Tennessee Civil War Photography
George Barnard's photographic equipment, southeast
of Atlanta, Georgia, 1864
(Courtesy of the National Archives, 111-B-4753)
Unique among the many new technologies that played significant roles in the Civil War, photographic images offer a sense of immediate experience that crosses many generations. Photography gave the people of the 1860s, including those not personally involved in actual combat, the ability to witness events of the war. Even for later generations, like ourselves, whose understanding of the Civil War has been strongly influenced by subsequent historical developments, these early photographic images retain a freshness and vitality that enlarges our own experience of that pivotal historic conflict.
Although many Civil War photographers worked in the Eastern Theater,
some worked in the Western Theater. Most notable among these was
George Barnard, who photographed various places throughout the area, including
Tennessee. The above photograph shows Barnard's photographic equipment
while he travelled with the Union army in Georgia, but the depicted equipment
is similar to, and indeed may be identical to, the equipment he carried
during his work in Tennessee.
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For further information on Civil War photography see the photography
bibliography.
CONTACT INFORMATION
Civil War photography in Tennessee constitutes a part of the technology/industry heritage aspect of the TCWNHA. If you have information about Civil War photography in Tennessee to share, or would like further clarification regarding the topics discussed on these pages, please contact the Research Coordinator, Center for Historic Preservation, MTSU Box 80, Murfreesboro, TN 37132, or by email at histpres@mtsu.edu, by phone at (615) 898-2947, or by fax at (615) 898-5614.
(Thanks to Nathan Kinser, assistant to the Research Coordinator, for the research used in these pages.)
Civil
War Technology & Industry in Tennessee
Last update: December 8, 2000