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  • #31
    Re: corduory overshirt

    Hi,

    Under neath the picture in the book I have it says he was bayoneted and that he was 14 when he was killed. I guess the wound is the darker area on the shirt. I do agree with Ryan that this photo is very sad one because he is so long, and two it is so near to the end of the Civil War.

    Andrew Kasmar

    4th Missouri Company E
    Andrew Kasmar

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    • #32
      Re: corduory overshirt

      Hi,

      To answer Mr. Cooper's question, the picture just had a caption. I did not know that Fort Mahone was part of Petersburg, I will have to remember that.

      Andrew Kasmar

      4th Missouri Company E
      Andrew Kasmar

      Comment


      • #33
        Re: corduory overshirt

        Just a caveat: Most of the photos in Gardner's sketchbook and in similar works have "embellished" captions, not unlike the "dead confederate sharpshooter at G-burg", etc.

        Do you really think that a photographer would take time to find out how a particular soldier died? And how would he find out the soldier's age? Why not his name?

        The photographers were busy moving their gear around and taking the best photos that they could, partially to document what they saw, but they also wanted to make money on their work.

        Mike Willey
        late of the 49th Ohio and Coffee-coolers

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        • #34
          Re: corduory overshirt

          Hi,

          I agree that it is impossible to knew for sure what the age or the cause of death of this soldier, I was just giving the information that I found in my book. Know I think you would be able to tell the wound type, but the age would be harder to tell.

          Andrew Kasmar
          Andrew Kasmar

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          • #35
            Re: corduory overshirt

            Is one shoe much narrower than the other? The right shoe appears very tapered, while the left is rounded.
            Galen Wagner
            Mobile, AL

            Duty is, then, the sublimest word in our language.Do your duty in all things. You cannot do more. You should never wish to do less. -Col. Robert E.Lee, Superintendent of USMA West Point, 1852

            Comment


            • #36
              Re: corduory overshirt

              Hi,

              It does look like he is wearing two different shoes.

              Andrew Kasmar
              Andrew Kasmar

              Comment


              • #37
                Re: corduory overshirt

                Originally posted by Mike Willey View Post
                Just a caveat: Most of the photos in Gardner's sketchbook and in similar works have "embellished" captions, not unlike the "dead confederate sharpshooter at G-burg", etc.
                The sharpshooter one isn't misleading though. Not sure if it was posted on here or not, but some guy recently did an ungodly amount of research on that photo and came up with a very convincing argument that the "dead sharpshooter" truly was a sharpshooter because of the existence of a leather rifle case in the photo and a piece of a broken scope, among other things. The photo of the sharpshooter that is taken down the hill was the second photo, not the first.

                I used to be strongly in the camp that the photo was staged by Gardner, but after reading this guy's essay about it, I'm THOROUGHLY convinced that they found him like that.
                Ryan Burns
                The Skulkers Mess

                GGG Grandson of 1st Sgt. Albert Burns
                3rd Mississippi Infantry Regiment

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                • #38
                  Re: corduory overshirt

                  Now that Ryan Burns has posted this second photo (the "14 year old"), it seems it gives us more possible corduroy to speculate about. This boy appears to be wearing two jackets, the innner one being a corduroy or a similar verticle stripe. The inner jacket has a collar much like common Confederate shells/roundabouts, and may have dished wooden buttons -- the collar and buttons do not look typical of a vest. What do you think?
                  Andy Conlon

                  Comment


                  • #39
                    Re: corduory overshirt

                    Hi,

                    The collar would be strange for a civilian vest, so it might be a jacket. but I can only see three buttons, and they are on the lower half of the vest or jacket which would also be strange. Maybe it is a vest with it's collar turned up. The wood buttons do look like Confederate issue.

                    Andrew Kasmar

                    4th Missouri Company E
                    Andrew Kasmar

                    Comment


                    • #40
                      Re: corduory overshirt

                      In the second photo is the one pant leg bloused in the sock or is it cuffed? Looks bloused to me.
                      Robert Ambrose

                      Park Ranger
                      Fort Frederick State Park, Maryland
                      5th Virginia Infantry Co. K

                      Comment


                      • #41
                        Re: corduory overshirt

                        The poor young lads trouser leg does look like it is bloused. One can only speculate what happened to his shoes, and why someone would pull off one sock, and leave it there....
                        Robert W. Hughes
                        Co A, 2nd Georgia Sharpshooters/64th Illinois Inf.
                        Thrasher Mess
                        Operation Iraqi Freedom II 2004-2005
                        ENG Brigade, 1st Cavalry Div. "1st Team!"
                        Iraq & Afghanistan Veterans of America

                        Then I heard the voice of the Lord saying, "Whom shall I send? And who will go for us?"
                        And I said "Here I am. Send me!" Isaiah 6:8

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                        • #42
                          Re: corduory overshirt

                          I found another photo that has the young man in the original photo in question for this thread at http://old-picture.com

                          If anyone can get a more detailed image of this. It appears as though he may have some head trauma. You can also see the surrounding terrain.
                          Attached Files
                          Matthew S. Laird
                          [email]CampMcCulloch@gmail.com[/email]
                          [COLOR="DarkRed"]Rogers Lodge #460 F&AM

                          Cane Hill College Mess, Company H, McRae's Arkansas Infantry
                          Auxiliary, New Madrid Guards Mess
                          [/COLOR]
                          [I]"An association of men who will not quarrel with one another is a thing which has never yet existed, from the greatest confederacy of nations down to a town meeting or a vestry. "[/I] Thomas Jefferson

                          [SIGPIC][/SIGPIC]

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                          • #43
                            Re: corduory overshirt

                            What I find strange is where is all his gear? Weapon, belt, box, could it be posed? I mean the dead guy below him is buried almost. It is a strange pic and yeah there are allot of staged pics done by photographers, there even is a book on it on the ones done after Gettyburg. Just my $.02.
                            Thomas J. Alleman
                            "If the choice be mine, I chose to march." LOR

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                            • #44
                              Re: corduory overshirt

                              Still no sign of trauma:

                              Ryan Burns
                              The Skulkers Mess

                              GGG Grandson of 1st Sgt. Albert Burns
                              3rd Mississippi Infantry Regiment

                              Comment


                              • #45
                                Re: corduory overshirt

                                Could he have been killed by concussion?
                                Robert Ambrose

                                Park Ranger
                                Fort Frederick State Park, Maryland
                                5th Virginia Infantry Co. K

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