1862 Photos of Bull Run (Library of Congress)

15 12 2007

Along Bull Run Near Sudley Church (George Barnard)

bull-run-sudley-church.jpg

LOC Reproduction No.:  LC-DIG-cwpb-00960

Blackburn’s Ford – Ruins of RR Bridge (Unknown) 

blackburns-ford.jpg

LOC Reproduction No.: LC-DIG-cwpb-01546

Catharpin Run, Sudley Church, Remains of Sudley Sulphur Spring House (George Barnard)

catharpin-run.jpg

LOC Reproduciton No.: LC-DIG-cwpb-00956

Cavalry at Sudley Ford (George Barnard)

cav-at-sudley.jpg

LOC Reproduction No.:  LC-DIG-cwpb-00954

Cub Run Bridge (George Barnard)

cub-run-bridge.jpg

LOC Reproduction No.:  LC-DIG-cwpb-00945

Henry House Ruins (George Barnard)

henry-house.jpg

LOC Reproduction No.:  LC-DIG-cwpb-00972

Robinson House (George Barnard)

robinson-house.jpg

LOC Reproduction No.:  LC-DIG-cwpb-00967

Soldiers’ Graves (George Barnard)

soldiers-graves.jpg

LOC Reproduction No.: LC-DIG-cwpb-00974 

Stone Bridge Ruins (George Barnard)

stone-bridge-2.jpg

LOC Reproduction No.: LC-DIG-cwpb-00950  

Stone Brige Ruins #2 (George Barnard)

stone-bridge-3.jpg

LOC Reproduction No.:  LC-DIG-cwpb-00952

Stone Church at Centreville (George Barnard)

stone-church.jpg

LOC Reproduction No.: LC-DIG-cwpb-00937

Stone House (George Barnard)

stone-house.jpg

LOC Reproduction No.: LC-DIG-cwpb-00965

Sudley Church (George Barnard)

sudley-church.jpg

LOC Reproduciton No.: LC-DIG-cwpb-00959

Thornton’s (Thornberry’s) House on Route to Sudley Ford (George Barnard) 

thornton-house.jpg

LOC Reproduction No.: LC-DIG-cwpb-00963

View of Field (Unknown) – See aslo this post

view-of-field.jpg

LOC Reproduction No.: LC-DIG-cwpb-01314

View of Field #2

view-of-battlefield-2.jpg

LOC Reproduction No.: LC-DIG-cwpb-01527


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22 responses

16 12 2007
Kevin S. Coy

Great photos. Thank you for posting them. I particularly like the cavalry at Sudley Ford. Something about the little boys in their uniforms, staring at the cavalry, that I find compelling. The little girls seem occupied playing but the boys are imagining their own charge (or escape).

Keep up the good work, Harry. Bull Runnings is at the top of my must go to list.

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16 12 2007
Harry Smeltzer

Kevin,

I’m glad you like the photos. I’ll add any others I find from 1862, and will post other groups as they come along. You can access all the galleries by clicking on “Galleries” under “Pages” to the right.

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18 12 2007
Stephen Keating

Was the railroad bridge at Blackburn’s Ford built when the Confederates extended the rail line to Centreville in the winter of ’61-62?

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26 09 2012
RS

You’re right because the O&A crosses a few miles southwest of blackburns ford and had to be much sturdier than this.

The only other railroad (aside from the military road you suggested) over bull run or cub run in the area was the unfinished line from Gainesville to Alexandria, but that one crossed bull run at Sudley ford and had stone bridge abutments (the abutments over cub run are still visible http://www.hmdb.org/marker.asp?marker=655). Some say ruins of the military railway are still visible amongst the development but I have never seen them.

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26 09 2012
RS

My bad, I was thinking you were asking if this was a picture of the bridge at Blackburn ford there in my previous reply. You are correct.

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18 12 2007
Harry Smeltzer

Stephen,

I think you’re right, since I’ve never run across any mention of a bridge there at the time of the battle. Like most of these 1862 photos, this doesn’t show the area in quite the same condition it was in at the time of the battle (1st), but it does at least provide an image of Blackburn’s Ford.

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22 12 2007
Keith Yoder

It appears to me that the 2 photos of Sudley Ford (Catharpin Run, Sudley Church & Cavalry at Sudley Ford) are taken on opposite sides at essentially the same place at the ford. Is that the way you see it?

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22 12 2007
Harry Smeltzer

I think you’re right, Keith. The stone abutment and the crooked tree appear to be identical. Also note in the second photo what appears to be the photographer’s wagaon.

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22 12 2007
Keith Yoder

I assume this is the location of what is now referred to as Sudley Springs Ford – the hillside terrain behind the wagon matches exactly the the forested area behind the current “Sudley Springs Ford” marker at the Park.

For anyone interested in MNP photos here’s a link to another fascinating collection…

http://nps-vip.net/history/kern/index.htm

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28 12 2007
Brad Davidson

Can anyone identify what the View of Field #2 is a picture of? I see what appears to be crude grave markers in the middle ground but I can’t identify the structures in the background.

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28 03 2008
Amy Lindenberger

The image labeled “View of Field (Unknown)” is taken from a camera position some distance (not yet sure of exact distance, I’ll work on that the next time I can get back to VA) behind the Stone House, looking across the Warrenton Pike and towards the ruins of the Judith Henry house. The Henry house is that blob on the horizon, towards the right side of the image. If you study the image labeled “Henry House Ruins”, and then look closely at the ruins on the right side of this image, you can see that they are the same, though reversed; the “unknown” image is just taken from the opposite side of the house and at a signifcant distance away. I am an artist specializing in works inspired by Civil War era Americans, and currently working on a piece based on the final days in the life of Judith Henry. A few months ago I ordered a very large, very detailed reprint of this image from Zazzle.com and in that version of the photo, the ruins are unmistakable.

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28 03 2008
Harry Smeltzer

Thanks, Amy. I’m going to reprint your comment as a separate post with the photo in question, if that’s OK with you.

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28 03 2008
Amy Lindenberger

Sure, Harry. Happy to help. And thanks for creating this site; I bookmarked it some time ago and check back frequently!

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28 03 2008
A View to a Hill « Bull Runnings

[…] Amy Lindenberger sent the following in reference to the photo above, which appears in this Bull Runnings gallery:The image labeled “View of Field (Unknown)” (left photo above, click on thumbnail for larger […]

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29 03 2008
Amy Lindenberger

I enjoyed reading the article about the “Unknown” photograph, co-authored by Keith Knoke and Jim Burgess, drawing a different conclusion about camera direction than the one I presented – I had not come across this previously.

I don’t know Mr. Knoke, but I do know Jim Burgess who has been extremely helpful in providing information to me in the past, and I certainly don’t presume to know a fraction of what he does about the Manassas battlefield area. I’m going to go back to studying the images some more to see if I can visualize it the way they have. At least we agree that those are the ruins of the Henry House in the upper right section of the image, so that’s a start!

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29 03 2008
Harry Smeltzer

Amy,

Jim Burgess has been a good friend to Bull Runnings from almost the beginning. Looking closer at the image, I can see how the fenceline running down the left to right middle of the photo can give the impression that it might border the Warrenton Pike, but I’m thinking there may have been more tree cover to the left of the photo if it were indeed taken facing south from the area of the Stone House. I could be wrong, though.

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13 05 2008
Keith Knoke

Hello All, great comments on the photos. When I first approached Jim B and John Hennessy about this image, they indicated there were some at Manassas who felt the image was taken from the Stone House. The photo in question really comes into focus when you go to the Robinson House walk down the tree line heading due west. This tree line is the location of the fenceline running from the forground to the top of the image. The best I could determine was that Barnard and Gibson were standing on one of the Robinson out buildings. Also keep in mind the shawdows. Ask yourself if you are standing at the Stone House facing south, could I get a picture (in March) with the sun comming from behind me? Consider vegetation. In the righ side of the image are orchard trees. The Robinson farm had a well documented orchard, the Stone House did not. PS, concerning the soldier graves image, we have determined its not exactly in the copse of trees by the visitor center parking lot, but rather just north of there. If you go there following a heavy rain, water still ponds there. Im currently completing a book with Garry Adelman on Manassas Images (then and now piece). The center focus being the B&G images of March 1862. By the way, If anybody can figure out the location of the image title “View of Field #2” present above, I would love to hear it. If you look closely there is what appears to be a court house or like image. Im beginning to believe this image was mis identified. By the way there are few other out there that are mis identified as being Manasass. Best Regards

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18 09 2008
Pvt. John Clay Brown, 14th Brooklyn, on his Return to the Battlefield « Bull Runnings

[…] Bull Run battlefield in March of 1862, around the time of many of the photographs you can view here.  A transcription of this letter was provided to Bull Runnings by Dr. Thomas Clemens of […]

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25 10 2008
Harry Smeltzer

Keith,

I don’t know how I missed this comment! Anyway, thanks for all the info, and good luck with the “Then and Now” book. Is this going to be a Thomas publication?

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31 10 2010
Three Years Blogging « Bull Runnings

[…] like is still in the all-time lead with 4,171 views (none of these numbers include feed readers).  1862 Photos of Bull Run is a distant second with 3,212.  The most viewed post written this year has been Civil War Art […]

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18 07 2011
Thornberry Kids « Bull Runnings

[…] John Hennessy has this great post up at Remembering: Musings on Fredericksburg and Manassas, in which he dissects this famous image of Sudley Springs Ford in March, 1862. See other photos from this collection here. […]

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5 08 2013
Battlefield Photos March 1862 | Bull Runnings

[…] James Gibson, in the employ of Matthew Brady. You can find lower resolution copies of the photos here, filed under the heading Galleries over to the right. A quick once-over doesn’t turn up any […]

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