lhboudreau: Inauguration of Abraham Lincoln (March 4, 1861)
lhboudreau: President Lincoln delivering his second inaugural address. Washington, D.C., March 4, 1865
lhboudreau: Patent Office Building As It Looked in 1865
lhboudreau: Sleeping Bunks of the First Rhode Island Regiment at the U. S. Patent Office (1861). Accommodations for Union soldiers during the Civil War
lhboudreau: Martin R. Delany (1812-1885), First Black Major in Union Army
lhboudreau: Slave/Body Servant with Confederate Captain (c. 1862-65)
lhboudreau: Emancipated Slaves (1863)
lhboudreau: Sojourner Truth (c. 1797-1883). Portrait from the Mathew Brady Studio (c. 1864).
lhboudreau: Sojourner Truth (c. 1797-1883)
lhboudreau: “With a Rebel Yell” by Mort Kunstler. Battle of Gettysburg.
lhboudreau: Storming Fort Wagner on July 18, 1863
lhboudreau: Abraham, Who Was Blown to Freedom During Siege of Vicksburg
lhboudreau: Antidraft Riots in New York City on July 12, 1863
lhboudreau: Union Army Recruiting Poster (1864)
lhboudreau: First Louisiana Native Guards (1863) Composed of Free Black Recruits
lhboudreau: Page From Harper's Weekly, Independence Day, 1863
lhboudreau: Gordon, Escaped Slave From Louisiana Plantation (1863)
lhboudreau: Frederick Douglass (1818-1895)
lhboudreau: Wood Engraving of Emancipation Proclamation (1864)
lhboudreau: "Emancipation Proclamation" by Gilman R. Russell. Lithograph, 1865
lhboudreau: "Freedom to the Slaves" by Currier & Ives, after Anthony Berger. Lithograph (c. 1864-65)
lhboudreau: Fugitive Slaves Arrive at Fort Monroe, Virginia (1861)
lhboudreau: Lincoln in Richmond, April 4, 1865
lhboudreau: “Harper’s Weekly,” April 29, 1865. Lincoln Assassination Issue with John Wilkes Booth on the front page.
lhboudreau: Inside Ford’s Theatre in the Lincoln Assassination Issue of “Harper’s Weekly,” April 29, 1865.
lhboudreau: “Harper’s Weekly,” April 29, 1865. With a two-page illustration expressing the profound sadness over President Lincoln’s death.
lhboudreau: “Harper’s Weekly,” April 29, 1865. Including final military actions in the American Civil War
lhboudreau: "Union & Liberty Forever: Reconstruction of the South" by J. L. Giles, after Horatio Bateman. Lithograph, 1867
lhboudreau: South Carolina Secedes on December 20, 1860
lhboudreau: African American Union Soldier (1863)