Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, February 3, 1866, Pg. 76.
248 1864 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Manufacturing corn meal. Caption on back of picture:
Home manufacture of corn meal. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, December 24, 1864, Pg. 829.
249 1864 11×14 2 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The War in Louisiana-Grand Ecore, the base of operations
of General Banks, from a sketch by our special artist, C. E. H. Bonwill. Appeared
in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, May 21, 1864, Pg. 140.
250 1859 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The explosion of the steamer “Princess” at Conrad’s Point
on the Mississippi. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, March 12, 1859, Pg. 165.
251 1862 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Crossing cattle for the Rebels. Caption on back of picture:
Cattle for the Confederate armies being ferried over the Mississippi River, late summer
1862. Appeared in Harper Weekly, August 16, 1862, Pg. 520.
252 ca. 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Fort Pickens, on Santa Rosa Island, Pensacola Bay, Florida.
Appeared in Leslie’s Illustrated History, Pg. 55.
253 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Rebel prisoners in the New Orleans Custom-House, sketched
by Mr. J. R. Hamilton. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, August 29, 1863, Pg. 549.
254 1866 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Sunday in New Orleans-The French Market. Appeared in
Harper’s Weekly , August 18, 1866, Pg. 517.
255 ca. 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on back of picture: Louisiana State Seminary of Learning and Military Academy
was opened at Pineville in January 1860 with Colonel William T. Sherman as the first
superintendent. Appeared in LSU Catalog.
256 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Battle of Corinth, Miss., October 4 th, 1862-Scene in the roundabouts of Fort Robinett after the repulse of the Confederates.
Caption on back of picture: Waiting for “a very small spot of earth.” Appeared in
Leslie’s Illustrated History, Pg. 346.
257 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The War on the Gulf of Mexico-Pascagoula, Gen. Grant’s
base of operations against Mobile, from a sketch by E. B. Hough. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, October 17, 1863, Pg. 52.
258 ca. 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Removing powder from the magazine of Fort Sumter during
the bombardment. Appeared in Harper’s Pictorial History of the Civil War, Pg. 63.
259 1861 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The Battery or Park Promenade at Charleston, South Carolina,
during the bombardment of Fort Sumter. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, May 18, 1861, Pg. 310.
260 1861 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front: The City of Charleston, South Carolina. “Mercury Office; Custom
House; Castle Pinckney; Fort Moultrie, Fort Sumter. Appeared in Harper Weekly, January 26, 1861, Pg. 61.
261 1860 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Meeting of the Southern Seceders from the Democratic
Convention at St. Andrew’s Hall, Charles, April 30, 1860. Meeting of Southern Delegates
at St. Andrew’s Hall, Charleston, South Carolina, after their withdrawal from the
National Democratic Party Convention of 1860. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, May 12, 1860, Pg. 300.
262 1860 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The South Carolina Institute, at Charleston South Carolina,
in which the Democratic Convention will meet. Caption on back of picture: The South
Carolina Institute, Charleston, South Carolina, scene of the National Democratic Party
Convention of 1860. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, April 21, 1860, Pg. 252.
263 1860 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The City of Charleston, South Carolina, where the Democratic
Convention will be held. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, April 12, 1860, Pg. 244.
264 ca. 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Winter quarters on the Rappahannock-army huts of the
one hundred and nineteenth Regiment, Pennsylvania Volunteers, near Falmouth, VA. Caption
on back of picture: Winter Quarters-He burrowed into hillsides, built . . . `dug-outs,’
bored `gopher holes’ and then covered them with poles and earth or with his tent,
and occasionally had time to erect log cabins. Appeared in Leslie’s Illustrated History, Pg. 316.
265 ca. 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The school-house in the mountains, used by Brown as an
arsenal, sketched by Porte Crayon.
266 1859 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front: The storming of the engine-house by the United States Marines, sketched
by Porte Crayon. Caption on back: Capture of John Brown and his men by United States
marines under the command of Colonel Robert E. Lee. appeared in Harper’s Weekly, November 5, 1859, Pg. 712.
267 1859 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The arraignment of John Brown, drawn by Porte Crayon.
He is third from left. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, November 12, 1859, Pg. 721.
268 1859 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The trial of John Brown, at Charlestown, Virginia, for
treason and murder, sketched by Porte Crayon. Caption on back of picture: Trial of
John Brown on charges of treason against Virginia, inciting a slave insurrection,
and murder, at Charlestown, Virginia. He was convicted and hanged. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, November 12, 1859, Pg. 728.
269 1859 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front: The Dueling ground. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, January 8, 1859, Pg. 21.
270 1865 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Scene in the burnt district, Richmond, VA, looking up
Cary Street. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, April 26, 1865, Pg. 84.
271 1862 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The Main Street, Harper’s Ferry, VA-Zouaves on mules-Contrabands
hauling guns-Officers Lounging, etc., October 16, sketched by our special artist,
Mr. Edwin Forbes. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, November 8, 1862, Pg. 109.
272 1861 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Vue de Harper’s-Ferry (Virginie). Appeared in Leslie’s Illustrated History, Pg. 20.
273 1859 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: General view of Harper’s Ferry and the Maryland Heights.
Caption on back of picture: Scene of John Brown’s Raid, October 1859. Appeared in
Harper’s Pictorial History, Pg. 80.
274 1859 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Harper’s Ferry-The scene of the late insurrection. Appeared
in Harper’s Weekly , October 29, 1859, Pg. 692.
275 1865 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Assassination of President Lincoln in his private box
at Ford’s Theatre, Washington, April 14. Left to right: Booth, Mr. Lincoln, Mrs. Lincoln,
Miss Harris, and Major Rathbun. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, April 29, 1865, Pg. 81.
276 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Morgan’s Raid-Entry of Morgan’s Freebooters into Washington,
Ohio. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly , August 15, 1863, Pg. 513.
277 1862 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Rebel prisoners at Camp Douglas, Chicago, Illinois. Appeared
in Harper’s Weekly, April 5, 1862, Pg. 215.
278 1860 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The Wigwam at Chicago, built for the meeting of the Republican
Convention of 1860. Appeared in Harper’s Pictorial History, Pg. 199.
279 1861 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front: Crossing the Manassas Gap Railroad, and the Alexandria and Warrington
Turnpike, at White Plants-Arrival of reinforcements for Beauregard, at the camp of
the Tiger Zouaves, of Louisiana. Caption on back of picture: Louisiana Zouaves arriving
in Virginia to reinforce General P. G. T. Beauregard. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, September 28, 1861, Pg. 617.
280 1865 11×14 2 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Front view of Mr. W. McLean’s House at Appomattox Court
House, Virginia, in which General Lee signed the terms of surrender, April 9. Appeared
in Harper’s Weekly, November 4, 1865, Pg. 696.
281 1865 11×14 2 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The surrender at Appomattox; based upon the lithograph
called “The Dawn of Peace.” By permission of W. H. Stelle. Appeared in Battles and Leaders, Pg. 736.
282 1860 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Position of the Confederate Army when the surrender was
announced. Appeared in Harper’s Pictorial History of the Civil War, April 1865, Pg. 1770.
283 1860 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Portrait of Abraham Lincoln. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, May 26, 1860, Pg. 321.
284 1864 11×14 2 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture (Copy 1): The Rebel General Robert Edmund Lee (full length
portrait). Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, July 2, 1864, Pg. 417. Caption on front of picture (Copy 2): Robert E. Lee. Appeared
in Harper’s Pictorial History of the Civil War, Pg. 358.
285 1863 11×14 2 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture (Copy 1): William Tecumseh Sherman. Appeared in Harper’s Pictorial History of the Civil War, Pg. 325. Caption on front of picture (Copy 2): Major-General William T. Sherman,
photographed by Anthony. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, June 4, 1864, Pg. 353.
286 ca. 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: General William Tecumseh Sherman. Appeared in Leslie’s Illustrated History, Pg. 39.
287 ca. 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Jefferson Davis. Appeared in Harper’s Pictorial History of the Civil War, Pg. 45.
288 1862 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Major-General Benjamin F. Butler, commanding Department
of the Gulf. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, June 12, 1862, Pg. 444.
289 1861 11×14 2 B&W copy print none
Ordinance of Secession.
290 1869 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: A modern tournament, drawn by W. S. L. Jewett. Appeared
in Harper’s Weekly, December 4, 1869, Pg. 780.
291 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on back of picture: Mark of the invader (shows a house on fire and a family
huddled together). Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, December 12, 1863, Pg. 185.
292 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Arrival of a Federal Column at a plantation home in Dixie.
Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, April 4, 1863, Pg. 220.
293 1864 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The War in America: A corps of the Confederate Army marching
by night through burning woods. Appeared in Illustrated London News, August 6, 1864, Pg. 133.
294 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front: Reveille in Camp-5 A.M. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, July 11, 1863, Pg. 444.
295 1864 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The Halt. Caption on back of picture: A halt at a plantation
well. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, October 1, 1864, Pg. 628.
296 ca. 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: A twenty minutes’ halt. Caption on back of picture. Fall
out for five minutes. Appeared in Artists Story, Pg. 167.
297 ca. 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Played Out-Lights and Shadows. Appeared in Artists Story , Pg. 203.
298 1864 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Before Petersburg-“Mounted Infantry.” Caption on back
of picture: Army punishments-sentenced to join the “Mounted Infantry.”
299 1864 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The battle-field-at the read, sketched by A. W. Warren.
Caption on back of picture: Card games were of long or short duration, depending upon
the circumstances. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, December 10, 1864, Pg. 796.
300 1864 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The soldiers’ thanksgiving dinner in camp. Appeared in
Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, December 3, 1864, Pg. 169.
301 ca. 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: A Christmas Dinner. Appeared in Artists Story, Pg. 39.
302 ca. 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Noontide and Evening. Appeared in Artists Story, Pg. 59.
303 ca. 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Fall in for Soup! Appeared in Artists Story, Pg. 59.
304 ca. 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front: Coffee and Tobacco trading-A truce. Appeared in Artists Story, Pg. 163.
305 1864 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Night after the Battle, sketched by William Waud. Appeared
in Harper’s Weekly, October 29, 1864, Pg. 696
306 ca. 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Searching for the dead and wounded. Caption on back of
picture: “The memory of our glorious dead is a rich legacy to future generations .
. .” General Richard Taylor. Appeared in Harper’s Pictorial History of the Civil War, Pg. 353.
307 ca. 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Arrival of the News-Boy. Caption on back of picture:
When newspapers did arrive, they were passed from hand to hand until worn out. appeared
in Artists Story, Pg. 135.
308 1864 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Guerrilla Depredations-“Your money or your life!” sketched
by W. D. Matthews. Caption on back of picture: Jayhawker Depredations-“Your money
or your life!”Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, December 24, 1864, Pg. 829.
309 1864 11×14 3 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The Last Review. Caption on back of picture: The Last
Review. You have borne the flag of your regiment with honor, with no stain upon its
folds amid the smoke of battle.–Colonel J. S. Scott, First Regiment, Louisiana Cavalry.
Appeared in Harper’s Pictorial History of the Civil War, April 1864, Pg. 772.
310. 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Rolling Cotton on Board the “Tatum.” Caption on back
of picture: Confiscated “Rebel Cotton” being loaded on board the Tatum. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, May 2, 1863, Pg. 273.
311 1864 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front: Negroes leaving their home. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, April 9, 1864, Pg. 237.
312 1864 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front: Negroes escaping out of slavery. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, May 7, 1864, Pg. 292.
313 ca. 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Negre en sentinelle. Appeared in Leslie’s Illustrated History, Pg. 88.
314 ca. 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front: Les Negres dans la tranchee. Appeared in Leslie’s Illustrated History, Pg. 89.
315 1864 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Contraband news. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, April 30, 1864, Pg. 280
316 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Contrabands coming into our lines under the proclamation.
Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, May 9, 1863, Pg. 293.
317 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: A group of exchanged Rebel prisoners. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, March 21, 1863, Pg. 408.
318 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The War on the Mississippi-Secesh ladies coming to the
United States commissaries for provisions, from a sketch by our special artist, Fred
B. Schell. Caption on back of picture: “Secesh” ladies smuggled provisions, medicines
and other supplies through the lines. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, October 10, 1863, Pg. 33.
319 1864 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Union refugees coming into the Federal lines. Caption
on back of picture: Refugees from war. “Tomorrow at daybreak we leave . . . on our
journey to the unknown.”–Kate Stone. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, November 5, 1864, Pg. 708.
320 1864 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Sketches of army life-weighing out rations, from a sketch
by our special artist, Edwin Forbes. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper , May 7, 1864, Pg. 100.
321 1864 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: A group of Union prisoners escorted through a Rebel town.
Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, June 13, 1863, Pg. 373.
322 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The Army of the Potomac-drawing rations. Appeared in
Harper’s Weekly , August 22, 1863, Pg. 540.
323 1864 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front: “Washerwomen” in the army of the Potomac, from a sketch by our special
artist, Joseph Becker. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, December 10, 1864, Pg. 189.
324 1862 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front: The Army of the Potomac-Kearney’s Division fighting in the woods,
Monday, June 30, sketched by Mr. A. R. Waud. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly , August 9, 1862, Pg. 500.
325 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Blooded stallion Frank Cheatham bought by George Wilkes.
Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, June 6, 1863, Pg. 172.
326 ca. 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Infantryman on picket. Caption on back of picture: “I
felt dejected and heartsick” as I looked “over those cold, barren, cheerless hills.
The wind sighed along in mournful cadences. . .” Appeared in Artists Story, Pg. 127.
327 ca. 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Roadside Commissaries. Appeared in Artists Story, P. 19.
328 1864 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Music hath charms. Appeared in Artists Story, Pg. 267.
329 1861 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The Sixth Regiment of the Massachusetts Volunteers firing
into the people in Pratt Street. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, April 30, 1861, Pg. 376.
330 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
2nd Louisiana Colored Reg. Port Hudson, May 27
331 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Assault of the 1 st and 3 rd Louisiana Native Guards at Port Hudson on May 27, 1863 against the Northwestern Confederate
defenses. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, June 27, 1863, Pg. 216. Two sides of the same picture.
332 1862 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
A battle charge. “Bein’ scared’s all right. Backin’ away ain’t.” Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, June 12, 1862, Pg. 440.
333 ca. 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
A “most desperate and bloody engagement.” Appeared in Leslie’s Illustrated History of the Civil War, Pg. 345.
334 ca. 1860s 11×14 2 B&W copy print none
A Cavalry Charge. Appeared in Harper’s Pictorial History of the Civil War, Pg. 43-44.
335 ca. 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on back of picture: A charge was ordered over the fence and through the field.
Appeared in Leslie’s Illustrated History of the Civil War, Pg. 425.
336 1864 11×14 3 B&W copy print none
Scene of battle. Appeared in London Illustrated Journal, 1864, Pg. 89.
337 1863 11×14 2 B&W copy print none
Scene of men going up ramps with wheelbarrows. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, May 9, 1863, Pg. 105.
338 ca. 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on back: Into the cannon’s mouth. Appeared in Official and Illustrated War Record, Pg. 487.
339 ca. 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Battle scene. Appeared in London Illustrated Journal, Pg. 88.
340 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Battle scene. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, May 30, 1863, Pg. 345.
341 ca. 1860s 11×14 2 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: With Fate Against Them. Appeared in Battles and Leaders, Pg. 311.
342 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Battle scene. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, April 18, 1863, Pg. 248.
343 1861 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Battle scene. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, 1861, Pg. 377.
344 ca. 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Scene of two boats being unloaded. Appeared in Harper’s Pictorial History of the Civil War, Pg. 34.
345 1864 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on back of picture: A land of maimed men, widows, orphans, and graves. Appeared
in Harper’s Weekly, January 2, 1864, Pg. 9.
346 ca. 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Bombardment of Forts Jackson and St. Philip-The United States Squadron under Farragut
engaging the Confederate forts and fleet on its way to New Orleans, April 24 th, 1862, from a sketch taken from foretop of the United States war steamer “Mississippi”
by our special artist, Wm. Waud. Appeared in Official Portfolio, Pg. 544.
347 ca. 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Mortar vessels in the distance shelling the forts. Left to right: Fort St. Philip,
“Brooklyn” (Abreast of Fort St. Philip), Fort Jackson, “Hartford” (Flag-Ship, Fire-Raft
Alongside), “Pensacola,” “Mississippi,” “Louisiana” (Iron Plated Battery Exploding),
“Manassas” (Ram). Appeared in Officers and Soldiers, Pg. 235.
348 1862 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Reconnaissance of Forts Jackson and St. Philip, on the
Mississippi, by gun-boats from Flat-Officer Farraguts Squadron, sketched by our special
artist with the squadron. Caption on back of picture: Reconnaissance of Forts Jackson
and St. Philip by the blockading Federal fleet, Spring 1862, Fort Jackson is at the
left. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, May 10, 1862, Pg. 293.
349 1862 11×14 2 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Bombardment des Forts Jackson Et Saint-Philip Par la
Flotte du commodore Ferragut. Caption on back of picture: Federal fleet pasing forts
Jackson and St. Philip, Fort Jackson is at the left. Appeared in London’s Illustrated History, 1862, Pg. 404
350 1862 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Bombardment of the Forts. Appeared in Harper’s Pictorial History of the Civil War, Pg. 265.
351 ca. 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The War on the Mississippi-Panoramic view of the U. S.
Fleet passing the Forts of the Mississippi on its way to New Orleans, April 19, sketched
by our special artist, Wm. Waud, from the foretop of the U. S. War Steam, Mississippi.
Left to right: U. S. Gunboats, Porter’s Mortar Flotilla, Ferryboat Jackson, Mississippi,
Fort Jackson, Pensacola, Rebel Gunboats, Hartford-Flagship, Fort St. Philip, Chain
supported on hulks, Iroquis, Ferryboat Westfield, Cayuga, Varuna. appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, June 7, 1862, Pg. 157.
352 ca. 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: The great naval battle on the Mississippi-passage of
the second division of the Federal squadron past Fort St. Philip, April 24 th, 1862. Appeared in Leslie’s Illustrated History, Pg. 133.
353 1862 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: View of Ship Island, Louisiana, by our special artist
on board the “Sagamore.” Left to right: Winona, New London, Niagara, Fort Massachusetts,
Sagamore, Ship Island, 9 th Conn. and 22d Mass. Regiments, Wissabicon, Massachusetts. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, February 8, 1862, Pg. 84.
354 1862 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Ship Island and the approaches to New Orleans. Appeared
in Harper’s Pictorial History of the Civil War, Pg. 263.
355 1862 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Ships left to right: Benton (Federal), General Van Dorn (Confederate)., Marquis de
Habana and another (Confederate), Cincinnati (Federal), Carondelet (Federal). Appeared
in Illustrated London Journal, June 14, 1862, Pg. 607.
356 1862 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Scene of ships on the river. appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, May 24, 1862, Pg. 89.
357 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Scenes of ships on the river. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, May 17, 1863, Pg. 313.
358 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Scene of ships burning on the river. Appeared in London Illustrated Journal, May 1863, Pg. 328.
359 ca. 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Scene of ships on the river. appeared in Leslie’s Illustrated History of the Civil War, Pg. 440.
360 1863 11×14 2 B&W copy print none
Caption on front of picture: Evenments des etats-unis: Charleston et ses fortifications.
Appeared in London Illustrated Journal, October 1883, Pg. 232.
361 ca. 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
A ship being loaded or unloaded. Appeared in London Illustrated Journal, Pg. 88.
362 ca. 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Scene of a ship dock. Appeared in Southern State, Pg. 50.
363 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Bombardment of Port Hudson by Admiral Farragut’s fleet, March 14-15, 1863, sketched
by Mr. Hamilton. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, April 18, 1863, Pg. 249.
364 1864 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Scene of fighting on a ship. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, June 25, 1864, Pg. 220.
365 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Scene of the levee at New Orleans on the departure of the paroled Rebel prisoners,
February 20, 1863. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, March 21, 1863, Pg. 185.
366 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Scene of men working on the levee. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, March 28, 1863, Pg. 9.
367 ca. 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Page from a book, Chapter XII, Select Incident of Lawful Trade.
368 ca. 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Page from a book, Chapter XIX, Miss Ophelia’s Experiences and Opinions, continued.
369 ca. 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Page from a book, Chapter XL, The Martyr.
370 ca. 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Four Flags of the Confederate States of America. No. 1: The “Stars and Bars” was the
first flag of the Confederate States, and was adopted by the Confederate Congress
in session at Montgomery, AL and was elevated to the summit of the staff on the Capitol
at Montgomery, AL on March 4, 1861, by Miss L.C. Tyler, of Virginia, Granddaughter
of John Tyler, ex-President of the U.S.; No. 2: The “Battle Flag” was designed by
Gen. Beauregard, adopted by Gen. Joseph E. Johnston, after the first battle of Manassas
(Bull Run), and afterward adopted by the confederate Congress. The reason for its
adoption was that in the smoke and dust of battle, the “Stars and Bars” was frequently
mistaken for the “Stars and Stripes.” The “Battle Flag” was conceived on the field
of battle, lived on the field of battle, and was proudly borne on every field from
Manassas to Appomattox; No. 3: Adopted May 1, 1863, the “National Flag” of the Confederate
States by the Confederate Congress; No. 4: Adopted March 4, 1865, the “National Flag”
of the Confederate States by the Confederate Congress, for the reason that when the
flag adopted May 1, 1863, fell limp around the staff, it resembled a flag of truce.
Appeared in American Civil War, Pg 5. Artist unknown.
371 ca. 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Three Flags of the Confederate States of America. “Stars and Bars”, “Battle Flag”,
“National Flag”, appeared in Off. Portfolio, Pg 33.
372 1864 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Map of Fort De Russy, Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, April 30, 1864, Pg. 277.
373 1862 11×14 7 B&W copy print none
Topographical Plan of the City and Battle-Field of Baton Rouge, La. fought on the
5 th of August 1862, drawn by Joseph Gorlinski, Civil Eng. Series 1, Vol XV, Plate XXIV,
No. 1, Group 13, from a map on file in the office of the Chief of Engineers, US Army
374 ca. 1860s 11×14 2 B&W copy print none
Map of Northwest Louisiana and northeast Texas. Appeared in Atlas of Union and Confederate Armies, Plate CLVIII
375 ca. 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Map of Northwest Louisiana.
376 ca. 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Map of Southwest Mississippi. Plate CLV, Group 11
377 ca. 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Map of Central Southwest Mississippi. Place CLV, Group 11
378 ca. 1860s 11×14 6 B&W copy print none
Map of Louisiana west of the Mississippi River. Plate CLV
379 ca. 1860s 11×14 6 B&W copy print none
Map showing Mississippi River and surrounding land south of Lake Pontchartrain. Appeared
in Atlas of Union and Confederate Armies, Plate CLVI
380 ca. 1860s 11×14 3 B&W copy print none
Map of Louisiana-North of the Gulf between Lake Charles and Napoleonville. Appeared
in Atlas of Union and Confederate Armies, Plate CLVI
381 ca. 1860s 11×14 2 B&W copy print none
Map of North of the Gulf, including southwest Louisiana and southeast Texas. Appeared
in Atlas of Union and Confederate Armies, Plate CLVII
382 ca. 1860s 11×14 5 B&W copy print none
Map of Port Hudson, Louisiana and vicinity. Appeared in Atlas of Union and Confederate Armies, Plate XXXVIII
383 ca. 1860s 11×14 2 B&W copy print none
Map of Charleston Harbor, showing Fort Sumter and the Confederate batteries. Appeared
in Harper’s Pictorial History of the Civil War, Pg. 58
384 ca. 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Plan of operations in Charleston Harbour. Plan of the siege operations in Charleston
Harbor, showing the position of Fort Sumpter in relation to the attacking batteries.
Appeared in Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, April 27, 1861, Pg 368.
385 ca. 1860s 11×14 2 B&W copy print none
Map of Red River Expedition, accompanying letter of Rear-Admiral D. D. Porter, U.
S. Navy. Appeared in Atlas of Union and Confederate Armies, Plate L, Group 13, Series 1, Vol. XXXIV, Part 3, Pg 172
386 ca. 1860s 11×14 6 B&W copy print none
Map of Valley of the Red River, LA, Mississippi River to Shreveport.
387 ca. 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Map of south Louisiana between Lake Charles and Baton Rouge.
388 ca. 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Map of Louisiana during the Civil War. Appeared in Louisiana, by Davis, Pg. 207.
389 1866 11×14 2 B&W copy print none
Map of Louisiana. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, February 3, 1866, Pg. 77
390 ca. 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Map of Ante Bellum Economic Life. Railroad 1860. Appeared in Louisiana, by Davis, Pg. 180.
391 ca. 1860s 11×14 2 B&W copy print none
Map of Vicksburg and the surrounding area. Appeared in Union and Confederate.
392 ca. 1860s 11×14 2 B&W copy print none
Map of New Orleans and vicinity.
393 ca. 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Map of Mississippi River from Bayou Sara to Baton Rouge. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, April 4, 1863, Pg. 218.
394 ca. 1860s 11×14 8 B&W copy print none
Map of south of Shreveport, Louisiana between Logansport and Minden. Appeared in Union and Confederate.
395 ca. 1860s 11×14 2 B&W copy print none
Map of south La. between Lake Charles and Baton Rouge. Appeared in Union and Confederate.
396 ca. 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Map of Mississippi River from Milliken’s Bend to Warrenton. Appeared in Union and Confederate.
397 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Map of Vicksburg and vicinity. Appeared in Illustrated London Journal, July 11, 1863, Pg. 28..
398 1863 11×14 2 B&W copy print none
Map No. 7 of the Gulf Grand Lake Region, prepared by order of Maj. Gen. N. P. Banks,
Henery L. Abbot Capt. and Chief Top Engrs. Feb. 3 rd 1863.
399 1861 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Map of the harbor of Pensacola, Florida, showing the Forts, Navy Yard, etc. Appeared
in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, February 9, 1861, Pg. 77.
400 1862 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Map of mouth of the Mississippi River. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, January 4, 1862, Pg. 103.
401 1861 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Map of the coast line from the mouths of the Mississippi to Pensacola. Appeared in
Harper’s Weekly, March 30, 1861, Pg. 197.
402 ca. 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Map of Red River from Collinsberg to Natchitoches.
403 1862 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Map of the mouth of the Mississippi River to Iberville. Appeared in Harper’s Pictorial History of the Civil War, P. 429.
404 1862 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Map of the Mississippi River from Millikens Bend to Plaquemine. Appeared in Harper’s Pictorial History of the Civil War, Pg. 429.
405 1861 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Map of Pensacola Bay, Florida, showing the situations of the U. S. Navy Yard, Forts
Pickens, M’Rae, water battery and Fort San Carlos de Barrancas, and the only channel
by which vessels can enter the harbor-The Navy Yard and all the Forst except Pickens
being in the possession of the authorities of Florida. Appeared in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, February 9, 1861, Pg. 177.
406 1864 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Map of Red River from Shreveport to Fort de Russey. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, May 7, 1864, Pg. 291.
407 ca. 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Map of Sabine River and Neches River.
408 ca. 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Map of Plan of Sabine Pass, of its defenses and means of communication.
409 ca. 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Map of Northwest Louisiana.
410 ca. 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Map of West Central Louisiana.
411 ca. 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Map of part of Louisiana, accompanying leter of Maj. Gen. R. Taylor, C. S. Army.
412 1863 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Map of Mississippi River from Vicksburg to Grand Gulf. Appeared in Harper’s Weekly, May 23, 1863, Pg. 327.
413 ca. 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Map of Louisiana. Appeared in Harper’s Pictorial History of the Civil War, Pg. 130.
414 1870 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Map of Shreveport, Louisiana.
414A. ca. 1860s 11×14 1 B&W copy print none
Vue Générale de Madrid. Appeared in London Illustrated Journal, Pg. 185.
415 1903 6×8 1 original color map none
Map of the Roman Empire at its greatest extent. Taken from James Harvey Robinson,
History of Western Europe, Pg. 8.
416 1903 6×8 1 original color map none
Map of the Migrations of the Germans in the Fifth Century. Taken from James Harvey
Robinson, History of Western Europe, Pg.26.
417 1903 6×8 1 original color map none
Map of Europe in the time of Charlemagne, A. D. 814. Taken from James Harvey Robinson,
History of Western Europe, Pg. 82.
418 1903 6×8 1 original color map none
Map of Europe about A. D. 1000. Taken from James Harvey Robinson, History of Western Europe, Pg. 152.
419 1903 6×8 1 original color map none
Map showing Routes of the Crusaders. Taken from James Harvey Robinson, History of Western Europe, Pg. 190.
420 1903 6×8 1 original color map none
Map showing Commercial Towns and Trade Routes of the 13 th and 14 th Centuries. Taken from James Harvey Robinson, History of Western Europe, Pg. 242.
421 1903 6×8 1 original color map none
Map of Europe about the middle of the Sixteenth Century. Taken from James Harvey Robinson,
History of Western Europe, Pg. 358.
422 1903 6×8 1 original color map none
Map of Europe after the Treaties of Utrecht and Rastadt, 1713-1714. Taken from James
Harvey Robinson, History of Western Europe, Pg. 506-507.
423 1903 3 1/4×6 1 original color map none
Map of Europe at the time of Napoleon’s Greatest Power about 1810. Taken from James
Harvey Robinson, History of Western Europe, Pg. 614.
424 1903 6×8 1 original color map none
Map of Europe after 1815. Taken from James Harvey Robinson, History of Western Europe, Pg. 626.
425 1903 6×8 1 original color map none
Map of the British Isles about 1700-1715. Taken from James Harvey Robinson, History of Western Europe, Pg. 278.
426 1945 3×5 1 B&W copy print none
Map of Spain and North Africa. Appeared in Summer Wells, ed., An Intelligent American’s Guide to Peace, Pg. 41.
427 1945 3×5 1 B&W copy print none
Map of France. Appeared in Summer Wells, ed., An Intelligent American’s Guide to Peace, Pg. 41.
428-431. There are no picture with these numbers.
432 1904 6×10 1 B&W copy print none
Carte De La Nouvelle France Et De La Louisiane. Appeared in Alcee Fortier, History of Louisiana, Pg. 28.
433 1940 8×10 1 B&W copy print none
De Fer’s Map, 1701. Les Costes Aux Environs de la Riviere de Misisipi. Appeared in
Emile Lauvriere, Histoire de la Louisiane Francois, Pg. 82.
434 1941 8×10 2 B&W copy print none
Henry de Tonty in the Mississippi Valley, 1679-1704. Appeared in Edmund R. Murphy,
Henry de Tonty, Fur Trader of the Mississippi.
435 N/A 8×10 1 B&W copy print none
First French map of lower Mississippi, 1684-1685. Appeared in Louisiana Historical Quarterly, Vol. 17, Pg. 425.
436 1889 8×10 2 B&W copy print none
Louisiana in 1685. Drawn by Minet. Originally in the Archives of the Marine in Bordeaux.
Appeared in Justin Winsor, Narrative and Critical History of America, Vol. IV, Pg. 237.
437 1889 8×10 1 B&W copy print none
Map of Mississippi River Valley drawn by Father Louis Hennepin in 1697. Appeared in
Justin Winsor, Narrative and Critical History of America, Vol. IV, Pg. 251.
438 N/A 8×10 1 B&W copy print B&W 8×10
Map of New Orleans, Louisiana.
438A. N/A 8×10 1 B&W copy print none
Map of New Orleans, Louisiana. Copy from Archives Nationale, N III Louisiane
439 1881 8×10 1 B&W copy print none
Map of New Orleans, Louisiana. Appeared in George B. Waring, Jr. and George W. Cable,
History and Present Condition of New Orleans, Louisiana, Pg. 9.
440 1889 8×10 1 B&W copy print none
Map of New Orleans, Louisiana, 1718-1720. Probably drawn by Le Blond de la Tour and
Adrien de Pauger. Appeared in Justin Winsor, Narrative and Critical History of America, Vol. 5, Pg. 381.
441 1774 & 1889 8×10 2 B&W copy print none
Plan of New Orleans, Capital of Louisiana, 1720. Copy 1 copies from Du Pratz, History of Louisiana, Pg. 50. Copy 2 copies from Justin Winsor, Narrative and Critical History of America, Vo. V, Pg. 37.
442 1777 8×10 1 B&W copy print none
Plan of New Orleans, the Capital of Louisiana with the disposition of its quarters
and canals as they have been traced by Mr. de la Tour in the year 1720. Appeared in
North American Atlas printed for William Faden, 1777.
443 N/A 8×10 1 B&W copy print none
Detail of early New Orleans, circa 1723. Appeared in Louisiana Historical Quarterly, Vol. XIX, Pg. 878 for the article by Maurice Ries, “The Mississippi Fort, called
Fort de la Boulaye,” pp. 829-899.
444 1725 8×10 1 B&W copy print none
Plan de la Ville de la Nouvelle Orleans En L’Etat Quelle Etoit le, 30 May 1725. Copied
from Bibl. Nat. Paris.
445 1881 8×10 3 B&W copy print none
Plan dela Nouvelle Orleans Capitale dela Louisiana, 1728. Appeared in George B. Waring,
Jr. and George W. Cable, History and Present Condition of New Orleans, Louisiana, Pg. 8.
446 1903 8×10 1 B&W copy print none
Map of New Olreans, Louisiana, 1728. Appeared in John H. Spears and A. N. Clark, A History of the Mississippi Valley, Pg. 73.
447 1936 8×10 2 B&W copy print none
The Old Plantations on “West” Side of River, Bienville Period. Appeared in Laville
Bremer, A Narrative History of the Gulf Coast, Pg. 72.
448 1889 8×10 1 B&W copy print none
New Orleans and the Mississippi. Justin Winsor, Narrative and Critical History of America, Vol. 5, Pg. 41.
449 1852 8×10 1 B&W copy print none
Plan of New Orleans, Louisiana. Charles Gayarre, Vol. I, Frontispiece.
449A. 1906 8×10 1 B&W copy print none
Plan of New Orleans. Appeared in Capt. Philip Pittman, The Present State of the European Settlements on the Mississippi, reprint of the London, 1770, edition, with Intro. etc. by Frank H. Hodder, Cleveland,
1906 (at end of volume).
450 1881 & 1922 8×10 2 B&W copy print none
Plan Et Project de la Nouvelle Orleans, 1763. Copy 1 Appeared in George B. Waring,
Jr. and George W. Cable, History and Present Condition of New Orleans, Louisiana, 1881, Pg. 13. Copy 2 Appeared in John Smith Kendall, History of New Orleans, 1922, Pg. 23.
451 1909 8×10 1 B&W copy print none
Map of New Orleans, Louisiana and vicinity, 1765. Appeared in David I. Bushnell, Jr.,
The Choctaw of Bayou Lacomb, Plate 2 (end of book)
452 1881 & 1922 8×10 2 B&W copy print none
Plan of New Orleans, 1770, by Capt. Pittman of the British Army. Copy 1 Appeared in
George B. Waring, Jr. and George W. Cable, History and Present Condition of New Orleans, Louisiana, 1881, Pg. 20. Copy 2 Appeared in John Smith Kendall, History of New Orleans, 1922, Pg. 28.
453 1881 8×10 1 B&W copy print none
Plan showing the boundaries of the great Conflagration of New Orleans on the 21 st of March 1788. Appeared in George B. Waring, Jr. and George W. Cable, History and Present Condition of New Orleans, Louisiana, 1881, Pg. 24.
454 N/A 8×10 1 B&W copy print none
Map of New Orleans and vicinity. Copied from Carondelet y Perchet Part 1, Biblioteca
Nacional (Madrid), M. I. 328.
455 1792 8×10 1 B&W copy print none
New Orleans Defenses 1792. Carondolet y Perchet Part 2 Town of Forts, Biblioteca Nacional
(Madrid), M. I. 328
456 1792 8×10 1 B&W copy print none
New Orleans Defenses. Copied from Carondelet y Perchet Part 2, Biblioteca Nacional
(Madrid), M. I. 328.
457 1792 8×10 1 B&W copy print none
New Orleans Fortifications. Copied from Carondelet y Perchet Part 3, Biblioteca Nacional
(Madrid), M. I. 328.
458 1794 8×10 1 B&W copy print none
New Orleans Fire of 1794. Perchet, A. S. H. M. M-B-11-19.
459 1794 8×10 1 B&W copy print none
New Orleans Fire of 1794. Map by Juan Maria’ Perchet, Dec. 11, 1794, A. G. I. S. D.,
Leg. 2643 (planos Luis of Flas. #150).
460 1794 8×10 1 B&W copy print none
New Orleans Fire of 1794. Perchet: Dec. 8, 1794, A. G. Simaneas, XVI-132.
461 1791 8×10 1 B&W copy print none
New Orleans, Louisiana, 1791. Arcivio General de Simancas, VII-80.
462 1794 8×10 1 B&W copy print none
Detailed plan of New Orleans fortifications. Perchet, A. S. H. M.-k-b-4-41.
463 1922 8×10 1 B&W copy print none
New Orleans, Louisiana. Appeared in John Smith Kendall, History of New Orleans, Vol. I, Pg. 36.
464 1882 8×10 1 B&W copy print none
New Orleans, Louisiana in 1798. Appeared in Martin, Pg. 412.
465 N/A 8×10 1 B&W copy print none
A plan of New Orleans, Louisiana.
466 N/A 8×10 1 B&W copy print none
New Orleans, Louisiana in 1798. Part of Trudeau map. Appeared in Louisiana Historical Quarterly, Vol. 22, Pg. 405.
467 N/A 8×10 1 B&W copy print none
Plan by Carlow Trudeau, December 24, 1798, showing the original subdivision of the
Faubourg Ste. Marie and its relation to the plan of the city of New Orleans.
468 8×10 B&W copy print none
Eighteenth Century map of the Louisiana Colony.
469 8×10 B&W copy print none
Emile Lauvriere Histoire de La Lauisiane Francaise. Paris: Libraire Orientale et Americaine 1940. p. 159.
470 8×10 B&W copy print none
Canada, Louisiane et Tennes Angloiese. Nov. 1704.
471 8×10 B&W copy print none
Archives nationales, NN article ^73
472 8×10 B&W copy print none
Eighteenth century map of the Louisiana colony.
473 8×10 B&W copy print none
LA.IN 1733 Baron de Cresnay
474 unknown 8×10 1 B&W copy print none
Eighteenth Century Louisiana Colony. Appeared in Archives Nationales N N Article piece
no. 88
475 8×10 B&W copy print none
Anonymous. Province de la Louisiane, 1743. Biblioteca Nacional (Madrid). M-I 326.
476 8×10 B&W copy print none
Anonymous. Province de la Louisiane 1743, Biblioteca NQ ciond (Madrid) M.I. 326.
477 8×10 B&W copy print none
B. M. 73210 (7). Carte de la Coste de la Louisiane.
478 8×10 B&W copy print none
Plate de la Louisiane coars du Mississippi et pais voisins par N. Bellin. Ingenieur
de la Marine- 1744. Bm 73210(8).
479 8×10 B&W copy print none
Du Pratz, M. Le Page, The History of Louisiana. New Orleans: Pelican Press, Inc. P.1. 1750s.
480 8×10 B&W copy print none
BM 73210 (10). Eighteenth century map of the Louisiana colony.
481 8×10 B&W copy print none
“Gulf of Mexico & the Caribbean Sea, the so-called ‘Lakes of Louisiana.’” Justin Winsor,
Narrative and Critical History of America, Boston, VIII vols. (Vol. VIII (1889), p. 276) Bellin, 1754.
482 8×10 B&W copy print none
Winsor, V, 86. 1750s.
483 1758 8×10 1 B&W copy print none
Mouths of the Mississippi. French Period. Le Page Du Pratz. Appeared in Winsor, Vol
X, Pg 66
484 8×10 B&W copy print none
Published Nov. 1759 by T. Jeffery. Plate 47 in. ‘The North American Atlas” Printed
for William Faden 1777. BM 1. tab.44 (47).
485 8×10 B&W copy print none
N. American before the French and Indian War. Maguider, Harriet. A History of Louisiana. Boston: D. C. Heath & Co. (1909) p. 118.
486 8×10 B&W copy print none
From: Carte de la Louisiana et du Coars du Mississippi par Fuillaume de L’gelle. No
data. B.M. 73210 (4).
487 unknown 8×10 1 B&W copy print none
Eighteenth Century Louisiana Colony. French Period, Map 6. Appeared in Louisiana Historical Quarterly, Vol. XIX, Pg 878
488 8×10 B&W copy print none
Section of Delisle Map, 1718. V. R. Casado, Psimeros Anos De Dominacion Espanola En La Luisiana, Madrid, 1942, 16.
489 8×10 B&W copy print none
Eighteenth century map. (copy 3 of no. 486)
490 8×10 B&W copy print none
#7 archives national N III Louisiane article 7, piece no. 3. Part 1.
491 8×10 B&W copy print none
#7 archives national N III Louisiane article 7, piece no. 3. Part 2.
492 8×10 B&W copy print none
43 archives nationales, NN article ^73 D piece no. l54 (partir gauche).
493 8×10 B&W copy print none
Eighteenth century map. BM 73210 (1)
494 8×10 B&W copy print none
Eighteenth century map. BM 73210 (2) #323.
495 8×10 B&W copy print none
Eighteenth century map. BM 73210 (3).
496 8×10 B&W copy print none
Archives nationale, N. N. article ^73, price no. 86.
497 8×10 B&W copy print none
Archives nationale, NN article ^73 price no. 100C partie gauche.
498 8×10 B&W copy print none
Plate 44 in the North American Atlas. Printed for William Faden in 1777. This plate
was printed 20 th I eb. 1775. B.M. 1. tab. 44 (44).
499 8×10 B&W copy print none
From ‘Lounce of the River Mississippi from the Balier to foot chateau. By ht. Ross
of the 56 th Regiment. 1765 Plate 46 in. The North American Atlas. Printed for William Faden 1777.
BM. I Tab 44 (46).
500 8×10 B&W copy print none
MR- gig. S/Q 604.
501 8×10 B&W copy print none
Document MR gig. Re orders: S/Q 604.
502 8×10 B&W copy print none
Fr. Ha.- 1720. Gulf of Mexico. Deiler. The Settlement of the German coast of Louisiana. Philadelphia. Americana Germanica Press. 1909. Page 78.
503 8×10 B&W copy print none
Map of the country replaced by La Salle. Magruder, Harriet. A History of Louisiana. Boston: D.C. Heath & Co. (1909) P. 25.
504 8×10 B&W copy print none
Ficklen, H. & Govt. F. l.a., M.4., 1901. Frontispeed.
505 8×10 B&W copy print none
haville Brenner, Amichel, A Narrative Hist. of the Gulf Coast. M. P., md. – p. 61
c. 1940 (hm room). #229.
506 8×10 B&W copy print none
Bremer, Laville, Gulf Coast History and Guide N. P., N. D., (c. 1940) p. 62.
507 8×10 B&W copy print none
Fort of the Biloxi. Marcel Giraud, Histoire de la Louisiane Francaise, Presses Universitaines de France, Paris 1953, 32.
508 8×10 B&W copy print none
View of Dauphine Island, 1717. Emile Launriere Histoire de la Louisiane Francaise. Paris: Lebraire Oriental et Americaine, 1940 p. 176.
509 8×10 B&W copy print none
Map 1. 19 L. H. Q. 878.
510 8×10 B&W copy print none
Map 2. 19 L. H. Q. 878.
511 8×10 B&W copy print none
Map of Fort St. Louis and Pensacola. Emile Lauririere Histoire de la Louisiane Francais, Paris: Lebraire Oriental et American 1940 p. 221.
512 8×10 B&W copy print none
Mobile Bay. Marcel Giraud, Histoire de la Louisiane Francaise, Presses Universitaines de France, Paris, 1953, p. 174.
513 8×10 B&W copy print none
Pauger’s Plan. Fort Conde, Mobile. Emile Lauvriere Histoire de la Louisiane Francaises. Paris: Libraire Oriental et Americaine, 1940 p. 232.
514 8×10 B&W copy print none
Mobile prior to 1715. Marcel Giraud, Histoire de la Louisiane Francaise, Presses Universitaines de France, Paris 1953, 40.
515 8×10 B&W copy print none
Pensacola Bay. V. R. Casada, Primeros Anos De Dominacion Espanola en la Luisiana, Madrid, 1942, p. 272.
516 8×10 B&W copy print none
Mouth of the Mississippi, de Pauger. Emile Lauvieiere. Histoire de la Louisiane Francaise, Paris: Libraire Orientale et Americaine, 1940 p. 243.
517 8×10 B&W copy print none
Winsor, V, 22.
518 8×10 B&W copy print none
Map of Natchez and Natchez. Emile Lauvriere. Histoire de la Louisiane Francaise. Paris: Lebraire Orientale et Americaine 1940, p. 270.
519 8×10 B&W copy print none
Natchez, Mississippi (1729). 19 L. H. Q. 549.
520 8×10 B&W copy print none
archives nationale N III. Louisiane article 7, price no. 2. Natchez.
521 8×10 B&W copy print none
Mission of LeBlanc on the Yazoo River. Emile Lauvriere. Historie de la Louisiane Francaise. Pairs: Libraire Orientale et Americaine, 1940 p. 265.
522 8×10 B&W copy print none
III-7 During the 1770s, the British planned to build a fort and town near the mouth
of Bayou Manchac (Iberville River). (78) Courtesy of British Museum, London.
523 8×10 B&W copy print none
Document MR gig Re orders S/Q 604.
524 8×10 B&W copy print none
BM 73215 913 0.
525 8×10 B&W copy print none
Archivo del Servicio Historico Militar (Madrid) Baton Rouge 7284.
526 8×10 B&W copy print none
C. O. 700 Florida 3 g. S/Q 610. British Museum.
527 8×10 B&W copy print none
Broutin’s Map of Natchitoches. Emile Lauvriere Histoire de la Louisiane Francaise. Paris: Libraire Orientale et Americaine 1940, p. 285.
528 8×10 B&W copy print none
Plan of the Fort at Natchitoches, 1732. From an unidentified reproduction in the E.
A. Davis Collection. A. Church; B. Commandant’s House; C. Armory & Magazine; D. Priest’s
House (the fort’s records kept here); E. Militia Barracks; F. Guardhouse; G. Mess
Hall; H. Servants Quarters; I. Oven.
529 8×10 B&W copy print none
Louisiana Indians. Fred B. Kniffen, “The Historic Indian Tribes of Louisiana,” LA Conservation Review, July, 1935, (Vol. IV, No. 7), p.6.
530 8×10 B&W copy print none
Courtesy of Fred Kniffen. Dept. of Geog., L. S. U.
531 8×10 B&W copy print none
Indian tribes of Louisiana in 1700. Fred Kniffen. The Indians of Louisiana. Ed. Mat., Stat., Research Baton Rouge Louisiana. 1945, p. 52.
532 8×10 B&W copy print none
Map of Territory of Orleans 1805-1806. Counties- approved 10 April 1805. Co.-Par.
Boundaries in La. H.R.S.- 1939, p. 18. La. Room.
532B 8×10 B&W copy print none
Map of Territory of Orleans and State of Louisiana 1811-1814. Parishes- 1811 (Apr.)
Co.- Par. Boundaries in LA. H.R.S.- 1934, p. 27.
532C 8×10 B&W copy print none
Map of Louisiana 1852-1867. Parishes 1852-1867. Co.-Par. Boundaries in La. H.R.S.-
1939, p. 74 La. Room.
533 8×10 B&W copy print none
Mississippi River, Nouvelle Orleans 1802. Copy of original print in LSU library.
534 8×10 B&W copy print none
“Map of the Island of Orleans: for the possession of which the United States began
the negotiations that ended in the Louisiana Purchase.” Virgil A. Lewis. The Story of the Louisiana Purchase. St. Louis: Woodward, Turnan, 1903. P. 124.
535 8×10 B&W copy print none
Woodrow Wilson, Hist. of the American People, (Documentary edition), N.Y., 1901-1918,
X vols. See vol. VI. (“The United States, 1801.”)
536 8×10 B&W copy print none
“U.S. History- La. Purchase- Louisiana.”
537 8×10 B&W copy print none
Plan o t Fort Miro 1805. 20 L.H.Q. p. 465.
538 8×10 B&W copy print none
Spain’s West Florida. Arthur. The West Florida Rebellion. St. Francisville Democrat, 1935. P. 146.
539 3×5 B&W copy print none
GC59:1 Battle of New Orleans (map). Grace King and John R. Ficklen, A History of Louisiana,
(New York and New Orleans, 1893), p. 184.
540 8×10 B&W copy print none
A general map of the seat of war in Louisiana and West Florida, shewing all the fortified
points and encampments of both the American and British armies; also the march of
Gen. Jackson’s Army on his expedition against Pensacola.
541 8×10 B&W copy print none
Map shewing the landing of the British army: its several encampments and fortifications
on the Mississippi and the works they erected on their Retreat; also the different
posts encampments and fortifications made by the several corps of the American army
during the whole campaign.
542 8×10 B&W copy print none
War of 1812, Louisiana and West Florida. Powell A. Casey, Louisiana in the War of 1812. (1963) p. 117.
543 8×10 B&W copy print none
Ft. Jesup- 1846. 17 L. H. Q. 152.
544 8×10 B&W copy print none
La. in late 1850s. T. 9. Bradford. Atlas. Boston, 1855or later. p. 45.
545 8×10 B&W copy print none
First map of Shreveport 1848. Shreveport Centennial 1935, p. 15. La. 976.3 Sh 84s.
546 6×8 B&W copy print none
Plantations along the lower Mississippi. Section of Persac’s Map, from Stephenson,
Isaac Franklin.
547 8×10 B&W copy print none
Caskey, Willie M. Secession and Restoration of Louisiana. Baton Rouge: LSU Press, 1938. p. 14.
548 8×10 B&W copy print none
Caskey, Willie M. Secession and Restoration of Louisiana. Baton Rouge: LSU Press, 1938. p. 26.
549 8×10 B&W copy print none
Election 1860. A. P. Sindles, Huey Long’s La., Baltimore Johns Hopkins Ps., 1956, 9.
550 8×10 B&W copy print none
Chief agricultural products 1860.
551 8×10 B&W copy print none
12 LHQ 399
552 8×10 B&W copy print none
Harpers 1964 p. 181.
553 8×10 B&W copy print none
Human Interest Library, Chicago, 1921, III 283.
554 8×10 B&W copy print none
Human Interest Library, Chicago, 1921, III 283.
555 8×10 B&W copy print none
Theatre of Southwestern Campaigns.
556 8×10 B&W copy print none
1860s. Harper’s Pict. H. of the C. War, 1866, pt. II, p. 578.
557 8×10 B&W copy print none
(same as 413) check source for paper page. Also Harpers, 1861 p. 718. Civil War. Harper’s
Pict. H. of the Civil War, N.Y., 1866, pt. 1, p. 125.
558 8×10 B&W copy print none
Harper’s 1861, p. 718. Harper’s Pict. H. of the C. W. pt. 1, p. 125.
559 8×10 B&W copy print none
Harper’s 1862, p. 247. Balloon view of the vicinity of New Orleans, looking toward
the Gulf of Mexico.
560 8×10 B&W copy print none
Harper’s 1861, p. 197.
561 8×10 B&W copy print none
Harper’s Pict. H. of the Civil War, N.Y., 1866, pt. 1, p. 264.
562 8×10 B&W copy print none
Battles and Trades p. 46. The course of the United States screw-sloop “Mississippi”
in the passage of the forts.
563 8×10 B&W copy print none
Map showing final disposition of the Confederate fleet. From a drawing lent by Commander
J. R. Bartlett.
564 8×10 B&W copy print none
Approaches to New Orleans.
565 8×10 B&W copy print none
Louisiana Plantations below Baton Rouge, from J. T. Lloyd’s Map, 1863. Frederick Way,
Jr., comp., Way’s Directory of Western Rivers Packets, n. p. , 1950, No. P-2414.
566 8×10 B&W copy print none
Topographical plan of the city and battle field of Baton Rouge, LA. Fought on the
5 th of August 1862.
567 8×10 B&W copy print none
Map of Port Hudson and Baton Rouge.
568 8×10 B&W copy print none
Tomlinson’s Map of Port Hudson. Showing all of the batteries, strongholds, principal
plantations & C.
569 8×10 B&W copy print none
XXX (1864-65), 426. Map of Port Hudson.
570 8×10 B&W copy print none
Atlas UTC Annis plate XXXV.
571 8×10 B&W copy print none
Map of the Red River, and Arkansas and Missouri campaigns, of 1864.
572 8×10 B&W copy print none
Atlas plate LIII. Same as 402
573 8×10 B&W copy print none
Atlas plate LIV
574 8×10 B&W copy print none
Map of the Red River Campaign.
575 8×10 B&W copy print none
Plan of Fort De Russy.
576 8×10 B&W copy print none
Section including falls and dam Red River.
577 8×10 B&W copy print none
Part of Louisiana. Sketch of General Liddell’s Plan, January, 1864.
578 8×10 B&W copy print none
Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation in Louisiana.
579 8×10 B&W copy print none
Parishes that participated in the adoption of the Constitution of 1864.
580 8×10 B&W copy print none
O. R. Atlas.
581 8×10 B&W copy print none
O. R. Atlas.
582 8×10 B&W copy print none
Map of LA 1803.
583 8×10 B&W copy print none
From John Melish’s Military and Topographical Atlas of the United States.
584 8×10 B&W copy print none
Positions of the American and British armies near New Orleans January 8th, 1815.
585 8×10 B&W copy print none
Map of New Orleans 1815.
586 8×10 B&W copy print none
Plan of the City and Environs of New Orleans. 1816
587 8×10 B&W copy print none
Diagram showing inundated district. Suare’s Crevasse, May 3, 1849.
588 8×10 B&W copy print none
New Orleans showing area built in 1841.
589 8×10 B&W copy print none
Map of the tract between the former Coast Bluff, and the Mississippi River, known
as Orleans Island.
590 8×10 B&W copy print none
Old campus, Louisiana State University.
591 8×10 B&W copy print none
Map of the Mississippi River from Princeton to the Gulf of Mexico.
592 8×10 B&W copy print none
Lowest temperatures ever recorded in LA (these were recorded in the great freeze of
Feb., 1899).
593 8×10 B&W copy print none
New Orleans showing the area closely built in 1878, with houses then existing in the
suburban part of the city.
594 8×10 B&W copy print none
Part of 2nd District New Orleans.
595 8×10 B&W copy print none
Louisiana 1901.
596 8×10 B&W copy print none
Average value of farm land 1910.
597 8×10 B&W copy print none
Percent of Negroes in total population of Louisiana, by parishes: 1910.
598 8×10 B&W copy print none
World’s Panama Exposition, New Orleans, The Logical Point 1915.
599 8×10 B&W copy print none
New Orleans Logical Point. 1915 September to May 1916. Most favorable to Exhibitors
before Canal opens- and to People after that event. WORLD’S PANAMA EXPOSITION.
600 8×10 B&W copy print none
New Orleans and the Delta of the Mississippi (Turn of the century).
601 8×10 B&W copy print none
Map of the State of Louisiana.
602 8×10 B&W copy print none
Louisiana: Place Names.
603 8×10 B&W copy print none
Map showing sugar parishes of Louisiana and approximate areas where sugar is produced
(the shaded areas only produce sugar).
604 8×10 B&W copy print none
Types of farming areas in Louisiana.
605 8×10 B&W copy print none
Left: Precipitation in inches during 6-month period of most active plant growth- April
to September (Average for 35 year period).
Right: Average precipitation in autumn (September-November) in inches.
606 8×10 B&W copy print none
Louisiana Growing Season, Isopleths in Days (Data fro Agricultural Yearbook, 1941).
607 8×10 B&W copy print none
The lower Mississippi River.
608 8×10 B&W copy print none
Indian Groups of Louisiana Today.
609 8×10 B&W copy print none
Migrants (born outside of Louisiana).
610 8×10 B&W copy print none
Principal oil and gas producing areas.
611 8×10 B&W copy print none
Rural social areas of Louisiana.
612 8×10 B&W copy print none
French Louisiana and Cultural Islands of Rural Louisiana.
613 8×10 B&W copy print none
Traffic flow on present state highways
614 8×10 B&W copy print none
Major industrial use of water- 1955.
615 8×10 B&W copy print none
Total average withdrawal use of water by parishes- 1955.
616 8×10 B&W copy print none
Tree regions of Louisiana.
617 8×10 B&W copy print none
Map.
618 8×10 B&W copy print none
Status of Parish Roads, 1955.
619 8×10 B&W copy print none
State of Louisiana prepared by Department of Public Works, Baton Rouge, LA, Natural
Drainage and Contours.
620 8×10 B&W copy print none
Rural and irrigation use of water- 1955.
621 8×10 B&W copy print none
Louisiana integrated hospital regions and estimated 1955 private population.
622 8×10 B&W copy print none
Tree regions of Louisiana.
623 8×10 B&W copy print none
1956 Louisiana Industrial Expansion.
624 8×10 B&W copy print none
Wildlife and Fisheries Commission Enforcement Districts.
625 8×10 B&W copy print none
Average annual rainfall- Louisiana.
626 8×10 B&W copy print none
Average daily flow of Louisiana streams (in millions of gallons).
627 8×10 B&W copy print none
Major forest types in Louisiana.
628 8×10 B&W copy print none
Louisiana Commission on Higher Education: projected increase in white college-age
population 1956 to 1970.
629 8×10 B&W copy print none
State of Louisiana- prepared by Department of Public Works, Baton Rouge, LA.
630 8×10 B&W copy print none
Louisiana Public Health Districts and Parishes.
631 8×10 B&W copy print none
Agricultural Experiment Stations.
632 8×10 B&W copy print none
Seaward limit of Zone I, Seaward limit of Zone III and the disputed area.
633 8×10 B&W copy print none
Existing Project: Navigation Channel in Mississippi River and Passes.
634 8×10 B&W copy print none
Louisiana Industrial Expansion 1957.
635 8×10 B&W copy print none
New Orleans and Vicinity showing highway approaches to the city.
636 8×10 B&W copy print none
State of Louisiana prepared by Department of Public Works, Baton Rouge, LA, Lakes
and Streams.
637 8×10 B&W copy print none
Louisiana Industrial Investment by Parish 1957.
638 8×10 B&W copy print none
Toledo Bend Reservoir.
639 8×10 B&W copy print none
Louisiana State Soil and Water Conservation Committee.
640 8×10 B&W copy print none
A profile of the continental shelf adjacent to the mouth of the river.
641 8×10 B&W copy print none
“Water for Industry,” Chamber of Commerce, Alexandria, LA.
642 8×10 B&W copy print none
Location of wood industries in Louisiana.
643 8×10 B&W copy print none
Ouachita River, navigation lock and dam near Columbia, LA.
644 3×5 B&W copy print none
J. H. Schlarman, From Quebec to New Orleans, Belleville, IL, 1929, p. 304.
645 8×10 B&W copy print none
A Plan of New Orleans. Reference.
646 8×10 B&W copy print none
Reference to a proposed plan of a new town.
647 8×10 B&W copy print none
Archivis Nationales K L 232 No. 52
648 8×10 B&W copy print none
Archivis Nationales K L 232 No. 52
649 8×10 B&W copy print none
Bernard, Antoine. Histoire de la Louisiane. Quebec: Universiti Laval, 1953. P. 400.
650 8×10 B&W copy print none
Girl in front of a house.
651 8×10 B&W copy print none
Acadian House, Evangeline State Park, St. Martinville, LA.
652 8×10 B&W copy print none
Kitchen, Acadian House Museum, Longfellow-Evangeline State Park at St. Montinville.
653 8×10 B&W copy print none
Evangeline Oak.
654 8×10 B&W copy print none
A typical habitat.
655 8×10 B&W copy print none
Upper Teche Country.
656 8×10 B&W copy print none
Sketch of two people in a small fishing boat.
657 8×10 B&W copy print none
Acadian Exile, from an old drawing.
658 8×10 B&W copy print none
Washing day among the Acadians of the Bayou Lafourche, Louisiana.
659 8×10 B&W copy print none
Exile of the Acadian.
660 8×10 B&W copy print none
Evangeline by Fald.
661 8×10 B&W copy print none
Deportation of the Acadians by Order of Charles Lawrence, Governor of Nova Scotia.
Evangeline and her father in the foreground.
662 8×10 B&W copy print none
Acadians hauling boats a scene on the Bayou Lafourche, Louisiana.
663 8×10 B&W copy print none
Acadians in a boat.
664 8×10 B&W copy print none
Acadians.
665 8×10 B&W copy print none
More Acadians.
666 8×10 B&W copy print none
A parade.
667 8×10 B&W copy print none
Parade.
668 8×10 B&W copy print none
Spring Fiesta, New Orleans.
669 8×10 B&W copy print none
Float in the parade.
670 8×10 B&W copy print none
Behind-the-scenes… floats.
671 8×10 B&W copy print none
Baton Rouge Mardi Gras float, early 1900s.
672 8×10 B&W copy print none
Five O’Clock Tea Club.
673 8×10 B&W copy print none
Baton Rouge Mardi Gras float, 1901.
674 8×10 B&W copy print none
Mistick Krewe of Comus announcement.
675 8×10 B&W copy print none
Caption: “Many wright eyes are in vain endeavoring to pierce the disguise” King,
Edward. The Southern States of W. Amer. London, 1875. p.45
676 8×10 B&W copy print none
Mardi Gras costumes, New Orleans, about 1873.
677 8×10 B&W copy print none
Caption: “The Bouef-Gras – the fat ox – is led in the procession” King, Edward. The Southern States of N. Ameri. London, 1875. pg. 41
678 8×10 B&W copy print none
The mosquito war.
679 8×10 B&W copy print none
Comic strip concerning St. Denis.
680 8×10 B&W copy print none
Comic strip regarding New Orleans and its fortifications.
681 8×10 B&W copy print none
Comic strip regarding the Mississippi River.
682 8×10 B&W copy print none
Comic strip regarding “LaSalle’s Louisiana.”
683 8×10 B&W copy print none
Comic strip regarding DeSoto’s March 1539-1543.
684 8×10 B&W copy print none
Comic strip regarding Oregon.
685 8×10 B&W copy print none
Comic strip regarding John Law.
686 8×10 B&W copy print none
Comic strip regarding Laussat.
687 8×10 B&W copy print none
…regarding Henri Tonti.
688 8×10 B&W copy print none
…regarding Thomas Jefferson and the Louisiana Purchase.
689 8×10 B&W copy print none
…regarding New Orleans and the Mississippi River Valley.
690 8×10 B&W copy print none
Railroad cartoon about 1850.
691 8×10 B&W copy print none
MIA.
692 8×10 B&W copy print none
Hotel Bentley, Alexandria, LA.
693 8×10 B&W copy print none
England Air Force Base, Located at Alexandria, LA.
694 8×10 B&W copy print none
Alexandria, LA showing Red River Bridge to Pineville.
695 8×10 B&W copy print none
Fire prevention demonstration at high school.
696 8×10 B&W copy print none
Huddle Grammar School, Alexandria, LA.
697 8×10 B&W copy print none
Louisiana State School for Spastic Children.
698 8×10 B&W copy print none
Huey P. Long Hospital, Pineville, LA.
699 8×10 B&W copy print none
Alexandria, on the Red River. From a war-time photograph.
700 8×10 B&W copy print none
Occupation of Alexandria, Spring, 1863.
701 8×10 B&W copy print none
Alexandria Wharf, 1864.
702 8×10 B&W copy print none
Pansy Circle, Baton Rouge.
703 8×10 B&W copy print none
No. 3 Fire Company, Baton Rouge, 1887.
704 8×10 B&W copy print none
No. 3 Fire Company, Baton Rouge, in Fireman’s Parade, 1887.
705 8×10 B&W copy print none
Sketch of the old State Capitol.
706 8×10 B&W copy print none
Old Capitol building, Baton Rouge, La.
707 8×10 B&W copy print none
Old Capitol, Baton Rouge, 1863.
708 8×10 B&W copy print none
Printed sketch of Baton Rouge
709 8×10 B&W copy print none
Baton Rouge, looking inland penitentiary buildings in the background.
710 8×10 B&W copy print none
Old State Capitol.
711 8×10 B&W copy print none
Old State Capitol about 1800.
712 8×10 B&W copy print none
Old State Capitol.
713 8×10 B&W copy print none
Old State Capitol.
714 8×10 B&W copy print none
Old State Capitol, 1973, Baton Rouge, Louisiana.
715 8×10 B&W copy print none
Main Central Staircase, Old State Capitol, 1973, Baton Rouge, Louisiana.
716 8×10 B&W copy print none
Third Street, Baton Rouge, LA.
717 8×10 B&W copy print none
Old Garig House fronting the Mississippi River, Baton Rouge.
718 8×10 B&W copy print none
Baton Rouge, Main Street.
719 8×10 B&W copy print none
Old State Penitentiary- Florida and Laurel Sts. Baton Rouge.
720 8×10 B&W copy print none
First electric streetcar- Baton Rouge.
721 8×10 B&W copy print none
Horse cars- Baton Rouge.
722 8×10 B&W copy print none
LA Institute of the Blind- Baton Rouge.
723 8×10 B&W copy print none
Convention St. School, Baton Rouge, 1890.
724 8×10 B&W copy print none
Yamettes, 1956.
725 8×10 B&W copy print none
State Capitol, on State Capitol Avenue, one block off River Road.
726 8×10 B&W copy print none
Huey Long statue/monument in the foreground, State Capitol in the background.
727 8×10 B&W copy print none
Huey Long monument in the foreground, State Capitol in the background.
728 8×10 B&W copy print none
State Capitol.
729 8×10 B&W copy print none
First floor plan of the State Capitol.
730 8×10 B&W copy print none
Interior view of Memorial Hall, State Capitol, Baton Rouge, LA.
731 8×10 B&W copy print none
View from the top of the State Capitol.
732 8×10 B&W copy print none
Aerial view of the State Capitol, Baton Rouge, LA.
733 8×10 B&W copy print none
Aerial view of Governor’s Mansion
734 8×10 B&W copy print none
Mississippi River Bridge, June 1958, Baton Rouge.
735 8×10 B&W copy print none
Mississippi River Bridge.
736 8×10 B&W copy print none
Louisiana Governor’s Mansion
737 8×10 B&W copy print none
Louisiana State University
738 8×10 B&W copy print none
Chamber of Commerce.
739 8×10 B&W copy print none
Cities–Columbia Street, Bogalusa, Louisiana.
740 8×10 B&W copy print none
Fireman’s Parade, 1890.
741 8×10 B&W copy print none
Courthouse, Clinton, Louisiana.
742 8×10 B&W copy print none
East Louisiana Hospital- Insane Asylum, Jackson, Louisiana.
743 8×10 B&W copy print none
Caption: Mixing water of the Rio Grande with the Intracoastal Canal water in Houma,
La in 1934, the year the canal opened to Ga[lve]ston. – Courtesy of Houma-Terrebone
Chamber of Commerce
744 8×10 B&W copy print none
Group of men in Houma standing by the Intracoastal Canal to emphasize its opening
all the way to Texas. This was in 1934.
745 8×10 B&W copy print none
Man with buggy and horse in front of Houma City Hall in 1930s. He appears to be traveling
about and on the top of his buggy reads, “Spirit of Louisiana.”
746 8×10 B&W copy print none
Caption: “Men drinking a toast in front of sugarcane wagon at sugar mill. On back
of original photo was the name Frederic Brothers — must be the mill. Listed as small
sugar mill. And place Bayou Dulasze (or Dulasge) is given as place. Must be in Terrebonne
parish since the Chamber of Commerce of Houma supplied this photo.”
747 8×10 B&W copy print none
Cornerstone being lifted into place in building in Houma, LA in 1936.
748 8×10 B&W copy print none
Ceremony to commemorate the opening of the Intracoastal Canal to Texas in 1934 in
Houma, LA.
749 8×10 B&W copy print none
P. O. Building- under construction. December 24, 1934.
750 8×10 B&W copy print none
Ribbon-cutting ceremony.
751 8×10 B&W copy print none
Church Street, Houma, LA.
752 8×10 B&W copy print none
Exhibit from Houma, South Louisiana Fair at Donaldsonville, 1941.
753 8×10 B&W copy print none
Terrebonne High School Building, Houma, LA.
754 8×10 B&W copy print none
St. Francis de Sales Catholic Church.
755 8×10 B&W copy print none
Aerial view of Houma, LA.
756 8×10 B&W copy print none
Dock on the Lake, Lake Charles, LA c. 1895.
757 8×10 B&W copy print none
Industrial plant- Calcasieu River. Lake Charles.
758 8×10 B&W copy print none
Industrial plant- Calcasieu River.
759 8×10 B&W copy print none
Aerial view of Lone Star Cement Corp Plant- Lake Charles.
760 8×10 B&W copy print none
Aerial view of downtown Lake Charles.
761 8×10 B&W copy print none
Aerial view of the new Lake Charles- Calcasieu River Bridge, which is a part of U.
S. 90.
762 8×10 B&W copy print none
Calcasieu- Lake Charles River Bridge.
763 8×10 B&W copy print none
LA Rice Milling Co. Lake Charles, LA.
764 8×10 B&W copy print none
Loading a barge at Lake Charles.
765 8×10 B&W copy print none
Port at Lake Charles.
766 8×10 B&W copy print none
Aerial picture.
767 8×10 B&W copy print none
Picture of a portion of our docks showing steamers berthed at Warehouse #1 and #2.
768 8×10 B&W copy print none
Reforestation.
769 8×10 B&W copy print none
Tree Farm, Fisher, LA.
770 8×10 B&W copy print none
Loring Pond, Enjoy motor boat racing, swimming, fishing, and camping, located near
Many, LA.
771 8×10 B&W copy print none
Elementary and high school, Many, LA.
772 8×10 B&W copy print none
Many City swimming pool.
773 8×10 B&W copy print none
Many City swimming pool.
774 8×10 B&W copy print none
U. S. Post Office, Many, LA.
775 8×10 B&W copy print none
City of Monroe and West Monroe, showing how levees and floodwalls protected cities
from flood of May, 1958 on Ouachita River. See Corps of Engineers letter, Upper Miss.
folder.
776 8×10 B&W copy print none
Shadows on the Teche.
777 8×10 B&W copy print none
“The Shadows,” New Iberia.
778 8×10 B&W copy print none
View: Mt. Carmel Convent, New Iberia, LA.
779 8×10 B&W copy print none
New Iberia.
780 8×10 B&W copy print none
Seaplane landing on Bayou Teche, New Iberia, LA.
781 8×10 B&W copy print none
Iberia Parish Court House. New Iberia, LA.
782 8×10 B&W copy print none
Artist’s sketch of multi-million $ U. S. Naval Auxiliary Air Advanced Training Station,
New Iberia, LA, under construction now to be ready for occupancy late 1958 or early
1959.
783 8×10 B&W copy print none
New Iberia, B. R. station, Late 1800s.
784 8×10 B&W copy print none
14 Nov 1863.
785 8×10 B&W copy print none
New Orleans Custom House under construction, 1860.
786 8×10 B&W copy print none
Confederate Museum.
787 8×10 B&W copy print none
Caption: Louisville & Nashville Railroad Freight Yards, Warehouses and Terminals.
Used in New Orleans, The Crescent City. New Orleans: George W. Engelhardt, 1903-04, p. 62.
788 8×10 B&W copy print none
Lafayette Square, New Orleans, the American counterpart of Creole Jackson Square.
The National Flag of Louisiana was raised over City Hall (right) on February 12, 1861.
789 8×10 B&W copy print none
First church in New Orleans 1718.
790 8×10 B&W copy print none
Cathedral, etc. about 1815.
791 8×10 B&W copy print none
Arch honoring Jackson- Jackson Square.
792 8×10 B&W copy print none
Charity hospital, New Orleans.
793 8×10 B&W copy print none
The Custom House at New Orleans, seized by the state.
794 8×10 B&W copy print none
Old St. Charles Theatre.
795 8×10 B&W copy print none
Picayune Building, mid 1880s.
796 8×10 B&W copy print none
Antoines Restaurant.
797 8×10 B&W copy print none
Broker’s Office, New Orleans.
798 8×10 B&W copy print none
Abbot Cycle Co.’s Show Room, New Orleans.
799 8×10 B&W copy print none
England Tea and Coffee House.
800 8×10 B&W copy print none
New Orleans railway car.
801 8×10 B&W copy print none
Pickwick Club.
802 8×10 B&W copy print none
Café des Exiles.
803 8×10 B&W copy print none
French Opera House.
804 8×10 B&W copy print none
Workers, New Orleans. Custom House, 1860.
805 8×10 B&W copy print none
The New Orleans Charity Hospital.
806 8×10 B&W copy print none
Store, New Orleans, early 1900s.
807 8×10 B&W copy print none
City Park, New Orleans, early 1900s.
808 8×10 B&W copy print none
Canal Bank.
809 8×10 B&W copy print none
French Market, early 1900s.
810 8×10 B&W copy print none
French Market.
811 8×10 B&W copy print none
French Market scene.
812 8×10 B&W copy print none
French Market scene.
813 8×10 B&W copy print none
French Market scene.
814 8×10 B&W copy print none
Sketch of Louisiana State Lottery Company
815 8×10 B&W copy print none
LA Jockey Club, early 1900s.
816 8×10 B&W copy print none
Bicycle Club, St. Charles Avenue.
817 8×10 B&W copy print none
New Orleans Cold Storage Company.
818 8×10 B&W copy print none
Electric cars, 1895.
819 8×10 B&W copy print none
Electric cars, 1895.
820 8×10 B&W copy print none
Rice Mill, New Orleans.
821 8×10 B&W copy print none
Haunted House, Royal Street.
822 8×10 B&W copy print none
National Rice Milling Co., New Orleans.
823 8×10 B&W copy print none
Cathedral, Jackson Square.
824 8×10 B&W copy print none
Cathedral, early 1920s.
825 8×10 B&W copy print none
Cabildo, early 1900s.
826 8×10 B&W copy print none
Parish prison.
827 8×10 B&W copy print none
Old Rookery, New Orleans.
828 8×10 B&W copy print none
Central Station, New Orleans.
829 8×10 B&W copy print none
Thomas H. Underwood Home, New Orleans.
830 8×10 B&W copy print none
On Royal Street.
831 8×10 B&W copy print none
Miller’s Academy and Billiard Hall.
832 8×10 B&W copy print none
Bofinger Residence, New Orleans, early 19 th century.
833 8×10 B&W copy print none
Fabacher’s, the Gentlemen’s café.
834 8×10 B&W copy print none
Bofinger Parlor and Library, early 19 th century.
835 8×10 B&W copy print none
Drawing Room, late 19 th century.
836 8×10 B&W copy print none
J. G. Libadiote’s American Confectionary.
837 8×10 B&W copy print none
Interior American Drug Store.
838 8×10 B&W copy print none
Herwig Residence Drawing Room, early 19 th century.
839 8×10 B&W copy print none
Begnets at the French Market.
840 8×10 B&W copy print none
State Agricultural Experiment Station, Audubon Park, New Orleans.
841 8×10 B&W copy print none
Laffite’s Shop.
842 8×10 B&W copy print none
Philadelphia Ice Cream Works.
843 8×10 B&W copy print none
“A La Renaissance Des Chenes Verts.” Restaurant and Ladies’ Café.
844 8×10 B&W copy print none
American Drug Store, New Orleans.
845 8×10 B&W copy print none
New Orleans Sanitarium and Training School for Nurses.
846 8×10 B&W copy print none
No. 547, Canal St., West from Charters.
847 8×10 B&W copy print none
Alcee Fortier High School Band of New Orleans, LA. City and State Champions for 1933.
848 8×10 B&W copy print none
Colonial Costumes.
849 8×10 B&W copy print none
Hovey King home.
850 8×10 B&W copy print none
Doorway and patio of house built during Spanish period, New Orleans.
851 8×10 B&W copy print none
Night, Canal Street, New Orleans.
852 8×10 B&W copy print none
Street car (trolley).
853 8×10 B&W copy print none
An upper floor iron-fringes gallery in the Crescent City.
854 8×10 B&W copy print none
Caption: “The original Basin Street in New Orleans were jazz began.”
Second Caption: “King Oliver’s Creole Jazz Band ‘hamming it up’ during 1921 in San
Francisco”
855 8×10 B&W copy print none
Jackson Square.
856 8×10 B&W copy print none
St. Louis Cathedral and Jackson Square.
857 8×10 B&W copy print none
Superdome.
858 8×10 B&W copy print none
Modern New Orleans.
859 8×10 B&W copy print none
Main Lobby, New Orleans International Airport.
860 8×10 B&W copy print none
Catholic Church at Opelousas, LA.
861 8×10 B&W copy print none
May Festival Tournament, Opelousas 1897.
862 8×10 B&W copy print none
Saudoz Store, Opelousas about 1900.
863 8×10 B&W copy print none
Saudoz Store, Opelousas about 1900.
864 8×10 B&W copy print none
Ruston High School and Athletic Field, La. Tech in background.
865 8×10 B&W copy print none
Grambling College, Grambling, LA.
866 8×10 B&W copy print none
Between Ruston and Grambling.
867 8×10 B&W copy print none
Firemen’s Parade, Shreveport, circa 1880s.
868 8×10 B&W copy print none
Central High School, Shreveport, about 1908.
869 8×10 B&W copy print none
A view of the Greater Shreveport Municipal Airport.
870 8×10 B&W copy print none
This is the 450 bed Veterans Administration Hospital in Shreveport. It is located
on the historic site of Fort Humbug, of Civil War fame.
871 8×10 B&W copy print none
Caddo Parish courthouse
872 8×10 B&W copy print none
Caddo Parish courthouse
873 8×10 B&W copy print none
Henry C. Beck Building.
874 8×10 B&W copy print none
A night view of Shreveport’s downtown skyline, taken from recently completed Spring
Street viaduct, an important link in the city’s improvement program and one that will
bring relief to traffic congestion to the downtown area.
875 8×10 B&W copy print none
Downtown Shreveport. LA Municipal Review.
876 8×10 B&W copy print none
Aerial view of downtown Shreveport.
877 8×10 B&W copy print none
Henry Miller Shreve monument.
878 8×10 B&W copy print none
Foster Rd. Interstate in Shreveport.
879 8×10 B&W copy print none
Shreveport Expressway.
880 8×10 B&W copy print none
Silliman Collegiate Institute, for young ladies, Clinton, Louisiana.
881 8×10 B&W copy print none
Centenary College, Clinton, LA, photographer: Andrew Lytle, 1885.
882 8×10 B&W copy print none
LSU 1888 Deaf and Dumb Institute.
883 8×10 B&W copy print none
LA College, Pineville (LA’s oldest accredited college, a four year institution, has
campus of 80 acres. It offers BA degrees in 14 areas. 1957 enrollment of 900 students.)
884 8×10 B&W copy print none
Louisiana State Seminary.
885 8×10 B&W copy print none
Nicholls State, 1968.
886 8×10 B&W copy print none
C of C, Thibodeaux.
887 8×10 B&W copy print none
Graduation Day, Northwestern State College.
888 8×10 B&W copy print none
Straight University.
889 8×10 B&W copy print none
Soule Commercial College and Literary Institute, New Orleans.
890 8×10 B&W copy print none
New Orleans College of Dentistry.
891 8×10 B&W copy print none
The University of Louisiana, New Orleans.
892 8×10 B&W copy print none
Boarders’ Costume. Uniform for school days. Uniform for Sundays and Thursdays. Ursuline
Convent, New Orleans, 1888.
893 8×10 B&W copy print none
Study Hall, Ursuline Convent, New Orleans, 1888.
894 8×10 B&W copy print none
Library, Ursuline Convent, New Orleans, 1888.
895 8×10 B&W copy print none
Ursuline Convent Studio, New Orleans, 1888.
896 8×10 B&W copy print none
The Interrupted Duel, by Garnelo-Alda, Salon de 1897.
897 8×10 B&W copy print none
The famous New Orleans dueling ground. “The Oaks.”
898 8×10 B&W copy print none
Page 5 & 6 from unknown source. Titled “Anniversary — 6608 Scenic Highway” with
multiple advertisements
899 8×10 B&W copy print none
Drawing of salt mining from salt dome
900 8×10 B&W copy print none
Mineral revenues from state-owned lands, 1945-1955.
901 8×10 B&W copy print none
Total applications for public assistance grants by category, July 1, 1956-June 30,
1957.
902 8×10 B&W copy print none
Louisiana Forest Fires, 1957.
903 8×10 B&W copy print none
Layout of the French Opera House.
904 8×10 B&W copy print none
Statistics.
905 8×10 B&W copy print none
Diagram.
906 8×10 B&W copy print none
“All of Louisiana’s Teachers are Better Prepared”
907 8×10 B&W copy print none
“Louisiana Commission on Higher Education Teaching Personnel Needed in Louisiana’s
State-Supported Institutions” 1970-71.
908 8×10 B&W copy print none
French class.
909 8×10 B&W copy print none
Number of children transported to school in Louisiana.
910 8×10 B&W copy print none
Average annual salaries-teachers.
911 8×10 B&W copy print none
Diagram.
912 8×10 B&W copy print none
Louisiana State Department of Hospitals, Annual Report, Baton Rouge, 1957.
913 8×10 B&W copy print none
Mississippi River cut-offs.
914 8×10 B&W copy print none
Diagram-sulphur.
915 8×10 B&W copy print none
How LSU’s money is spent.
916 8×10 B&W copy print none
Population of Louisiana 1900-1956 (white/non-white).
917 8×10 B&W copy print none
Graph illustrating sugar production in LA from 1815-1980.
918 8×10 B&W copy print none
Graph illustrating sugar production in LA from 1880-1938.
919 8×10 B&W copy print none
Louisiana population 1810-1954.
920 8×10 B&W copy print none
Urban rural population 1810-1930.
921 8×10 B&W copy print none
Color, nativity percentage.
922 8×10 B&W copy print none
Blowgun shooting.
923 8×10 B&W copy print none
Pounding corn in wooden mortar.
924 8×10 B&W copy print none
Emil John.
925 8×10 B&W copy print none
Dwellings of present day Louisiana Indians.
926 8×10 B&W copy print none
Indian mound and group of present-day Indians, Louisiana.
927 8×10 B&W copy print none
Present-day Indians and their dwellings, Terre Bonne Parish, Louisiana.
928 8×10 B&W copy print none
Tick dance.
929 8×10 B&W copy print none
Ready to begin snake dance.
930 8×10 B&W copy print none
Scraping a skin.
931 8×10 B&W copy print none
A Choctaw baby peeks out of a handwoven Indian basket at Lacombe, Louisiana.
932 8×10 B&W copy print none
Indian village scene.
933 8×10 B&W copy print none
Indian scene.
934 8×10 B&W copy print none
A Caddo Indian village, Northwest Louisiana.
935 8×10 B&W copy print none
Femme sauvage broyant le mais.
936 8×10 B&W copy print none
Indian in summer time.
937 8×10 B&W copy print none
Head flattening.
938 8×10 B&W copy print none
Customs of Lower Mississippi Valley tribes.
939 8×10 B&W copy print none
Indian torture in Louisiana.
940 8×10 B&W copy print none
A calumet- from an old drawing.
941 8×10 B&W copy print none
Stone boiling.
942 8×10 B&W copy print none
A new discovery of a large country in America by Father Lewis Hennepin.
943 8×10 B&W copy print none
Indians cooking over a fire.
944 8×10 B&W copy print none
Indian village scene.
945 8×10 B&W copy print none
Indian house, South Louisiana.
946 8×10 B&W copy print none
The last reed, Natchez Massacre, 1729.
947 8×10 B&W copy print none
The Red River Valley 8000 Years Ago.
948 8×10 B&W copy print none
Indians performing a task.
949 8×10 B&W copy print none
Chitimacha.
950 8×10 B&W copy print none
Chitimacha basketing.
951 8×10 B&W copy print none
Chitimacha basketing.
952 8×10 B&W copy print none
Chitimacha basketing.
953 8×10 B&W copy print none
Chitimacha basketry.
954 8×10 B&W copy print none
Wooden mortar and pestle.
955 8×10 B&W copy print none
Blowgun and cane arrows.
956 8×10 B&W copy print none
Mortar.
957 8×10 B&W copy print none
Drum.
958 8×10 B&W copy print none
Round from Tathuland Plantation.
959 8×10 B&W copy print none
Site No. 15, Wilkinson Place, Caddo.
960 8×10 B&W copy print none
Early Delta Airlines Plane.
961 8×10 B&W copy print none
Stinson T (airplane).
962 8×10 B&W copy print none
Coffee tasters, New Orleans.
963 8×10 B&W copy print none
Main office building- Esso Standard Oil Company, Baton Rouge, LA.
964 8×10 B&W copy print none
View of one of the motor oil canning machines at Esso Standard Oil Company’s Baton
Rouge Refinery. The machine fills cans at the rate of about 360 a minute.
965 8×10 B&W copy print none
Esso Standard Oil Company.
966 8×10 B&W copy print none
Fluid Hydroformer at the Baton Rouge refinery of Esso Standard Oil Company. This unit
produces high-octane aviation gasoline stock.
967 8×10 B&W copy print none
Esso Standard Oil Company.
968 8×10 B&W copy print none
Here is a scene showing the 206-foot, 9-inch tower in position before it started its
move into upright position.
969 8×10 B&W copy print none
Gas storage tanks.
970 8×10 B&W copy print none
MIA
971 8×10 B&W copy print none
Early Well Jennings Oil Field
972 8×10 B&W copy print none
Instrument control room in the Digestion Department, Kaiser Aluminum and Chemical
Corporation’s Baton Rouge alumina plant.
973 8×10 B&W copy print none
Aerial photograph.
974 8×10 B&W copy print none
Polymer Chemicals Division, W. R. Grace & Co. Semi-Works Plant, Baton Rouge, LA.
975 8×10 B&W copy print none
Located on the Calcasieu Ship Channel from Lake Charles to the Gulf of Mexico are
the plants of Cities Service Oil Company, Cit-Con Oil Corporation, Firestone Synthetic
Rubber and Latex Company, Petroleum Chemicals, Inc., and the Hercules Powder Company.
976 8×10 B&W copy print none
Towing an off-shore oil rig to location.
977 8×10 B&W copy print none
Oil rig, Bayou Lafourche.
978 8×10 B&W copy print none
Loading machinery for export to Latin America at New Orleans.
979 8×10 B&W copy print none
Holland America Line.
980 8×10 B&W copy print none
Port of New Orleans photo.
981 8×10 B&W copy print none
Loading cotton at New Orleans.
982 8×10 B&W copy print none
Jefferson Island Salt Company, Division Diamond Crystal Salt Co., Jefferson Island,
LA, Iberia Parish. (Open to visitors.)
983 8×10 B&W copy print none
Iberia Parish Sugar Co-Op. Mill.
984 8×10 B&W copy print none
Evangeline Hot Sauce- A noted Louisiana product.
985 8×10 B&W copy print none
Louisiana State Rice Milling Company, Inc.
986 8×10 B&W copy print none
Loading truck with LA Highway Dept. “A” gravel. April 1968.
987 8×10 B&W copy print none
The Bulk Marine Terminal at Burnside, LA.
988 8×10 B&W copy print none
Paper Mill, Bogalusa.
989 8×10 B&W copy print none
Louisiana Long Leaf Lumber Co. mill at Fisher, LA, 6 miles south of Many, LA. Employs
275 men, turns out 67, 500 board feet of lumber per day.
990 8×10 B&W copy print none
Continental Can Company’s Paper Mill, Hodge, Louisiana.
991 8×10 B&W copy print none
South Louisiana lumbering, early 1900s.
992 8×10 B&W copy print none
White oak staves made by Frank Sabyl, Jennings, LA in 1928 to France for claret wine
casks.
993 8×10 B&W copy print none
Loading logs, late 1800s.
994 8×10 B&W copy print none
Debarking log.
995 8×10 B&W copy print none
“Longleaf Pine.”
996 8×10 B&W copy print none
Wesson Oil and Snowdrift Plant, world’s largest for processing cottonseed oil.
997 8×10 B&W copy print none
A plant.
998 8×10 B&W copy print none
Sulphur plant on the Lower Mississippi.
999 8×10 B&W copy print none
Dark image of what appears to be an oil refinery or some type of plant
1000 8×10 B&W copy print none
A plant.
1000A 8×10 B&W copy print none
Kaiser Aluminum and Ideal Cement Corporation, Baton Rouge.
1000B 8×10 B&W copy print none
Aerial view- Baton Rouge Refinery, Humble Oil and Refining Company.
1000C 8×10 B&W copy print none
Esso Standard Oil Company.
1001 8×10 B&W copy print none
Departure of the Spaniards.
1002 8×10 B&W copy print none
The fight at Mobile.
1003 8×10 B&W copy print none
Indian fleet meeting De Soto.
1004 8×10 B&W copy print none
Repelling the landing.
1005 8×10 B&W copy print none
Spaniards enslaving Indians.
1006 8×10 B&W copy print none
De Soto’s march.
1007 8×10 B&W copy print none
De Soto discovering the Mississippi River.
1008 8×10 B&W copy print none
De Soto’s army on the bank of the Mississippi.
1009 8×10 B&W copy print none
Burial of De Soto.
1010 8×10 B&W copy print none
Marquette descending the Mississippi.
1011 8×10 B&W copy print none
La Salle displays the arms of France.
1012 8×10 B&W copy print none
The Discovery of the Mississippi. “In the name of Louis the Great, I do now take possession
of this great river of the Mississippi.”
1013 8×10 B&W copy print none
La Salle at the mouth of the Mississippi, April 9, 1862.
1014 8×10 B&W copy print none
La Salle claimed for his royal master and his beloved France all the land watered
by this great river and all its tributaries.
1015 8×10 B&W copy print none
His musket rang out, and La Salle fell to the ground and never spoke again.
1016 8×10 B&W copy print none
Death of La Salle.
1017 8×10 B&W copy print none
Tonty.
1018 8×10 B&W copy print none
Charlevoix’s descent of the Mississippi.
1019 8×10 B&W copy print none
New Orleans in 1719- from an old print.
1020 8×10 B&W copy print none
Laying out New Orleans.
1021 8×10 B&W copy print none
Bienville building Fort Rosalie.
1022 8×10 B&W copy print none
First Fort at Biloxi.
1023 8×10 B&W copy print none
Bienville.
1024 8×10 B&W copy print none
Cabane D’Emigrant.
1025 8×10 B&W copy print none
House.
1026 8×10 B&W copy print none
German names in the Spanish marriage register of St. John the Baptist.
1027 8×10 B&W copy print none
Barrow Family Coat of Arms.
1028 8×10 B&W copy print none
Tools and utensils.
1029 8×10 B&W copy print none
Fleur de lis.
1030 8×10 B&W copy print none
Pioneer rifle and powder horn.
1031 8×10 B&W copy print none
A Canadian soldier.
1032 8×10 B&W copy print none
Le coton mis en sac.
1033 8×10 B&W copy print none
Ursuline nuns- 1733.
1034 8×10 B&W copy print none
Bienville’s House, 1727.
1035 8×10 B&W copy print none
First Church- 1718.
1036 8×10 B&W copy print none
Second Church built- 1724-27.
1037 8×10 B&W copy print none
Landing of the Ursulines- 1727.
1038 8×10 B&W copy print none
Entrance to Havana Harbor about 1720. The early French trade with Spanish Havana brought
needed gold and silver to the Louisiana colony. (97)
1039 8×10 B&W copy print none
At the English Turn.
1040 8×10 B&W copy print none
Fort Maurepas. A model of the first fort at Old Biloxi made in 1967 by the eighth
grade Louisiana History class at Catholic High School, Baton Rouge, Patrick B. Kennedy,
instructor.
1041 8×10 B&W copy print none
La Freniere’s appeal to the Council.
1042 8×10 B&W copy print none
“Vue du fort de la Bolise.”
1043 8×10 B&W copy print none
French.
1044 8×10 B&W copy print none
French soldier-1710.
1045 8×10 B&W copy print none
French soldier- 1710.
1046 8×10 B&W copy print none
Colonial Wooden Plow.
1047 8×10 B&W copy print none
Casket Girls.
1048 8×10 B&W copy print none
New Orleans- 1719.
1049 8×10 B&W copy print none
Louis XV.
1050 8×10 B&W copy print none
La Rue Quincampoix.
1051 8×10 B&W copy print none
Immigrants for Louis- Louisiana.
1052 8×10 B&W copy print none
Kerlerec.
1053 8×10 B&W copy print none
Vandreuil.
1054 8×10 B&W copy print none
Model of the first fort at Biloxi, Fort Maurepas 1699.
1055 8×10 B&W copy print none
Eighth grade, Catholic High School, first fort at Old Biloxi, Patrick Kennedy instructor.
1056 8×10 B&W copy print none
Iberville.
1057 8×10 B&W copy print none
Bienville building Fort Rosalie.
1058 8×10 B&W copy print none
La Salle’s landing in Texas.
1059 8×10 B&W copy print none
The voyage of Iberville landing at Dauphin Island.
1060 8×10 B&W copy print none
Assassination of La Salle.
1061 8×10 B&W copy print none
The murder of La Salle.
1062 8×10 B&W copy print none
Death to the Natchez!
1063 8×10 B&W copy print none
Philippe duc d’Orleans, Regent de France.
1064 8×10 B&W copy print none
Le Moyne d’Iberville.
1065 8×10 B&W copy print none
Jean Law.
1066 8×10 B&W copy print none
Louis XIV.
1067 8×10 B&W copy print none
A French Frigate.
1068 8×10 B&W copy print none
Failure of Law’s Bank- from an old drawing.
1069 8×10 B&W copy print none
Dolphin Island.
1070 8×10 B&W copy print none
Flag.
1071 8×10 B&W copy print none
“Bars of Aragon.”
1072 8×10 B&W copy print none
British Union Jack (1763-1779).
1073 8×10 B&W copy print none
“Habitacion” de Leseuer.
1074 8×10 B&W copy print none
Interior flatboat. Sometimes entire families moved to the lower Mississippi Valley
area with all of their possessions- livestock, poultry, and household goods.- from
an old print
1075 8×10 B&W copy print none
Baton Rouge Troop Quarters-1788.
1076 8×10 B&W copy print none
Baton Rouge Commandant’s House, 1788.
1077 8×10 B&W copy print none
Natchez Jail, by Gayoso de Lemos (Nov. 8, 1792).
1078 8×10 B&W copy print none
St. Martinville, late Spanish period.
1079 8×10 B&W copy print none
Fortif at Baton Rouge, July 13, 1798.
1080 8×10 B&W copy print none
Model of Cathedral- 1794.
1081 8×10 B&W copy print none
The sale of Louisiana.
1082 8×10 B&W copy print none
Amnesty given by O’Reilly- August 21, 1769.
1083 8×10 B&W copy print none
Bill of Louis’ Royal Bank about 1720.
1084 8×10 B&W copy print none
The changes of fashion.
1085 8×10 B&W copy print none
French dress 1793.
1086 8×10 B&W copy print none
The “Merveilleuse,” 1793.
1087-1117 8×10 B&W copy print none
Louisiana History–Early American Regime.
1099 Missing
1106 Missing
1118-1148 8×10 B&W copy print none
Louisiana History–Antebellum.
1149-1179 8×10 B&W copy print none
Louisiana History–Antebellum.
1180-1211 8×10 B&W copy print none
Louisiana History–Civil War.
1212-1246 8×10 B&W copy print none
Louisiana History–Civil War.
1247-1280 8×10 B&W copy print none
Louisiana History–Civil War.
1281-1307 8×10 B&W copy print none
Louisiana History–Civil War.
1308-1344 8×10 B&W copy print none
Louisiana History–Civil War.
1345-1381 8×10 B&W copy print none
Louisiana History–1877-1920.
1382-1413 8×10 B&W copy print none
Louisiana History–Modern Era. 1394 Missing
1414-1423 8×10 B&W copy print none
Louisiana–Animals.
1424-1440 8×10 B&W copy print none
Louisiana Plantations.
1441-1467 8×10 B&W copy print none
Louisiana State University, 1880s-1940s.
1468-1499 8×10 B&W copy print none
Louisiana State University, 1880s-1940s.
1500-1513 8×10 B&W copy print none
Out of State Photographs.
1514-1520 8×10 B&W copy print none
Portraits–Groups.
1521-1564 8×10 B&W copy print none
Portraits–Individuals.
1565–1573 8×10 B&W copy print none
Public Notices and Advertisements.
1574-1596 8×10 B&W copy print none
Rural Life.
1597-1629 8×10 B&W copy print none
Sports, Recreation, and Food.
1630-1637 8×10 B&W copy print none
Trains.
1638-1677 8×10 B&W copy print none
Watercraft and River Photographs.
1678-1716 8×10 B&W copy print none
Watercraft and River Photographs.
1717-1754 8×10 B&W copy print none
Watercraft and River Photographs.
1755-1794 8×10 B&W copy print none
Watercraft and River Photographs.
1795 8×10/3×6 B&W copy print none
Spanish Attack on English Pensacola, 1781
1796-1797 8×10 B & W copy print none
Fort McComb Photos/Newspaper Article
1791-1801 5×7 B& W copy print none
Red River Raft
1802 8×10 B&W copy print none
Photos for Pelican State
1803-1811 8×10/5×7 B& W copy print none
Louisiana State Seal and Photos for “Up the Mississippi”
1812-1815 8×10 B&W none
Live Oak Society/Newspaper article
1816-1821 8×10 B&W copy print none
LA Leaders and Forts
1822-1876 8×10/5×7 B&W copy prints none
Miscellaneous
1877-1880 8×10 B&W copy prints none
New State Capital
1881-1963 8×10/5×7/3×3 B & W copy prints none
Miscellaneous Buildings
1964-2004 B&W copy prints none
Scenic shots of towns/rivers/countryside
2005-2013 8×10 B & W copy prints none
Shots of individuals
2014-2035 8×10 B & W copy prints none
Civil War Photos
2036-2086
Original Louisiana Prints
2087-2110 8×10 B & W copy prints none
Sketches and Advertisements
2111-2117 8 x 10 B & W copy prints none
Map Photos
2118-2146 8 x10/5x 7 B & W copy prints none
Boats
2147-2205 8 x10/5×7 B & W copy prints none
Miscellaneous Group Shots
2206-2207 8×10 B & W none
Louis Armstrong
2208-2215 6×8 B & W none
Houma-Terrebonne Chamber of Commerce, 1930s
DAVIS, LA VERNA R. & EDWIN A., COLLECTION
BOX 23 – Xerox Photographs from books
Folder
1. Adams, Henry, History of the United States of America, During the Administration of James Madison, 1930: Map showing the landing of the British Army by Major A. Lacarriere Latour,
1815 (pp. 336 a & b-2 copies)
2. Adams, James Truslow and Charles Garrett Vannest, The Record of America, 1938: Map of French Settlements in North America (p. 64-2 copies)
3. a) Arthur, Stanley Clisby, The Story of the Battle of New Orleans, 1915: Jackson’s Headquarters in Royal Street (p. 50-2 copies); The Jackson Portrait
Given Livingston (p. 53-2 copies); The Macarty Plantation Home, Jackson’s Battlefield
Headquarters (p. 117-2 copies); The Battle of New Orleans (p. 175-2 copies); Plan
of the Attack and Defence of the American Lines Below New Orleans, on the 8 th January 1815 (p. 181-2 copies)
b) Arthur, Stanley Clisby, Old New Orleans, 1937: Patio of Seignouret Maison (p. 61-2 copies); LePetit Theatre du Vieux Carré
(p. 103-2 copies); Iron Balcony Railing at 824 Royal Street (p. 128-2 copies); Iron
work on the balconies of the Miltenberger buildings at Royal and Dumaine streets (p.
129-2 copies); Patio at 520 Royal Street (p. 132-2 copies); Shaded balconies in Chartres
street and sunlight on the facade of the Cathedral (p. 176-2 copies); Cabildo, Cathedral
and Presbytere as they were in 1803 when New Orleans came into the possession of the
United States (p. 179-2 copies); Father Antoine’s Date Palm (Phoenix dactylifera)
as it appeared in 1841 (p. 235-2 copies)
4. Barker, Eugene C., Walter P. Webb, and William E. Dodd, The Growth of a Nation, The United States of America, 1928: This scene shows the methods which the Spaniards who settled the West Indies
used for making sugar from sugar cane (p. 41); Near the mouth of the Mississippi River,
La Salle erected a cross and claimed the Mississippi Valley for France (p. 126-2 copies);
This picture represents a scene in the lives of the Acadians. They are shown here
waiting to go aboard the ship that is to carry them away from their old homes (p.
130-2 copies); Map of European Possessions in the Present United States after the
Treaty of 1763 (p. 131-2 copies); Map, The Claims of European Nations in 1750 (p.
139-2 copies); Before the Battle of New Orleans, General Jackson reviewed his troops,
a strangely assorted force of trained soldiers, frontiersmen, and plain citizens (p.
307-2 copies); Men’s costumes of about the year 1830 (p. 362-2 copies); Women’s costumes
of about the year 1836 (p. 363-2 copies); Map, Stages in the Territorial Growth of
the United States (p. 391-2 copies); Uniforms worn by Confederate soldiers (p. 475-2
copies); After the war many a Confederate soldier returned to find marks of war’s
ravage on every hand (p. 495-2 copies)
5. Beard, Charles A. and William C. Bagley, The History of the American People, 1931: La Salle (p. 83-2 copies ); Raising the American Flag in New Orleans, 1803
(p. 209-2 copies)
6. Bolton, Herbert Eugene, History of the Americas, 1935: Map, The French in Acadia and the St. Lawrence Valley (Seventeenth Century)
(p. 76-2 copies); Map, The Louisiana Purchase and Disputed Boundaries (p. 194-2 copies)
7. Bourne, Henry Eldridge and Elbert J. Benton, American History, 1925: Map, European Claims in North America in 1710 (p. 19-2 copies); Map, Distribution
of Population in 1810 (p. 251-2 copies)
8. Campbell, Edna Fay, Victor L. Webb, and William L. Nida, the Old World Past and Present, 1937: Map, The French and Spanish Heritage (p. 161-2 copies)
9. Casey, Powell A., Louisiana in the War of 1812, 1963: A General Map of the Seat of War in Louisiana and West Florida, by Major A.
Lacarriere Latour (p. 108-2 copies); Latour’s Map of the Area of the Night Battle
of December 23 (p. 112-2 copies); Sketches of the Villere and de la Ronde Houses in
1860 (from Frost’s Pictorial History of the War of 1812) (p. 113-2 copies); Sketches
of the Lacoste and Macarty (Jackson Hqts.) Houses in 1860 (from Frost’s Pictorial
History of the War of 1812) (p. 114-2 copies); Latour’s Map Showing Area of Landing
of British Army Below New Orleans (p. 115-2 copies); Map of British Captain H. H.
Moorsam Showing American and British Positions Below New Orleans (from Cope’s History
of the Rifle Brigade) (p. 116-2 copies); Latour’s Map Showing British Attack on American
Lines on January 8, 1815 (p. 117-2 copies); The Left Portion of the Battlefield on
January 8 (from print in Cabildo by Hyacinthe Laclotte made in 1815) (p. 118-2 copies);
The Right Portion of the Battlefield on January 8 (from print in Cabildo by Hyacinthe
Laclotte made in 1815) (p. 119-2 copies)
10. Celeste, Sister Mary, The Origin and Growth of Our Republic, 1943: De Soto’s discovery of the Mississippi River (p. 41-2 copies); Sieur de Bienville
(p. 62-2 copies); Map, French possessions in the Mississippi valley, the upper Lakes
region, and central Canada (p. 169-2 copies); Map, North America in 1763 (p. 172);
Map, The United States in 1802 (p. 264-2 copies); The transfer of Louisiana to the
United States (p. 265-2 copies); Andrew Jackson, Engraving from a painting by Jarvis
(p. 298-2 copies); Map, The Confederacy (p. 487)
11. Chadsey, Charles E., Louis Weinberg, and Chester F. Miller, America in the Making, 1928-Exiled from Acadia (p. 202-2 copies)
12. Davis, Edwin Adams, Plantation Life in the Florida Parishes of Louisiana, 1836-1846, 1943: Train (p. 3); The Big House at Highland (p. 12a-2 copies); Making horseshoes
(p. 33); Wagon with Cotton (p. 37); Horses and buggy (p. 60); A party (p. 140)
13. Deiler, J. Hanno, The Settlement of the German Coast of Louisiana and The Creoles of German Descent, 1909: Map, The Principal Forts and Trading Posts of Louisiana, 18 th Century, by J. Hanno Deiler (7 copies)
14. Dimitry, John, Lessons in the History of Louisiana, 1877: De Soto’s March (Frontispiece-2 copies); The Battle of New Orleans (p. 102-2
copies); The City of New Orleans (p. 140-2 copies); Map of the State of Louisiana
(pp. 153 & 154-2 copies)
15. Dole, Helen B., Rustic Life in France, 1896 The Cooper (p. 106a-2 copies); The Spinners (p. 152-2 copies); Tree-Felling
(p. 200a-2 copies); The Floatage of Wood (p. 226a-2 copies)
16. Eggleston, Edward, The History of the United States and its People, 1914: French Country Man and French Country Woman of that Day (p. 68-2 copies);
Indian bottle of Pottery from Arkansas;; Indian agriculture; Indian Manner of Broiling
in 1585 (p. 74-2 copies); Cabin of Round Logs (p. 93-2 copies); Pack-Horses; A School
Scene in 1740. The Master and His Assistant Wear Hats (p. 95-2 copies); Kidnapping
a Man for the Colonies (p. 105-2 copies); La Salle; French Gentleman of the Time (p.
117-2 copies)
17. Estill, Harry F., The Beginner’s History of our Country, 1925: De Leon on the Florida Coast (p. 24-2 copies); De Soto Reaches the Mississippi
River (p. 26-2 copies); La Salle Claiming Louisiana for France (p. 107-2 copies);
Jefferson (p. 197-2 copies); Perry’s Victory on Lake Erie (p. 212-2 copies); The Battle
of New Orleans (p. 213-2 copies); General R. E. Lee (p. 271-2 copies)
18. Evans, Lawton, The Essential Facts of American History, 1917: De Soto having discovered the Mississippi in 1541 dies upon its banks one
year after, and is buried in its stream (p. 31-2 copies); New Orleans as it appeared
1719 (p. 130); The Acadians in Nova Scotia are driven from their homes on account
of their sympathy for the French (p. 148-2 copies)
19. Fant, Mabel B. and John C. Fant, History of Mississippi, 1925: The Common Dance of the Natchez (p. 12-2 copies); De Soto Discovers the Mississippi
River (p. 20-2 copies); La Salle at the Mouth of the Mississippi, 1682 (p. 28-2 copies);
First Fort at Biloxi (p. 34-2 copies); The Gulf Coast, Showing Points of Early Exploration
and Settlement (p. 37-2 copies); Fort Rosalie and Neighboring Settlements Showing
Indian Villages (p. 44-2 copies); The Battle of New Orleans (p. 112-2 copies)
20. Fortier, Alcée, Précis de L’Histoire de France, 1913: Louis XIV (pg. 82b-2 copies)
21. Gordy, Wilbur F., A History of the United States for Schools, 1907: French Soldiers and Officers of the Time of the French War (p. 95); An Ohio
River Flatboat (p. 219-2 copies); Map, Lewis and Clark’s Expedition through the Louisiana
Territory to the Pacific (1804-1806) (p. 221-2 copies); Old Plantation Days (p. 292-2
copies)
22. Greene, Francis Vinton, The Mississippi, 1898: Map, Operations in Louisiana, February to July 1863 (p. 212); Port Hudson,
1863 (p. 226)
23. Guitteau, William Backus, Our United States, A History, 1923: New Orleans in 1803 (p. 259-2 copies)
24. Kelsey, D. M., Our Pioneer Heroes and Their Daring Deeds, 1883: Discovery of the Mississippi (p. 40-2 copies); Indian Fleet Meeting De Soto
(p. 41-2 copies); Burial of De Soto (p. 44); Departure of the Spaniards (p. 45-2 copies);
Assassination of La Salle (p. 80-2 copies); Lafitte, The Pirate (p. 333-2 copies)
25. a) King, Grace and John R. Ficklen, A History of Louisiana, 1893: Cathedral, Jackson Square (Frontispiece-2 copies); Hernando De Soto (p. 5-2
copies); Map showing French settlements on the Gulf Coast and Mississippi River (p.
46-2 copies); Parish Map of Louisiana (p. 146a & b-2 copies); Cabildo (Supreme Court
Building) (p. 152-2 copies); Battle of New Orleans (p. 184-2 copies); Jackson’s Statue
(p. 190-2 copies); Court House in which Jackson was tried (p. 193-2 copies); Gov.
Thos. B. Robertson, Gov. Henry Johnson; Gov. E. D. White, Gov. Joseph Walker, Gov.
P. O. Hibert, Gov. R. C. Wickliffe, Gov. Thos. O. Moore (P. 209-2 copies); War Map
of Louisiana (p. 215-2 copies); Gov. Henry W. Allen (p. 234-2 copies); The Capitol
at B. R. (p. 246-2 copies); The Levee at New Orleans (p. 247-2 copies)
b) King, Grace and John R. Ficklen, Stories from Louisiana History, 1905: The St. Louis Cathedral, New Orleans (frontispiece-2 copies); Hernando De
Soto (p. 25-2 copies); A Quaint Old Picture of New Orleans in 1803 (p. 265-2 copies);
The Cabildo (p. 267-2 copies); Jean Lafitte (p. 280-2 copies)
26. Knowlton, Daniel C. and Mary Harden, Since We Became a Nation, 1934: New Orleans in the 1800, redrawn from an old print and New Orleans today (p.
186-2 copies); A Table of Events Showing Our Relations with Other Nations, 1789-1825
(p. 202); The Southern Confederacy, states included are shown by the diagonal lines,
the capitol was Richmond (p. 327-2 copies)
27. Lewis, Virgil A., The Story of the Louisiana Purchase, 1903: Map of United States Showing Extend and Boundary of the Louisiana Purchase
in 1903 (p. 19-2 copies); Map of the Island of Orleans (p. 125-2 copies)
28. McDermott, John Francis, The Spanish in the Mississippi Valley, 1974: Ursuline Chapel and Detail from “A View of New Orleans taken from the Opposite
Side of the Mississippi, 1765” (p. 256); Plan showing the part of New Orleans consumed
in the conflagration of Dec. 8, 1794 (p. 258); Plan of New Orleans in 1793 (p. 264-2
copies); The Plaza de Armas in 1803 (p. 254); Plan of New Orleans in 1803 (p. 267);
Santa Maria III at Anchor (p. 120); View
29. Mace, William H. and George Petrie, Elementary History, 1933: Hernado De Soto (p. 22-2 copies); De Soto Discovers the Mighty Mississippi
(p. 23-2 copies); French Fur Traders Bartering with the Indians (p. 81-2 copies);
La Salle at the Mouth of the Mississippi (p. 83-2 copies); Bienville (p. 84-2 copies);
Iberville (p. 85-2 copies); Thomas Jefferson (p. 191-2 copies); Andrew Jackson (p.
201-2 copies); The Battle of New Orleans (p. 204-2 copies)
30. Magruder, Harriet, A History of Louisiana, 1909: Map of Louisiana Showing Parishes and Principal Places (frontispiece-2 copies);
The Capitol at B. R. (p. viii-2 copies); Spanish Knight of 16 th Century (p. 4-2 copies); Spaniards Landing on the Gulf Coast (p. 5-2 copies); De
Soto’s Discovery of the Mississippi (p. 9-4 copies); La Salle at the Mouth of the
Mississippi (p. 21-2 copies); King Louis XIV (p. 59-2 copies); The Duke of Orleans
(p. 78-2 copies); New Orleans in 1719 (p. 80); Failure of Law’s Bank (p. 83); Old
Ursuline Convent (p. 90-2 copies); A View in Acadia (p. 129-2 copies); The Exile of
the Acadians (p. 130-2 copies); A Flatboat (p. 174-2 copies); An Early Street Lamp
(p. 180-2 copies); Baron Carondelet (p. 182-2 copies); Making Sugar from Sugar Cane
(p. 184-2 copies); The Place D’Armes (p. 210-2 copies); The Old Markets, New Orleans
(p. 223-2 copies); Zachary Taylor (p. 279-2 copies); P. G. T. Beauregard (p. 299-2
copies); Confederate Battle Flag (p. 309-2 copies); Henry W. Allen (p. 311-2 copies);
Jetties at the Mouth of the Mississippi River (p. 339-2 copies); “The Oaks” (p. 352-2
copies)
31. Marshall, Thomas M., American History, 1933: Map, North America in 1763 (p. 133-2 copies); The United States in 1802 (p.
244-2 copies); Map, The War of 1812 in the South and The Battle of New Orleans, General
Jackson is the man on the white horse (p. 265-2 copies)
32. Montgomery, D. H., The Leading Facts of American History, 1904: Map, De Soto’s Expedition, 1539-1542 (p. 29-2 copies); La Salle at the Mouth
of the Mississippi (p. 129-2 copies)
33. Mugnier, George François, edited with an introduction by John R. Kemp and Linda
Orr King, Louisiana Images, 1880-1920, 1975: Fishing Shacks on a Bayou, ca. 1895 and Shrimping, Bayou Castaign, ca. 1895
(p. 99-4 copies); Dock on the Lake, Lake Charles, Louisiana, ca. 1895 (4 copies);
Repairing a Crevasse, ca. 1920 (4 copies); St. John’s Church (4 copies)
34. Powers, Stephen, Afoot and Alone, 1872: Cotton Press, A Negro Village, Caves at Vicksburg (p. 80a-2 copies); The Bayou
Region, Live-Oak Grove (2 copies)
35. Report of the Secretary of State, 1902: Louisiana Institute for the Deaf ad Dumb; Hon. E. B. Kruttschnitt, President
Board School Directors, Orleans Parish; Southwestern Louisiana Industrial Institute,
Lafayette; Flag; Justice E. D. White; Discovery of Louisiana, Miscellaneous, Historical
(written material pp. 595-602); Railroads in Louisiana (written material p. 623);
Gen. Leon Jastremski (p. 665); Southern University, founded in New Orleans 1880, moved
to Scotlandville 1914 (p. 465); Levee Camp at Melville; Quarters at Angola; Cutting
Cane at Hope; Crowley High School; Main Building Charity Hospital; Memorial Hall;
Monroe High School; Soldiers’ Home
36. Robinson, James Harvey and Emma Peters Smith, and James Henry Breasted, Our World Today and Yesterday, 1924: Court Scene at Versailles (p. 277-2 copies); Louis XIV (p. 497-2 copies);
Napoleon (p. 609-2 copies)
37. The St. Louis Cathedral and its Neighbors, A publication of the Louisiana State Museum, October 10, 1938: St. Louis Cathedral
(frontispiece); Residence at the time of his death of Huey Pierce Long (p. 14-2 copies);
Third Church (p. 21-2 copies)
38. Schlarman, J. H., From Quebec to New Orleans, 1929: Louis XIV, King of France (p. 32a-2 copies); John Law, Founder of the Mississippi
Company (p. 160b-2 copies); Acadia (p. 304b-2 copies); Deportation of the Acadians
by Order of Charles Lawrence, Governor of Nova Scotia. Evangeline and Her Father in
the Foreground (p. 320a-2 copies)
39. Scroggs, William O., The Story of Louisiana, 1924: The [old] State Capitol at Baton Rouge (frontispiece-2 copies); La Salle’s
Expedition Landing at Matagorda Bay (p. 24-2 copies); New Orleans in 1719 (p. 62);
A Choctaw Indian Village (p. 63-2 copies); Jackson Square, New Orleans (p. 170-2 copies)
40. Steele, Joel Dorman and Esther Baker Steele, Brief History of the United States, 1900: Burial of De Soto (p. 28-2 copies); La Salle at the Mouth of the Mississippi
(p. 34-2 copies); Battle of New Orleans (p. 170-2 copies)
41. Story of Our Country: The Burial of De Soto (p. 43-2 copies); French Gentleman and Lady (p. 129)
42. Street, Julian, American Adventures, 1917: Courtyard of the old Orleans Hotel (p. 640); The Mysterious old Absinthe House,
founded 1799 (p. 620)
43. Thompson, Maurice, The Story of Louisiana, 1888: Packenham’s Charge (frontispiece -2 copies); La Salle Displays the Arms of
France (p. 17-2 copies); Bienville Building Fort Rosalie (p. 41-2 copies); Laying
Out New Orleans (p. 55-2 copies); The Last Reed (p. 67-2 copies); A Primitive Sugar
Mill (p. 93-2 copies); Lafreniere’s Appeal to the Council (p. 105-2 copies); The Death
of Villiere (p. 119-2 copies); Filles a La Cassette (p. 167-2 copies); Jackson’s Sharp-Shooters
(p. 221-2 copies); By the Old Quarters (p. 288-2 copies); On the Levee (p. 297-2 copies)
44. Welles, Sumner, An Intelligent American’s Guide to the Peace, 1945: Map of France (p. 41)
45. Williams, W., Appleton’s United States Guide Book, 1853: Drawing of New Orleans (p. 12-2 copies) and map of the Mississippi River from
Princeton to the Gulf of Mexico; Map of the Mississippi from Memphis to Princeton
46. Wilson, Woodrow (President of the United States), A History of the American People, 1918: Old Court House, New Orleans (p. 53-2 copies); Robert R. Livingston (p. 67);
Jackson’s Headquarters, New Orleans (p. 105-2 copies); In the American Trenches, Battle
of New Orleans (p. 112-2 copies); The Old Cabildo of New Orleans (p. 296-2 copies);
Napoleon Bonaparte at the Time he was first Consul (p. 297-2 copies); Jean Baptiste
Le Moyne Bienville (p. 301-2 copies); Pierre Le Moyne D’Iberville (p. 302-2 copies);
Commissioners at Ghent (p. 111); The Old Cabildo of New Orleans (p. 296); Uniform
of a Marine, War of 1812 (p. 324); Uniform of a Sailor, War of 1812 (p. 323); The
Capitol During Madison’s Administration (p. 24); Western Cooking Utensils (p. 88);
Aaron Burr; Typical Privateer of the War of 1812 (p. 321); Montpelier, Virginia, The
Home of Madison; Eli Whitney (p. 51); Robert R. Livingston (p. 67); Jackson’s Headquarters,
New Orleans (p. 105); Early View of Washington City (p. 72); The White House in 1814,
South Front (p. 364); Monticello, Thomas Jefferson’s Residence (p. 91)
The following illustrations are pages from the original book:
John Quincy Adams (p. 84); Uniform of a Captain, War of 1812 (p. 325); Hamilton’s
Residence, The Grance (p. 70); Tremont Street, Boston, 1800, looking South (p. 94);
Cincinnati in 1810, from Howe’s History of Ohio (p. 93); A Mail Carrier in the Eighteenth
Century (p. 13); Andrew Jackson’s Forrest Residence (p. 174); James Monroe (facing
p. 376); House in which James Monroe Died, July 4, 1831; John Quincy Adams (p. 13);
The White House in the Time of Madison; Mrs. James Madison (p. 342); Cincinnati from
New port in 1812 (p. 95); The Capitol at Washington, 1804 (p. 145); In the American
Trenches, Battle of New Orleans (p. 112); House of American
47. a) Wirth, Fremont P., The Development of America, 1949: Travel on a corduroy road; a stagecoach of early days and an ox-drawn wagon
(p. 257); A Frontier Wedding (p. 308-2 copies); The War Between the States (pp. 386
& 387-2 copies); An early pioneer’s home (p. 498-2 copies); Changing Styles of Dress,
1900-1936 (pp. 690 & 691-2 copies)
b) Wirth, Fremont P., United States History, 1949: Map, The Louisiana Purchase and Other Territorial Acquisitions of the United
States, 1783-1853 (p. 142-2 copies); Signing purchase papers in France (p. 143-2 copies);
Confederate soldier viewing home destruction (p. 254-2 copies); Destruction of Southern
plantation (p. 255-2 copies)
48. a) Woodburn, James Albert and Thomas Francis Moran, Elementary American History and Government, 1931: Topical Outline for the Blackboard (pp. xxvi and xxvii); A Plow and Yoke of
the Early Days (p. 2-2 copies); Discovery of the Mississippi by De Soto (p. 24-2 copies);
French Explorations and Old French Trading Posts (p. 48-2 copies); LaSalle at the
Mouth of the Mississippi (p. 49-2 copies); A Clearing in the Wilderness About 1770
(p. 84-2 copies); Map, North America 1750 (p. 92-2 copies); The Battle of New Orleans
(p. 240-2 copies); Eli Whitney’s Cotton Gin Contrasted with a Modern Machine and Modern
Cotton Gin (p. 260-2 copies); A Flatboat on the Mississippi River (p. 272-2 copies);
Map, Slave and Free States after the Kansas-Nebraska Bill 1854 (p. 320-2 copies)
b) Woodburn, James Albert and Thomas Francis Moran, Introduction to American History, 1929: The Route of De Soto’s Expedition (p. 241-2 copies); Making Fire (p. 321-2
copies); Eli Whitney’s Cotton Gin Somewhat Enlarged (p. 338-2 copies); Early Motor
Car (p. 342-2 copies)
49. Forbes, An Artists Study of the Great War
50. Harper’s Weekly (83 pages of 1860s paper)
51. Harper’s Pictorial History of the Civil War (30 pages from book)
52. Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper (74 pages of 1860s paper)