Belfoured
Colonel
- Joined
- Aug 3, 2019
Regarding location, and assuming the photograph was taken in June, there are a couple of plausible "suspects" based on the records but both seem to involve the volunteer Engineer Brigade and not the US Engineers Battalion. The starting point is that much of the corduroying work done in June by the Brigade and the Battalion appears to have involved approaches to the bridges constructed/being constructed at the Chickahominy. In June this ground was extremely waterlogged and in addition the view we have doesn't appear to reflect the terrain nearer the river. The volunteer Brigade also was involved in mid-June corduroying roads from the station at Fair Oaks and from HQ to Smith's division. Those seem to be better possibilities - but would not be the Engineer Battalion.According to Library of Congress records
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[Richmond, Va., vicinity. Engineers building corduroy road]
1 negative : glass, stereograph, wet collodion ; 4 x 10 in. | Photograph from the main eastern theater of war, the Peninsular Campaign, May-August 1862.www.loc.govSummary
- Photograph from the main eastern theater of war, the Peninsular Campaign, May-August 1862.
Names
- Woodbury, D. B. (David B.), 1839-1866, photographer
Created / Published
ANy idea where it was taken {near Richmond or Seven Pines{?)
- 1862 June.
By the way when were the twin Houses at Seven Pines torn down?
Web link showing how the site looks today
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Lost Battlefields: Seven Pines, Part 1 - Emerging Civil War
In a series of articles author Doug Crenshaw will explore some of the battlefields in central Virginia that appear to be lost forever to development. In today’s installment, Doug looks at the Battlefield of Seven Pines. I hear it all too often: “I travelled to Richmond to see the Seven Pines...emergingcivilwar.com
Sic Transit Glory
This is all rampant speculation, so don't head to the betting window with it.
standing around with their hands in their pockets