Men of War: Selected image groupings from the Phil McCoy Collection
Confederate military history is deeply rooted in the fertile soil and rolling hills of Kentucky’s Bluegrass region. John Hunt Morgan and Basil Duke are buried here, and it is where
Confederate military history is deeply rooted in the fertile soil and rolling hills of Kentucky’s Bluegrass region. John Hunt Morgan and Basil Duke are buried here, and it is where
By Mark Savolis and Ronald S. Coddington, featuring images from Mark’s collection At Fredericksburg, a wave of Massachusetts volunteers charged towards Confederates entrenched along a stone wall on the crest
By Dione Longley and Buck Zaidel A crowd burst into enthusiastic and sustained applause when President Abraham Lincoln entered the grand hall of the Baltimore Sanitary Fair on the evening
By Joe Bauman and Ronald S. Coddington British warships and transports anchored off New Haven, a key port in the colony of Connecticut, on July 4, 1779. Aboard the vessels
Who are the stalwart individuals working with little fanfare to post period portraits, photographs of grave sites and other relevant information to Find-A-Grave pages? One of them, Bill Jones, has
By Frank Graves Portraits of Civil War soldiers armed with any of the three models of Colt Dragoons are uncommon. Images such as this tintype of a Union cavalryman gripping
By Adam Ochs Fleischer The backdrop highlighted in this installment is the only example I have cataloged thus far featuring subjects from a single regiment: the 23rd Pennsylvania Infantry, also
By Scott Valentine The 1864 Battle of the Monocacy determined the fate of a back door to Washington, D.C. If Lt. Gen. Jubal Early’s Confederates broke through it, the path
The expression of these Union pards uniformed in sack coats suggest the unfocused glaze known as the “thousand-yard stare.” Their names and military service are currently lost in time. Rare
This Southern soldier gazes directly at the camera, the almost perfect symmetry of his figure interrupted only by material items. In one hand he grasps the wood handle of a