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[Private Horace H. Smith of Company G, 16th Wisconsin Infantry Regiment, in forage cap with bayonet, musket, cartridge box, and musket sling etched H. H. Smith]

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[Private Horace H. Smith of Company G, 16th Wisconsin Infantry Regiment, in forage cap with bayonet, musket, cartridge box, and musket sling etched H. H. Smith]

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Summary

This tintype portrait of an identified Union soldier displays unusual clarity and fine detail. Its subject is well equipped with his bayonet, musket, cartridge box, and musket sling etched "H. H. Smith," a crucial clue in identifying the sitter as Private Horace H. Smith. Additional details on his forage cap, enhanced by hand in gold, indicate that he was part of Company G in the 16th Regiment.
Identification by Dana Shoaf, editor of Civil War Times magazine, May 2011, who saw this tintype in the Library's exhibition The Last Full Measure, spotted the identifying clues, and entered them into a Civil War soldiers database to recover Smith's name. Thanks to the interactive work of outside specialists with staff experts, future researchers can better trace the stories of previously unidentified Civil War soldiers.

Case: Leather gem geometric design.
Digital photo with mat removed by Mike O'Donnell.
Purchased from: Cowan's Auction of Historic Americana, Terrace Park, Ohio, 2000.
Gift; Tom Liljenquist; 2010; (DLC/PP-2010:105).

Forms part of: Liljenquist Family Collection of Civil War Photographs (Library of Congress).
Forms part of: Ambrotype/Tintype photograph filing series (Library of Congress).
Exhibited: "The Last Full Measure : Civil War Photographs from the Liljenquist Family Collection" at the Library of Congress, Washington, D.C., 2011.
pp/liljunion

The single best source for Civil War photographs is the U.S. Library of Congress, which holds the core collections of original Civil War documentary ... The majority of the ambrotypes and tintypes are portraits by unidentified photographers of Civil War soldiers, primarily Union soldiers.

More than 2,500 special portrait photographs, called ambrotypes and tintypes, and small card photos called cartes de visite represent both Union and Confederate soldiers during the American Civil War (1861-1865). Tom Liljenquist and his sons Jason, Brandon, and Christian built this collection in memory of President Abraham Lincoln and the estimated 620,000-850,000 Union and Confederate servicemen who died in the American Civil War. For many, these photographs are the last known record we have of who they were and what they looked like. See "From the Donor's Perspective--The Last Full Measure" for the full story. The Liljenquist Family began donating their collection to the Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Division in 2010, and continues to add to it. In addition to the ambrotypes and tintypes, the collection also includes several manuscripts, patriotic envelopes, photographs on paper, and artifacts related to the Civil War. The portraits often show weapons, hats, canteens, musical instruments, painted backdrops, and other details that enhance the research value of the collection. Other photo topics include flags, city views, veterans, and ships. Among the rarest images are sailors, African Americans in uniform, Lincoln campaign buttons, and portraits of soldiers with their families and friends. LOC Prints & Photographs Division holds thousands of images relating to the Civil War, found in many different collections.

date_range

Date

01/01/1861
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Location

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Source

Library of Congress
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Copyright info

No known restrictions on publication.

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