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Photography had
a tremendous
impact on
American society
over the course
of the Civil War
and beyond. Yet, it was not a new
technology. By the time of the
American Civil War photography had
been through several evolution.

President Lincoln and Gen. George B. McClellan, Antietam MD; Library of Congress

Civil War Preservation Trust
www.civilwar.org
Prior to the development of photography, Americans observed war through the
medium of paintings and lithographs.

The Death of General Warren at the Battle of Bunker’s Hill
John Trumbull, 1786; Yale University Gallery
www.the-athenaeum.org

Civil War Preservation Trust
www.civilwar.org
With photography, Americans witnessed the reality of war for the first time.

Unburied Confederate Soldier
Antietam, Sept. 1862, Photography by Alexander Gardner;
Library of Congress

Civil War Preservation Trust
www.civilwar.org
Photography got its start in the early nineteenth century.
• The daguerreotype was the first
functional photography and became
popular in the United States shortly
after its invention by Louis Daguerre.
• The collodion process, also
known as the wet plate process,
was developed in 1851 and was
extremely important because it
allowed the duplication of images.
• With the development of the wet
plate process, several other forms of
photography came about, including
ambrotypes and tintypes.
• Stereo view images could be
created as daguerreotypes, but their
real popularity was stimulated by the
reproductive abilities of the wet plate
process.

Louis Jacques Mandé Daguerre,
Inventor of the Daguerreotype
Library of Congress

Civil War Preservation Trust
www.civilwar.org
Daguerreotype
The Daguerreotype
was invented in 1839
by Frenchman Louis
Daguerre and was the
first practical form of
photography.It created
an image on silverplated copper and
required about 15
minutes of exposure
time. The image was
one-of-a-kind, which
meant that no
reproductions could be
made. Although less
expensive to have
made than a portrait,
daguerreotypes were
not affordable for all
Americans.

United States Capitol
Washington D.C., 1846
Library of Congress
Civil War Preservation Trust
www.civilwar.org
Occupational Portrait of Unidentified Woman, Library of Congress

Daguerreotypes were stored in a case like this one
because they were very thin and delicate.
Civil War Preservation Trust
www.civilwar.org
The earliest known portraits of Abraham and Mary
Lincoln were daguerreotypes taken in 1846 or 1847.
Library of Congress

Civil War Preservation Trust
www.civilwar.org
The world’s first
known
photographs of
war were
daguerreotypes
taken of the
MexicanAmerican War in
late 1846 or
early 1847.
Winfield Scott, c1849;
Photograph by Mathew Brady,
Library of Congress
Civil War Preservation Trust
www.civilwar.org
Sarony, Mexico, c1847
The Mexican Army evacuating Vera Cruz and surrendering their arms to the
U.S. Army under General Winfield Scott.

An unknown
cameraman from
Texas photographed
scenes of camp life
at Saltillo Mexico
during the war.
Unfortunately,
because they were
daguerreotypes,
those images were
not reproducible.
Therefore, they were
not viewed by the
general public until
the mid twentieth
century. This
lithograph, printed
in 1847, is an
example of how the
war was depicted to
the public.

Library of Congress
Civil War Preservation Trust
www.civilwar.org
There were further developments in photography in 1851 with the invention of the
collodion process, also known as wet-plate photography. Collodion is a
chemical mixture used to coat a plate of glass or iron, sensitizing it to light. Once
coated with collodion, the plate could then be used to create an image. The wet
plate process remained the most advanced photographic technology until after the
Civil War and was used by Civil War photographers. Click here to view demonstration

Developing plate glass image; Courtesy of Garry Adelman,
Center for Civil War Photography

Civil War Preservation Trust
www.civilwar.org
The most
significant
aspect of the
invention of the
collodion
processes was
the fact that it
could produce a
negative image
capable of
reproduction.
Now images
could be copied
and sold
nationwide.

22nd New York State Militia, Harpers Ferry, Va., 1861; Library of Congress

Civil War Preservation Trust
www.civilwar.org
Ambrotypes were
pictures taken on glass
using the collodion
process. They became
popular in the mid 1850s
because they were
cheaper and more
convenient to produce
than daguerreotypes.
The glass of the
ambrotype was also less
easily damaged than the
thin copper plate of the
daguerreotype and its
exposure time was
between two and 12
seconds.

Ambrotype

Ambrotype of African American black soldier; Library of Congress

Civil War Preservation Trust
www.civilwar.org
The first images of war to be
viewed by the public were
taken in 1855 during the
Crimean War by Roger Fenton
and James Robertson.
The town of Balaklava; Photograph by Roger Fenton;
Library of Congress

Colonel Brownrigg C.B. and two Russian boys, Alma & Inkermann;
Photograph by Roger Fenton; Library of Congress

Men of the 68th Regiment; Photograph by Roger Fenton; Library of Congress
Mortar Battery outside Sebastopol
Photography by Roger Fenton; Library of Congress

Artillery wagons, view looking toward Balaclava; Photography by Roger
Fenton; Library of Congress

Because they were created using the newly
developed collodion process, Robertson’s
images were reprinted. Copies were brought
back to the United States by a military
commission sent to observe the Crimean War,
which included future Union General George B.
McClellan. The images were the first to be
used as a direct source of military intelligence,
including such things as the analysis of gun
placements.

Mortar batteries in front of the picket house of the Light Division at the
Siege of Sebastopol; Photograph by Roger Fenton; Library of
Congress
Civil War Preservation Trust
www.civilwar.org
T
i
n
t
y
p
e

Ruben Farwell (right) and an unidentified man; Library of Congress

Tintypes used the same collodion process but were made on iron
plates, making them very durable and inexpensive. Most Civil War
soldiers had their pictures taken on tintypes because they typically
cost less than 25 cents and their durability made them easy to
transport.

Civil War Preservation Trust
www.civilwar.org
S
T
E
R
E
O
Yorktown, Va. Confederate fortifications; Library of Congress

Twin lens camera; Courtesy of Garry Adelman,
Center for Civil War Photography

Stereo photographs are a kind of ambrotype.
Today, one might identify them as a 3-D image. To
create a stereo view image a twin-lens camera was
used to capture the same image from two separate
lenses, in much the same way that two human eyes
capture the same image from slightly different
angles on the head. The images were developed
using the same wet-plate process, but stereoscopic
photography produced two of the same image on
one plate glass, like the one above. Most battlefield
and camp pictures were taken in this format.
Civil War Preservation Trust
www.civilwar.org
Sir Charles Wheatstone, Library of Congress

Stereoscope with stereo view card, © Peter Stubbs. www.edinphoto.org.uk

Physicist Sir Charles
Wheatstone discovered
stereoscopic vision in 1838
and invented a stereoscope
with which to view 3D
images. Combining this idea
with the collodion process,
which allowed for the
reproduction of images,
negatives could be used to
produce stereo cards, seen
here with the stereoscope
viewer. This technology was
reproducible and by 1854
had become very popular
nationwide.
Civil War Preservation Trust
www.civilwar.org
While most Americans
were familiar with
photographs before the
outbreak of war, there
were no photos that
depicted a battlefield
immediately following a
battle. Felice Beato was
the first to take pictures
of dead soldiers in 1860
during the Second
Opium War between
Anglo-French forces and
the Chinese. Although
they were the first, like
the Saltillo images, they
remained obscure until
the late twentieth
century.

Partial view of the ruins of a Chinese fort
shortly after it was captured
China August 21, 1860.
Art Icono.http//:phomul.canalblog.com/archives

Civil War Preservation Trust
www.civilwar.org
Considered a watershed
moment in history,
images taken during the
American Civil War were
the first to be distributed
to a large public audience
and many graphically
depicted dead soldiers
following battle. Unlike
the Crimean War, for
which there were only two
photographers, dozens of
photographers and
assistants followed each
army during the Civil War,
and several of these
professionals, including
Mathew Brady, attempted
to completely document
the war in images,
beginning a new genre of
documentation:
photojournalism.

Alexander Gardner began
as Brady’s assistant, but
went on to take the first
pictures of the Gettysburg
battlefield for his own studio;
Library of Congress

Mathew Brady took over
10,000 photographs of the
Civil War including the First
Battle of Manassas, during
which he was lost behind
enemy lines; Library of Congress
Civil War Preservation Trust
www.civilwar.org
The wet-plate photographic process was very challenging in a photography
studio, but completing the procedure while working out of a horse-drawn, portable
studio was even more difficult. Each professional photographer typically had one
to three assistants who aided in the creation of an image, which included the
production of collodion from scratch using raw materials such as ethyl ether,
sulfuric acid, and silver nitrate.

Wagons and Camera Equipment of Southern
Photographer Sam Cooley; Library of Congress

Photographer's wagon and tent

Cold Harbor, VA Library of Congress
Civil War Preservation Trust
www.civilwar.org
Advancements in
photography proved to
be immensely
important. The ability
to the reproduce
images allowed for
distribution to a wide
audience, bringing the
horrors of war to the
home front. These
realistic images of
war, brought directly
into American
households for the
first time, forever
altered society’s view
of war.
Deceased Confederate Soldier
Petersburg April 3, 1865;
Library of Congress
Civil War Preservation Trust
www.civilwar.org
Perhaps the best example of this can be found
in a New York Times article from October 20,
1862, one month after the battle of Antietam.
An unknown author addresses society’s
experience with war both before and after the
introduction of photographs.

This image of dead confederate soldiers was taken in
September 1862 and appeared in Brady’s New York
exhibit Dead at Antietam;
Library of Congress

“The living that throng Broadway care
little perhaps for the Dead at Antietam,
but we fancy they would jostle less
carelessly down the great
thoroughfare, saunter less at their ease,
were a few dripping bodies, fresh from
the field, laid along the
pavement….As it is, the dead of the
battle-field come up to us very rarely,
even in dreams. We see the list in the
morning paper at breakfast, but
dismiss its recollection with the
coffee….There is nothing very terrible
to us, however, in the list, though our
sensations might be different if the
newspaper carrier left the names on
the battle-field and the bodies at our
doors instead….
Mr. Brady has done something to
bring home to us the terrible reality
and earnestness of war. If he has not
brought bodies and laid them in our
door-yards and along the streets, he
has done something very like it.”
(italics added)
Dead Confederate sharpshooter at foot of Little Round Top
Gettysburg July 1863; Library of Congress
Sharpshooters, 18th Corp, Alfred Waud August 6, 1864; Library of Congress

Like photographers, Civil War artists traveled with the army, documenting images
of war. While both of these images depict sharpshooters, the realism of the
photograph is accentuated when placed next to the sketch. Done by artist Alfred
Waud, the sketch represents the format through which Americans were used to
viewing images of war. The sketch is entitled Sharpshooters 18th Corps and was
published in Harper’s Weekly. The photograph, taken by Alexander Gardner at
Gettysburg, is entitled The Home of a Rebel Sharpshooter and has come to be one
of the most recognizable photographs of the Civil War.
Civil War Preservation Trust
www.civilwar.org
Because of these advancements in photography, the Civil
War became a true watershed in the history of
photography. While pictures were taken of other wars, the
iconic photos of the American Civil War would directly
affect how war was viewed from the home front, and
inspire future combat photographers who would take their
cameras to the trenches of Flanders…
Confederate dead at Corinth, Mississippi, 1862;
Library of Congress

the black sands
of Iwo Jima...

A French assault on German positions. Champagne, France,
1917; National Archives
Marines land on Iwo Jima, 1945; Library of Congress

the
steaming
jungles of
Vietnam…

and the
mountains of
Afghanistan…
Helicopter drops soldiers, Vietnam 1959; U.S.
Army www. army.mil/images

Kunar Province, Afghanistan; U.S. Army www.army.mil

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Civil war-photography-slide-1

  • 1. Photography had a tremendous impact on American society over the course of the Civil War and beyond. Yet, it was not a new technology. By the time of the American Civil War photography had been through several evolution. President Lincoln and Gen. George B. McClellan, Antietam MD; Library of Congress Civil War Preservation Trust www.civilwar.org
  • 2. Prior to the development of photography, Americans observed war through the medium of paintings and lithographs. The Death of General Warren at the Battle of Bunker’s Hill John Trumbull, 1786; Yale University Gallery www.the-athenaeum.org Civil War Preservation Trust www.civilwar.org
  • 3. With photography, Americans witnessed the reality of war for the first time. Unburied Confederate Soldier Antietam, Sept. 1862, Photography by Alexander Gardner; Library of Congress Civil War Preservation Trust www.civilwar.org
  • 4. Photography got its start in the early nineteenth century. • The daguerreotype was the first functional photography and became popular in the United States shortly after its invention by Louis Daguerre. • The collodion process, also known as the wet plate process, was developed in 1851 and was extremely important because it allowed the duplication of images. • With the development of the wet plate process, several other forms of photography came about, including ambrotypes and tintypes. • Stereo view images could be created as daguerreotypes, but their real popularity was stimulated by the reproductive abilities of the wet plate process. Louis Jacques Mandé Daguerre, Inventor of the Daguerreotype Library of Congress Civil War Preservation Trust www.civilwar.org
  • 5. Daguerreotype The Daguerreotype was invented in 1839 by Frenchman Louis Daguerre and was the first practical form of photography.It created an image on silverplated copper and required about 15 minutes of exposure time. The image was one-of-a-kind, which meant that no reproductions could be made. Although less expensive to have made than a portrait, daguerreotypes were not affordable for all Americans. United States Capitol Washington D.C., 1846 Library of Congress Civil War Preservation Trust www.civilwar.org
  • 6. Occupational Portrait of Unidentified Woman, Library of Congress Daguerreotypes were stored in a case like this one because they were very thin and delicate. Civil War Preservation Trust www.civilwar.org
  • 7. The earliest known portraits of Abraham and Mary Lincoln were daguerreotypes taken in 1846 or 1847. Library of Congress Civil War Preservation Trust www.civilwar.org
  • 8. The world’s first known photographs of war were daguerreotypes taken of the MexicanAmerican War in late 1846 or early 1847. Winfield Scott, c1849; Photograph by Mathew Brady, Library of Congress Civil War Preservation Trust www.civilwar.org
  • 9. Sarony, Mexico, c1847 The Mexican Army evacuating Vera Cruz and surrendering their arms to the U.S. Army under General Winfield Scott. An unknown cameraman from Texas photographed scenes of camp life at Saltillo Mexico during the war. Unfortunately, because they were daguerreotypes, those images were not reproducible. Therefore, they were not viewed by the general public until the mid twentieth century. This lithograph, printed in 1847, is an example of how the war was depicted to the public. Library of Congress Civil War Preservation Trust www.civilwar.org
  • 10. There were further developments in photography in 1851 with the invention of the collodion process, also known as wet-plate photography. Collodion is a chemical mixture used to coat a plate of glass or iron, sensitizing it to light. Once coated with collodion, the plate could then be used to create an image. The wet plate process remained the most advanced photographic technology until after the Civil War and was used by Civil War photographers. Click here to view demonstration Developing plate glass image; Courtesy of Garry Adelman, Center for Civil War Photography Civil War Preservation Trust www.civilwar.org
  • 11. The most significant aspect of the invention of the collodion processes was the fact that it could produce a negative image capable of reproduction. Now images could be copied and sold nationwide. 22nd New York State Militia, Harpers Ferry, Va., 1861; Library of Congress Civil War Preservation Trust www.civilwar.org
  • 12. Ambrotypes were pictures taken on glass using the collodion process. They became popular in the mid 1850s because they were cheaper and more convenient to produce than daguerreotypes. The glass of the ambrotype was also less easily damaged than the thin copper plate of the daguerreotype and its exposure time was between two and 12 seconds. Ambrotype Ambrotype of African American black soldier; Library of Congress Civil War Preservation Trust www.civilwar.org
  • 13. The first images of war to be viewed by the public were taken in 1855 during the Crimean War by Roger Fenton and James Robertson. The town of Balaklava; Photograph by Roger Fenton; Library of Congress Colonel Brownrigg C.B. and two Russian boys, Alma & Inkermann; Photograph by Roger Fenton; Library of Congress Men of the 68th Regiment; Photograph by Roger Fenton; Library of Congress
  • 14. Mortar Battery outside Sebastopol Photography by Roger Fenton; Library of Congress Artillery wagons, view looking toward Balaclava; Photography by Roger Fenton; Library of Congress Because they were created using the newly developed collodion process, Robertson’s images were reprinted. Copies were brought back to the United States by a military commission sent to observe the Crimean War, which included future Union General George B. McClellan. The images were the first to be used as a direct source of military intelligence, including such things as the analysis of gun placements. Mortar batteries in front of the picket house of the Light Division at the Siege of Sebastopol; Photograph by Roger Fenton; Library of Congress Civil War Preservation Trust www.civilwar.org
  • 15. T i n t y p e Ruben Farwell (right) and an unidentified man; Library of Congress Tintypes used the same collodion process but were made on iron plates, making them very durable and inexpensive. Most Civil War soldiers had their pictures taken on tintypes because they typically cost less than 25 cents and their durability made them easy to transport. Civil War Preservation Trust www.civilwar.org
  • 16. S T E R E O Yorktown, Va. Confederate fortifications; Library of Congress Twin lens camera; Courtesy of Garry Adelman, Center for Civil War Photography Stereo photographs are a kind of ambrotype. Today, one might identify them as a 3-D image. To create a stereo view image a twin-lens camera was used to capture the same image from two separate lenses, in much the same way that two human eyes capture the same image from slightly different angles on the head. The images were developed using the same wet-plate process, but stereoscopic photography produced two of the same image on one plate glass, like the one above. Most battlefield and camp pictures were taken in this format. Civil War Preservation Trust www.civilwar.org
  • 17. Sir Charles Wheatstone, Library of Congress Stereoscope with stereo view card, © Peter Stubbs. www.edinphoto.org.uk Physicist Sir Charles Wheatstone discovered stereoscopic vision in 1838 and invented a stereoscope with which to view 3D images. Combining this idea with the collodion process, which allowed for the reproduction of images, negatives could be used to produce stereo cards, seen here with the stereoscope viewer. This technology was reproducible and by 1854 had become very popular nationwide. Civil War Preservation Trust www.civilwar.org
  • 18. While most Americans were familiar with photographs before the outbreak of war, there were no photos that depicted a battlefield immediately following a battle. Felice Beato was the first to take pictures of dead soldiers in 1860 during the Second Opium War between Anglo-French forces and the Chinese. Although they were the first, like the Saltillo images, they remained obscure until the late twentieth century. Partial view of the ruins of a Chinese fort shortly after it was captured China August 21, 1860. Art Icono.http//:phomul.canalblog.com/archives Civil War Preservation Trust www.civilwar.org
  • 19. Considered a watershed moment in history, images taken during the American Civil War were the first to be distributed to a large public audience and many graphically depicted dead soldiers following battle. Unlike the Crimean War, for which there were only two photographers, dozens of photographers and assistants followed each army during the Civil War, and several of these professionals, including Mathew Brady, attempted to completely document the war in images, beginning a new genre of documentation: photojournalism. Alexander Gardner began as Brady’s assistant, but went on to take the first pictures of the Gettysburg battlefield for his own studio; Library of Congress Mathew Brady took over 10,000 photographs of the Civil War including the First Battle of Manassas, during which he was lost behind enemy lines; Library of Congress Civil War Preservation Trust www.civilwar.org
  • 20. The wet-plate photographic process was very challenging in a photography studio, but completing the procedure while working out of a horse-drawn, portable studio was even more difficult. Each professional photographer typically had one to three assistants who aided in the creation of an image, which included the production of collodion from scratch using raw materials such as ethyl ether, sulfuric acid, and silver nitrate. Wagons and Camera Equipment of Southern Photographer Sam Cooley; Library of Congress Photographer's wagon and tent Cold Harbor, VA Library of Congress Civil War Preservation Trust www.civilwar.org
  • 21. Advancements in photography proved to be immensely important. The ability to the reproduce images allowed for distribution to a wide audience, bringing the horrors of war to the home front. These realistic images of war, brought directly into American households for the first time, forever altered society’s view of war. Deceased Confederate Soldier Petersburg April 3, 1865; Library of Congress Civil War Preservation Trust www.civilwar.org
  • 22. Perhaps the best example of this can be found in a New York Times article from October 20, 1862, one month after the battle of Antietam. An unknown author addresses society’s experience with war both before and after the introduction of photographs. This image of dead confederate soldiers was taken in September 1862 and appeared in Brady’s New York exhibit Dead at Antietam; Library of Congress “The living that throng Broadway care little perhaps for the Dead at Antietam, but we fancy they would jostle less carelessly down the great thoroughfare, saunter less at their ease, were a few dripping bodies, fresh from the field, laid along the pavement….As it is, the dead of the battle-field come up to us very rarely, even in dreams. We see the list in the morning paper at breakfast, but dismiss its recollection with the coffee….There is nothing very terrible to us, however, in the list, though our sensations might be different if the newspaper carrier left the names on the battle-field and the bodies at our doors instead…. Mr. Brady has done something to bring home to us the terrible reality and earnestness of war. If he has not brought bodies and laid them in our door-yards and along the streets, he has done something very like it.” (italics added)
  • 23. Dead Confederate sharpshooter at foot of Little Round Top Gettysburg July 1863; Library of Congress Sharpshooters, 18th Corp, Alfred Waud August 6, 1864; Library of Congress Like photographers, Civil War artists traveled with the army, documenting images of war. While both of these images depict sharpshooters, the realism of the photograph is accentuated when placed next to the sketch. Done by artist Alfred Waud, the sketch represents the format through which Americans were used to viewing images of war. The sketch is entitled Sharpshooters 18th Corps and was published in Harper’s Weekly. The photograph, taken by Alexander Gardner at Gettysburg, is entitled The Home of a Rebel Sharpshooter and has come to be one of the most recognizable photographs of the Civil War. Civil War Preservation Trust www.civilwar.org
  • 24. Because of these advancements in photography, the Civil War became a true watershed in the history of photography. While pictures were taken of other wars, the iconic photos of the American Civil War would directly affect how war was viewed from the home front, and inspire future combat photographers who would take their cameras to the trenches of Flanders… Confederate dead at Corinth, Mississippi, 1862; Library of Congress the black sands of Iwo Jima... A French assault on German positions. Champagne, France, 1917; National Archives Marines land on Iwo Jima, 1945; Library of Congress the steaming jungles of Vietnam… and the mountains of Afghanistan… Helicopter drops soldiers, Vietnam 1959; U.S. Army www. army.mil/images Kunar Province, Afghanistan; U.S. Army www.army.mil

Hinweis der Redaktion

  1. It is worth noting the actual title of this image: Antietam, Maryland. Federal buried, Confederate unburied, where they fell. You may find it opportune to discuss the subject matter a photographer chose to capture. Here, Alexander Gardner, a Union photographer, chose to capture an image of an unburied Confederate soldier, who is lying where he fell. The caption also indicates that the grave immediately behind the Confederate was that of a Federal soldier, who was buried.
  2. The images of the Mexican-American War have only come to light within the last 80 years. They are not available to the general public and did not have a tremendous impact on the development of photography.
  3. The images from the Mexican-American War were privately commissioned for an American officer. Only one example of a lithograph created from a daguerreotype exists today.
  4. -First, collodion was used to coat the plate glass in order to sensitize it to light. -In the portable darkroom, the plate was then immersed in silver nitrate, placed in a light-tight container, and inserted into the camera. -Next, the photograph was taken by removing the cap on the camera for two to twelve seconds, exposing it to light and imprinting the image on the plate. -Replacing the cap, the photographer immediately took the plate, still in the light-tight container, back to his portable darkroom, where he developed it in a solution of pyrogallic acid. -A mixture of sodium thiosulfate fixed the photograph so that the image would not fade. -After washing and drying the plate with water, the photographer coated it with a varnish to protect the surface.
  5. The Crimean War was one of several other wars photographed throughout Europe and Asia during the 1850s: Second Sikh War in India 1848-1849, by British army surgeon John MacCosh Second Burma War 1852-1853, also MacCosh War between the Turks and Russians in the Balkans in 1854, taken by Romanian Karl Baptist von Szathmari Sepoy Mutiny in India, 1857-1859, taken by Felice Beato, naturalized Englishman of Italian birth Second Opium War in China 1860, also by Beato. These represent the first images of a battlefield immediately after battle. Franco-Austrian Was in Melegano, Italy 1859. These images do not exist any longer. Oliver Wendell Holmes Sr. makes reference to them in his writings
  6. Balaklava is the site of the famous “Charge of the Light Brigade” written about by Alfred Lord Tennyson
  7. Tintypes were made in all sizes from gem sized
  8. See http://www.civilwar.org/photos/3d-photography-special/ for 3D images
  9. See CWPT’s 3D photography page at http://www.civilwar.org/photos/3d-photography-special/
  10. Discuss the outrage of the American public after the incident in Somalia.
  11. It is generally accepted, and worth noting, that the apparent haphazard way in which the body is sprawled was staged for a more dramatic photograph by Alexander Gardner. A Clipping from Confederate Veterans, v. 33, which was glued to back of mount of the original photograph, identifies the soldier as Andrew Johnston Hoge.