To all:
I was looking into my photo archives preparing for my blog entry on here and ran across some modern pictures that might be of some use. I don't know if they are published or not, but I took them in 2005 on a visit to my old alma mater -The Citadel. The museum is grat there and if you happen to go, then
One is of the Institution's guidon/colors and one is of a cadet from 1864 (or so the museum says). Neill Rose said he didn't know of any late-war pics from Charleston on another thread and the Citadel Museum attributes this photograph to 1864. I think it certainly LOOKS from the mid/late war period. Notice he is wearing some sort of a frock coat... what rifle is he carrying... a converted flintlock??
The palmetto cockade is awesome on his hat- probably a field modification by the cadet pictured as I don't think this was part of the official uniform- LOL. :p
The Lithograph (modern picture of the incident was done sometime in the 1950s and today in the in the Citadel Library... probably base off of the lithograph) is a picture from January 26th 1861's Harper's Weekly on the firing of the Star of The West by the Citadel Shore Battery... note the Red Palmetto flag, which the accompanying article in the magazine comments about as being:
THE FIRING ON THE " STAR OF THE WEST."
WE publish on page 52 a fine illustration of the firing on the Star of the West from the Morris Island Battery, Harbor of Charleston, on 10th January, 1861. The event was mentioned in our last Number ; and it is only necessary to say here that she was on her way to Fort Sumter with men and supplies for the reinforcement of Major Anderson. The captain of the Star of the West, by name M'Gowan, gives the following account of the event:
"When we arrived about two miles from Fort Moultrie —fort Sumter being about the same distance—a masked battery on Morris Island, where there was a red Palmetto flag flying, opened fire upon us—distance, about five-eighths of a mile...
Go Bulldogs... never forget our Southern heritage! lol :p
The museum is great there and if you happen to go to Charleston SC, then check them out!
Mods... if necessary, please move this to properly designated folder.
Thanks- Johnny Lloyd
I was looking into my photo archives preparing for my blog entry on here and ran across some modern pictures that might be of some use. I don't know if they are published or not, but I took them in 2005 on a visit to my old alma mater -The Citadel. The museum is grat there and if you happen to go, then
One is of the Institution's guidon/colors and one is of a cadet from 1864 (or so the museum says). Neill Rose said he didn't know of any late-war pics from Charleston on another thread and the Citadel Museum attributes this photograph to 1864. I think it certainly LOOKS from the mid/late war period. Notice he is wearing some sort of a frock coat... what rifle is he carrying... a converted flintlock??
The palmetto cockade is awesome on his hat- probably a field modification by the cadet pictured as I don't think this was part of the official uniform- LOL. :p
The Lithograph (modern picture of the incident was done sometime in the 1950s and today in the in the Citadel Library... probably base off of the lithograph) is a picture from January 26th 1861's Harper's Weekly on the firing of the Star of The West by the Citadel Shore Battery... note the Red Palmetto flag, which the accompanying article in the magazine comments about as being:
THE FIRING ON THE " STAR OF THE WEST."
WE publish on page 52 a fine illustration of the firing on the Star of the West from the Morris Island Battery, Harbor of Charleston, on 10th January, 1861. The event was mentioned in our last Number ; and it is only necessary to say here that she was on her way to Fort Sumter with men and supplies for the reinforcement of Major Anderson. The captain of the Star of the West, by name M'Gowan, gives the following account of the event:
"When we arrived about two miles from Fort Moultrie —fort Sumter being about the same distance—a masked battery on Morris Island, where there was a red Palmetto flag flying, opened fire upon us—distance, about five-eighths of a mile...
Go Bulldogs... never forget our Southern heritage! lol :p
The museum is great there and if you happen to go to Charleston SC, then check them out!
Mods... if necessary, please move this to properly designated folder.
Thanks- Johnny Lloyd
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