DC -- GWU -- Museum and Textile Museum -- Exhibit: Civil War & Making of Modern Washington:
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Description of Pictures: The Civil War and the Making of Modern Washington
March 21–October 15, 2015
Washington, D.C. underwent remarkable changes, both physically and politically, as a result of the American Civil War. The Civil War and the Making of Modern Washington examines the city’s transformations from the beginning of the war to Reconstruction through maps, prints, and illustrations of the federal buildings, barracks, hospitals, hotels, and markets constructed to accommodate a ballooning population. The exhibition also explores Washington’s role as a laboratory for social and political changes during this transformative period in American history.
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Copyrights: All pictures were taken by amateur photographer Bruce Guthrie (me!) who retains copyright on them. Free for non-commercial use with attribution. See the [Creative Commons] definition of what this means. "Photos (c) Bruce Guthrie" is fine for attribution. (Commercial use folks including AI scrapers can of course contact me.) Feel free to use in publications and pages with attribution but you don't have permission to sell the photos themselves. A free copy of any printed publication using any photographs is requested. Descriptive text, if any, is from a mixture of sources, quite frequently from signs at the location or from official web sites; copyrights, if any, are retained by their original owners.
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Specific picture descriptions: Photos above with "i" icons next to the bracketed sequence numbers (e.g. "[1] ") are described as follows:
GWMMAK_150418_001.JPG: The Civil War & The Making of Modern Washington
GWMMAK_150418_004.JPG: The Civil War and the Making of Modern Washington
GWMMAK_150418_010.JPG: Capitol during President Abraham Lincoln's Inauguration, 1861
photomontage by Sydney Katz, 2014
GWMMAK_150418_018.JPG: Washington Before the War
GWMMAK_150418_025.JPG: $100 Reward
1857
GWMMAK_150418_033.JPG: William Slade
1814-1868
GWMMAK_150418_041.JPG: Racial and Ethnic Divisions
GWMMAK_150418_054.JPG: The Slave Market of America
1836
GWMMAK_150418_067.JPG: View of the Capitol, Showing the Present State of the Dome -- Taken during the Inauguration of Lincoln, Monday, March 4, 1861
GWMMAK_150418_075.JPG: Map of Washington City, District of Columbia, Seat of the Federal Government. Respectfully dedicated to the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of North America
1857
GWMMAK_150418_082.JPG: The Race and Ethnicity of Washington's Residents, 1860
GWMMAK_150418_088.JPG: View of Washington
1852
GWMMAK_150418_110.JPG: Clara Barton
1821-1912
GWMMAK_150418_114.JPG: Washington Guard!
c 1862
GWMMAK_150418_118.JPG: Pennsylvania Avenue, Washington.
Grand Parade Previous to the Invasion of Virginia
June 15, 1861
GWMMAK_150418_124.JPG: The War in Washington
GWMMAK_150418_128.JPG: Enlist Now and Get Your $100 Bounty
1862
GWMMAK_150418_141.JPG: (top) Alexandria , Va., Taken by Colonel Ellsworth's Zouaves on the Morning of 24th of May, 1861
(bottom) Landing of Ellsworth's Zouaves at Alexandria, Va. on the Morning of May 24, 1861.
GWMMAK_150418_150.JPG: Sketch of the Seat of War in Alexandria & Fairfax Cos.
May 31, 1861
GWMMAK_150418_158.JPG: To Arms! To Arms!
1861
GWMMAK_150418_163.JPG: Topographical Map of the Original District of Columbia and Environs: Showing the Fortifications Around the City of Washington
1862
GWMMAK_150418_181.JPG: Artillerymen at Fort Stevens, Washington, DC
c 1864
GWMMAK_150418_185.JPG: Soldiers Rest, Alexandria, Va.
Commanded by Capt. John J. Hoff
Military recruits, recently arrived by train or boat, found a hot meal and a cot for a day or two at the "Soldiers Rests" in Washington and Alexandria. Recruits would remain in these rest-stops until their units were transported to their initial postings.
GWMMAK_150418_192.JPG: Soldiers Rest, Washington, DC
GWMMAK_150418_195.JPG: Civil War Monuments
GWMMAK_150418_198.JPG: A Center of Defense
GWMMAK_150418_202.JPG: War Telegram Marking Map
1862
GWMMAK_150418_213.JPG: Camp Fry, Washington DC
Camp Fry, used mostly for the collection and distribution of supplies to soldiers in and around the capital, covered most of the current campus of the George Washington University. This view of the camp looks south from Washington Circle at the intersection of 23rd Street and Pennsylvania Avenue, NW.
GWMMAK_150418_217.JPG: The Hydraulic Press Room, United States
Treasury Department, Washington DC -- Printing US Bonds
June 5, 1865
GWMMAK_150418_223.JPG: The Washington Navy-Yard, with Shad Fishers in the Foreground
April 20, 1861
GWMMAK_150418_227.JPG: A Center of Military Medicine
GWMMAK_150418_231.JPG: Finley US Genl. Hospital, Washington, DC
1864
GWMMAK_150418_234.JPG: Mount Pleasant Hospitals, Washington, DC
1862
GWMMAK_150418_241.JPG: Harewood Hospital, Washington DC
1864
GWMMAK_150418_246.JPG: Campbell Hospital, Washington DC
GWMMAK_150418_250.JPG: Cliffburne Hospital, Washington DC
GWMMAK_150418_254.JPG: The Locations of Washington's Civil War Hospitals, 1861-1865
GWMMAK_150418_261.JPG: Post-War Washington
The Revolution Continues
GWMMAK_150418_265.JPG: The Growing City
GWMMAK_150418_269.JPG: The Political Environment
GWMMAK_150418_277.JPG: The Georgetown Election -- The Negro at the Ballot-Box
GWMMAK_150418_281.JPG: Significant Election Scene at Washington
June 22, 1867
GWMMAK_150418_284.JPG: Holy Horror of Mrs. McCaffraty in a Washington DC Street Passenger Car
February 24, 1866
GWMMAK_150418_290.JPG: Washington & Georgetown Railroad Company streetcar in front of car barn
c 1880
GWMMAK_150418_294.JPG: The New State Department Building at the National Capital. -- from the Architect's Drawing
April 20, 1872
GWMMAK_150418_302.JPG: City of Washington, Statistical Map No. 3, showing the different varieties of Street Pavements
1882
GWMMAK_150418_309.JPG: City of Washington
Statistical Map. No. 3,
showing the different varieties of --
Street Pavements
on January 1st, 1882
Asphalt and Concrete Pavements = 47.90 miles
Granite and Trap block = 16.80
Wood = 13.70
Cobble and Blue rock = 17.70
Macadamized streets = 7.00
Gravelled = 32.50
Unimproved = 94.60
Total = 230.20
GWMMAK_150418_313.JPG: Walt Whitman
1819-1892
GWMMAK_150418_315.JPG: Alexander R. "Boss" Shepherd
1835-1902
GWMMAK_150418_319.JPG: The City of Washington. Birds-Eye View from the Potomac - Looking North
1892
By 1892, the transformation of the city into the capital we know today was complete. Important federal buildings are everywhere in this bird's-eye view of the city. Memorials and monuments dot the landscape. The city of 230,000 inhabitants had the modern infrastructure befitting a capital of international importance.
GWMMAK_150418_363.JPG: The Race and Ethnicity of Washington's Residents, 1880 and 2010
GWMMAK_150418_366.JPG: The Transformation of Black Washington
GWMMAK_150418_373.JPG: Celebration of the Abolition of Slavery in the District of Columbia by the colored people, in Washington, April 19, 1866.
GWMMAK_150418_374.JPG: "The Contraband Camp" below Arlington House, VA , November 1862
GWMMAK_150418_381.JPG: Freedman's Village, Arlington, Virginia
May 7, 1864
During the war, Union forces controlled Arlington, Virginia.
GWMMAK_150418_384.JPG: By the President of the United States of America.
A Proclamation
January 1, 1863
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I still have them though. If you want me to email them to you, please send an email to guthrie.bruce@gmail.com
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2015 photos: Equipment this year: I mostly used my Fuji XS-1 camera but, depending on the event, I also used a Nikon D7000.
I retired from the US Census Bureau in god-forsaken Suitland, Maryland on my 58th birthday in May. Yee ha!
Trips this year:
a quick trip to Florida.
two Civil War Trust conferences (Raleigh, NC and Richmond, VA), and
my 10th consecutive San Diego Comic-Con trip (including Los Angeles).
Ego Strokes: Carolyn Cerbin used a Kevin Costner photo in her USA Today article. Miss DC pictures were used a few times in the Washington Post.
Number of photos taken this year: just over 550,000.
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