Group at Cumberland, May, 1862 - Public domain portrait print
Summary
Stereograph showing a group in civilian attire at Cumberland, Maryland. In the back row, left to right: H.B. Seybolt, Paul H. Dennis, (unidentified provost guard), Allan Pinkerton, (provost guard), George H. Bangs, (provost guard), John Babcock, Robert Pinkerton. In the front row, left to right: Paul Dennis, D.G. McCaulvey, William Pinkerton, Sam Bridgman. Lying down in front on the left is William B. Watts, chief wagon-master, and on the right is Sam Washingtin, cook.
Individuals in the photograph identified by Robert Pinkerton in a copy of a letter in the collections file.
Copyright in 1862 by Gardner & Gibson in Washington, D.C.
From series: Photographic Incidents of the War. No. 636.
Forms part of: Civil War Photograph Collection (Library of Congress).
Original negative may be available: LC-B811-636.
During the Civil War, photographers produced thousands of stereoviews. Stereographs were popular during American Civil War. A single glass plate negative capture both images using a Stereo camera. Prints from these negatives were intended to be looked at with a special viewer called a stereoscope, which created a three-dimensional ("3-D") image. This collection includes glass stereograph negatives, as well as stereograph card prints.
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