Gettysburg Greg
First Sergeant
- Joined
- Jun 6, 2010
- Location
- Decatur, Illinois
Before French artist Paul Philippoteaux began working on the grand Gettysburg Cyclorama, he visited the battlefield and interviewed many of the participants in the battle. Additionally, he employed Gettysburg photographer William Tipton to record a series of 360 degree of panoramas from near the Angle. He would use these 1882 images to accurately display the landscape in his masterpiece. The Tipton image below was recorded from a small tower located on today's Hancock Avenue just east of The Angle. The fence seen running away from the camera on the right terminates at The Angle. The view, facing west, includes the area within the Angle where the great charge of July 3rd climaxed, as well as Seminary Ridge in the background where the Southerner's stepped off. Crossing the scene in the middle background is the Emmitsburg Road where the Confederate struggled to climb over the stout 6-rail fences on both sides of the road while under intense rifle fire. The Codori farm is seen along the road on the left. Notice that Tipton included a man and a horse in the foreground as well as a man crossing the wall for the artist to use for perspective.
On the bottom is the same scene as it appears in the Cyclorama. This is a representation of the point in time when the Confederates have breeched the wall and the 71st Pa is being rushed to the Angle to fill the gap.
The attention to detail is amazing when comparing the two images.
On the bottom is the same scene as it appears in the Cyclorama. This is a representation of the point in time when the Confederates have breeched the wall and the 71st Pa is being rushed to the Angle to fill the gap.
The attention to detail is amazing when comparing the two images.
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