A website co-sponsored by Vanderbilt University Libraries, Middle Tennessee State University Walker Library, and the MTSU Center for Historic Preservation, with generous support from the Tennessee Civil War National Heritage Area.
History
The Flag of the South – Civil War Shades
A website co-sponsored by Vanderbilt University Libraries, Middle Tennessee State University Walker Library, and the MTSU Center for Historic Preservation, with generous support from the Tennessee Civil War National Heritage Area.
In The Tennessee Mountains – Civil War Shades
A website co-sponsored by Vanderbilt University Libraries, Middle Tennessee State University Walker Library, and the MTSU Center for Historic Preservation, with generous support from the Tennessee Civil War National Heritage Area.
A New Map of Tennessee with Its Roads and Distances – Civil War Shades
A website co-sponsored by Vanderbilt University Libraries, Middle Tennessee State University Walker Library, and the MTSU Center for Historic Preservation, with generous support from the Tennessee Civil War National Heritage Area.
The Pillars – Civil War Shades
A website co-sponsored by Vanderbilt University Libraries, Middle Tennessee State University Walker Library, and the MTSU Center for Historic Preservation, with generous support from the Tennessee Civil War National Heritage Area.
Elmwood Cemetery – Civil War Shades
A website co-sponsored by Vanderbilt University Libraries, Middle Tennessee State University Walker Library, and the MTSU Center for Historic Preservation, with generous support from the Tennessee Civil War National Heritage Area.
Johann Albert Lotz – Civil War Shades
Johann Albert Lotz. Lotz House Facade. 1858. Lotz House / Battle of Franklin Trust. Photo by John Guider. Lotz designed and built this Greek Revival, two-story frame house, which is located across the street from the brick home of Fountain Branch Carter. View Object Details In 1858 German immigrant Johann Albert Lotz (1820-1905) built a […]
Speakers Stand at the Blue and Gray Barbeque, Crawfish Springs, GA, September 20, 1889 – Civil War Shades
A website co-sponsored by Vanderbilt University Libraries, Middle Tennessee State University Walker Library, and the MTSU Center for Historic Preservation, with generous support from the Tennessee Civil War National Heritage Area.
McKissacks – Civil War Shades
A website co-sponsored by Vanderbilt University Libraries, Middle Tennessee State University Walker Library, and the MTSU Center for Historic Preservation, with generous support from the Tennessee Civil War National Heritage Area.
Topographical Map of the Battle Field of Stone River – Civil War Shades
A website co-sponsored by Vanderbilt University Libraries, Middle Tennessee State University Walker Library, and the MTSU Center for Historic Preservation, with generous support from the Tennessee Civil War National Heritage Area.
Iron Industry – Civil War Shades
Thomas Waterman Wood. Portrait of Jane Erwin Yeatman Bell, 1860. Tennessee State Museum. Artist Thomas Waterman Wood, a native of Vermont trained in Boston and New York, came to Nashville in 1859 and created portraits for wealthy and prominent patrons for several years before moving north to Louisville at the onset of the Civil War. […]
Confederate Currency with Lucy Pickens Image – Civil War Shades
A website co-sponsored by Vanderbilt University Libraries, Middle Tennessee State University Walker Library, and the MTSU Center for Historic Preservation, with generous support from the Tennessee Civil War National Heritage Area.
Contraband Camps – Civil War Shades
Henri Lovie. The Camp of the Contrabands on the Banks of the Mississippi, Fort Pickering, Memphis, Tenn, 1862. Courtesy American Antiquarian Society. This illustration, by Cincinnati-based artist Henri Lovie, was published in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper in late 1862. The text that accompanied it notes that the “national government” had formed this camp for men […]
Taking Care of Business – Civil War Shades
A website co-sponsored by Vanderbilt University Libraries, Middle Tennessee State University Walker Library, and the MTSU Center for Historic Preservation, with generous support from the Tennessee Civil War National Heritage Area.
