AndyHall
Colonel
- Joined
- Dec 13, 2011
There's a story from the Daily Mail that's making the rounds about a small community in Maryland, called Unionville, that was founded by African American veterans of the Civil War. It's a neat story, but one of the first things I noticed stood out, an image that (according to the Daily Mail) shows the eighteen veterans who would go on to establish the town in 1867, two years previously while still in service (highlighted):
I'm calling BS on this.
Many of you know this picture; it's one of most-often published images of African American soldiers from the war. As my friend Bryan Cheeseboro says, it has "become the face of the history of the Black Civil War soldier." But this image isn't what the Daily Mail — and presumably the local sources the paper was working with, claim it to be. It is, of course, Company E of the Fourth U.S. Colored Infantry, taken in November 1865. You can view the original at the LoC here.
Set aside for a moment the implausibility of there being an extant photo that shows the soldiers — and only those soldiers — who would go on two years later to establish Unionville. There's deliberate misrepresentation going on here. As some of you might have guessed, in order to get the desired number of eighteen soldiers, someone carefully cropped out roughly a third of men who appear in the original image from the Library of Congress:
But wait — it gets worse.
Even with careful cropping, there's still one too many men in the image — so someone Photoshopped him out entirely:
There's not much more to say about this, other that it's deliberate misrepresentation and manipulation of an historical photo, apparently for no purpose other than to juice the story about the veterans who founded Unionville. Pathetic and dishonest.
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