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The story of a border city during the Civil War cover

The story of a border city during the Civil War

Chapter 3: ILLUSTRATIONS
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About This Book

The author, drawing on his residence in the city and subsequent research, delivers an eyewitness account of city life immediately before and during the Civil War. He traces political divisions and popular feeling in a community split between loyalty and disloyalty, and documents military actions that directly affected urban life, episodes of riot and seizure, prison and refugee conditions, medical and relief efforts, debates in pulpit and press, and initiatives for educating formerly enslaved people. The narrative combines chronological episodes and topical chapters, illustrated with portraits and views, to show how border-city circumstances shaped wartime experience and postwar adjustment.

ILLUSTRATIONS

  PAGE
A Bird’s-eye View of St. Louis in 1860 Frontispiece
  From a lithograph in the possession of the Missouri Historical Society.
The Arsenal, St. Louis, in 1866 63
Camp Jackson, St. Louis 89
  From a photograph in the possession of the Missouri Historical Society.
Gratiot Street Prison, Formerly the McDowell Medical College 188
  From an oil painting, the property of the Missouri Historical Society.
Brigadier-General Nathaniel Lyon 198
General Fremont’s Headquarters, St. Louis 206
Facsimile of a Pass, Issued to the Author in 1861 215
The Author, Galusha Anderson, in 1861 218
  From a daguerreotype.
Honorable Frank P. Blair, Jr. 279
  From an oil painting, the property of the Missouri Historical Society.
Major-General Henry W. Halleck 279
Major-General William S. Rosecrans 279
Major-General John C. Fremont 279
Major-General John McA. Schofield 279