Trump
- Steely_D - Jan 26, 2025 - 8:35pm
What Are You Going To Do Today?
- islander - Jan 26, 2025 - 8:31pm
Republican Party
- Steely_D - Jan 26, 2025 - 7:58pm
Photography Forum - Your Own Photos
- fractalv - Jan 26, 2025 - 7:02pm
Are you ready for some football?
- JrzyTmata - Jan 26, 2025 - 3:26pm
Celebrity Face Recognition
- Red_Dragon - Jan 26, 2025 - 2:37pm
USA! USA! USA!
- steeler - Jan 26, 2025 - 2:30pm
Musky Mythology
- R_P - Jan 26, 2025 - 2:23pm
Brian Eno
- Steely_D - Jan 26, 2025 - 2:00pm
Israel
- R_P - Jan 26, 2025 - 1:57pm
Things You Thought Today
- Steely_D - Jan 26, 2025 - 1:56pm
Business as Usual
- R_P - Jan 26, 2025 - 11:40am
January 2025 Photo Theme - Beginnings
- Alchemist - Jan 26, 2025 - 10:19am
NYTimes Connections
- geoff_morphini - Jan 26, 2025 - 9:15am
NY Times Strands
- geoff_morphini - Jan 26, 2025 - 9:09am
Wordle - daily game
- geoff_morphini - Jan 26, 2025 - 8:57am
Today in History
- Red_Dragon - Jan 26, 2025 - 8:53am
Name My Band
- GeneP59 - Jan 26, 2025 - 7:04am
Radio Paradise Comments
- GeneP59 - Jan 26, 2025 - 6:59am
Bluesky - instead of Twitter
- haresfur - Jan 26, 2025 - 12:53am
Bug Reports & Feature Requests
- mccarty.richard - Jan 25, 2025 - 8:44pm
Great Old Songs You Rarely Hear Anymore
- KurtfromLaQuinta - Jan 25, 2025 - 8:13pm
Artificial Intelligence
- R_P - Jan 25, 2025 - 1:13pm
Pernicious Pious Proclivities Particularized Prodigiously
- haresfur - Jan 25, 2025 - 12:06pm
Things We Shouldn't Have To Say
- oldviolin - Jan 25, 2025 - 9:36am
How's the weather?
- GeneP59 - Jan 25, 2025 - 8:26am
Would you drive this car for dating with ur girl?
- KurtfromLaQuinta - Jan 25, 2025 - 6:40am
This is the main mix
- Thebiglebowski - Jan 25, 2025 - 4:52am
Two sexes or ? Gender as a non-binary concept
- Steely_D - Jan 24, 2025 - 6:13pm
Strips, cartoons, illustrations
- R_P - Jan 24, 2025 - 11:27am
I'm Thankful For..
- sunybuny - Jan 24, 2025 - 7:30am
Joe Biden
- VV - Jan 23, 2025 - 3:45pm
Annoying stuff. not things that piss you off, just annoyi...
- ScottFromWyoming - Jan 23, 2025 - 2:40pm
2024 Elections!
- black321 - Jan 23, 2025 - 1:56pm
Old Dog, New Trick
- ScottFromWyoming - Jan 23, 2025 - 12:40pm
The Grateful Dead
- black321 - Jan 23, 2025 - 10:59am
Demons in Church
- Red_Dragon - Jan 23, 2025 - 8:27am
Live Music
- oldviolin - Jan 23, 2025 - 8:10am
Mixtape Culture Club
- ColdMiser - Jan 23, 2025 - 7:55am
Spambags on RP
- miamizsun - Jan 23, 2025 - 7:14am
Climate Change
- R_P - Jan 22, 2025 - 8:49pm
Rock Movies/Documentaries
- ScottFromWyoming - Jan 22, 2025 - 4:58pm
Banksters
- R_P - Jan 22, 2025 - 4:47pm
Fires
- miamizsun - Jan 22, 2025 - 2:46pm
Social Media Are Changing Everything
- R_P - Jan 22, 2025 - 11:29am
BRING OUT YOUR DEAD
- oldviolin - Jan 22, 2025 - 11:20am
Other Medical Stuff
- farhantaimoor373 - Jan 22, 2025 - 8:33am
tunes!
- sahlman - Jan 22, 2025 - 5:48am
Now & Zen
- miamizsun - Jan 22, 2025 - 5:25am
The Obituary Page
- GeneP59 - Jan 21, 2025 - 4:04pm
What Makes You Laugh?
- Isabeau - Jan 21, 2025 - 1:31pm
Favorite Quotes
- oldviolin - Jan 21, 2025 - 10:43am
2 questions.
- miamizsun - Jan 21, 2025 - 4:56am
Canada
- R_P - Jan 20, 2025 - 10:10pm
What The Hell Buddy?
- oldviolin - Jan 20, 2025 - 5:57pm
Radio Paradise NFL Pick'em Group
- sunybuny - Jan 20, 2025 - 1:14pm
One Partying State - Wyoming News
- ScottFromWyoming - Jan 20, 2025 - 11:24am
the Todd Rundgren topic
- ColdMiser - Jan 20, 2025 - 7:56am
Amazon Tag
- simon.maasz770 - Jan 20, 2025 - 1:24am
Outstanding Covers
- Steely_D - Jan 19, 2025 - 9:27pm
Talk Behind Their Backs Forum
- geoff_morphini - Jan 19, 2025 - 8:51am
New Music
- R_P - Jan 18, 2025 - 4:14pm
Fire
- R_P - Jan 18, 2025 - 2:34pm
Counting with Pictures
- Proclivities - Jan 18, 2025 - 8:37am
True Confessions
- oldviolin - Jan 17, 2025 - 11:49pm
What the hell OV?
- oldviolin - Jan 17, 2025 - 11:18pm
Bad Poetry
- oldviolin - Jan 17, 2025 - 10:30pm
Breaking News
- R_P - Jan 17, 2025 - 8:08pm
KFAT Revival?
- KurtfromLaQuinta - Jan 17, 2025 - 11:53am
Billionaires
- Manbird - Jan 16, 2025 - 7:03pm
female vocalists
- skyguy - Jan 16, 2025 - 6:43am
Current Obsessions
- miamizsun - Jan 16, 2025 - 4:09am
What Makes You Sad?
- miamizsun - Jan 16, 2025 - 3:58am
New drop from Gren Bartley
- miamizsun - Jan 15, 2025 - 3:11pm
Pink Floyd Set?
- black321 - Jan 15, 2025 - 2:58pm
|
Index »
Radio Paradise/General »
General Discussion »
Amazing Civil War Photos
|
Page: 1, 2 Next |
meower
Location: i believe, i believe, it's silly, but I believe Gender:
|
|
NoEnzLefttoSplit
Gender:
|
Posted:
Apr 11, 2011 - 1:30pm |
|
cc_rider wrote: damn fine read! thanks for that!
|
|
meower
Location: i believe, i believe, it's silly, but I believe Gender:
|
Posted:
Apr 11, 2011 - 1:04pm |
|
aflanigan wrote:I was listening to the radio this weekend and a commenter was describing Matthew Brady's photographic exploits during the Civil War. She claimed that one of Brady's proteges faked photos by bringing a dead body to battlefield sites and posing it. She said the giveaway is when you see a rifle next to a corpse wearing boots/shoes; neither of these valuable items would have been abandoned on the field. The famous photo below is generally conceded to have been staged
(for example, the rifle in the photo is not one a Confederate sharpshooter would have used) i heard the same report. interesting.
|
|
cc_rider
Location: Bastrop Gender:
|
Posted:
Apr 11, 2011 - 12:34pm |
|
aflanigan wrote:I was listening to the radio this weekend and a commenter was describing Matthew Brady's photographic exploits during the Civil War. She claimed that one of Brady's proteges faked photos by bringing a dead body to battlefield sites and posing it.
Mainstream media manipulating photos? That's crazy talk. I don't doubt some of the photos were staged. Others seem just too gruesome to be posed, but who knows. Reporters and photographers of the period did not always adhere to the highest standards of journalistic integrity, like they do now.
|
|
aflanigan
Location: At Sea Gender:
|
Posted:
Apr 11, 2011 - 12:19pm |
|
DaveInVA wrote: I was listening to the radio this weekend and a commenter was describing Matthew Brady's photographic exploits during the Civil War. She claimed that one of Brady's proteges faked photos by bringing a dead body to battlefield sites and posing it. She said the giveaway is when you see a rifle next to a corpse wearing boots/shoes; neither of these valuable items would have been abandoned on the field. The famous photo below is generally conceded to have been staged
(for example, the rifle in the photo is not one a Confederate sharpshooter would have used)
|
|
Lazy8
Location: The Gallatin Valley of Montana Gender:
|
Posted:
Apr 10, 2011 - 6:37pm |
|
ScottFromWyoming wrote:Seward was Lincoln's SecState and neither of them had any notion of abolishing slavery at the outset of the war. Thru acts such as what are detailed in the article, emancipation was inevitable; he and Lincoln only recognized that years later. It sounded to me like —nevermind the war— he realized and was a bit ashamed that he'd been willfully ignoring the obvious wrongs of slavery in order to maintain some political stance.
Neither ignored the evils of slavery, but Lincoln at least publicly dissembled about it, adopting a wishy-washy stance that belied what he believed. Seward was chiding Lincoln for compromising those beliefs in an attempt to appease southern factions that might have broken with the Confederacy so long as they could keep their slaves. Anti-slavery sentiment was the unifying factor in the north, the real motivator for the troops. Lincoln's failure to endorse that cause early on was seen in many quarters (by Fredrick Douglass especially) as a betrayal.
|
|
ScottFromWyoming
Location: Powell Gender:
|
Posted:
Apr 10, 2011 - 5:52pm |
|
miamizsun wrote:Not many knew, but Lyle Lovett actually fought for the south. Justine says "chorff gots his frisky on!"
|
|
miamizsun
Location: (3283.1 Miles SE of RP) Gender:
|
Posted:
Apr 10, 2011 - 5:44pm |
|
Not many knew, but Lyle Lovett actually fought for the south.
|
|
ScottFromWyoming
Location: Powell Gender:
|
Posted:
Apr 10, 2011 - 5:26pm |
|
winter wrote:Sounds to me like what Seward was saying was that the Confederates never had a hope of winning - that they may as well have saved themselves and the rest of the country a lot of blood and tragedy if they'd just accepted the need for change and worked to make it happen instead of clinging to a dying tradition. Seward was Lincoln's SecState and neither of them had any notion of abolishing slavery at the outset of the war. Thru acts such as what are detailed in the article, emancipation was inevitable; he and Lincoln only recognized that years later. It sounded to me like —nevermind the war— he realized and was a bit ashamed that he'd been willfully ignoring the obvious wrongs of slavery in order to maintain some political stance.
|
|
winter
Location: in exile, as always Gender:
|
Posted:
Apr 10, 2011 - 4:15pm |
|
ScottFromWyoming wrote: Thanks, I read this twice yesterday. Kind of an aside, I really liked the last few lines: - When Lincoln finally unveiled the Emancipation Proclamation in the fall of 1862, he framed it in Butleresque terms, not as a humanitarian gesture but as a stratagem of war.On the September day of Lincoln’s edict, a Union colonel ran into William Seward, the president’s canny secretary of state, on the street in Washington and took the opportunity to congratulate him on the administration’s epochal act.
- Seward snorted. “Yes,” he said, “we have let off a puff of wind over an accomplished fact.”
- “What do you mean, Mr. Seward?” the officer asked.
- “I mean,” the secretary replied, “that the Emancipation Proclamation was uttered in the first gun fired at Sumter, and we have been the last to hear it.”
=========== Makes me wonder how things would have turned out if Seward had been elected president at some point.
Sounds to me like what Seward was saying was that the Confederates never had a hope of winning - that they may as well have saved themselves and the rest of the country a lot of blood and tragedy if they'd just accepted the need for change and worked to make it happen instead of clinging to a dying tradition.
|
|
meower
Location: i believe, i believe, it's silly, but I believe Gender:
|
Posted:
Apr 10, 2011 - 3:48pm |
|
hippiechick wrote:We have been watching the extremely long and interesting Ken Burns documentary The Civil War. What a horrid war that was. When we will stop killing each other?
i never killed you. wha??
|
|
hippiechick
Location: topsy turvy land Gender:
|
Posted:
Apr 10, 2011 - 3:37pm |
|
We have been watching the extremely long and interesting Ken Burns documentary The Civil War. What a horrid war that was. When we will stop killing each other?
|
|
DaveInSaoMiguel
Location: No longer in a hovel in effluent Damnville, VA Gender:
|
Posted:
Apr 10, 2011 - 3:20pm |
|
Antigone wrote:A small group of re-enactors at the historic house down the block. Cool, They had a 3 day encampment at the Nauseum of the Confederacy grounds behind my house this weekend. I should have taken pics. They are packing up to leave now...
|
|
Antigone
Location: A house, in a Virginian Valley Gender:
|
Posted:
Apr 10, 2011 - 3:02pm |
|
A small group of re-enactors at the historic house down the block.
|
|
hippiechick
Location: topsy turvy land Gender:
|
Posted:
Apr 5, 2011 - 8:47am |
|
cc_rider wrote: An interesting article. Enslaved people weren't treated much better than the way we treat cattle these days, which makes me seriously think about how badly we still treat animals.
|
|
cc_rider
Location: Bastrop Gender:
|
Posted:
Apr 5, 2011 - 8:03am |
|
ScottFromWyoming wrote:Middle East or Iowa, too. I'm gonna repost that speech. Take THAT, homophobes! Thanks.
|
|
ScottFromWyoming
Location: Powell Gender:
|
Posted:
Apr 5, 2011 - 7:55am |
|
cc_rider wrote: Love that line. It seems appropriate to some of the changes in the Middle East, you know? The 'ruling class' seems to be the last to hear the message from the street. Our own Administration included... Middle East or Iowa, too.
|
|
cc_rider
Location: Bastrop Gender:
|
Posted:
Apr 5, 2011 - 7:48am |
|
ScottFromWyoming wrote:Thanks, I read this twice yesterday. Kind of an aside, I really liked the last few lines: - When Lincoln finally unveiled the Emancipation Proclamation in the fall of 1862, he framed it in Butleresque terms, not as a humanitarian gesture but as a stratagem of war.On the September day of Lincoln’s edict, a Union colonel ran into William Seward, the president’s canny secretary of state, on the street in Washington and took the opportunity to congratulate him on the administration’s epochal act.
- Seward snorted. “Yes,” he said, “we have let off a puff of wind over an accomplished fact.”
- “What do you mean, Mr. Seward?” the officer asked.
- “I mean,” the secretary replied, “that the Emancipation Proclamation was uttered in the first gun fired at Sumter, and we have been the last to hear it.”
=========== Makes me wonder how things would have turned out if Seward had been elected president at some point Love that line. It seems appropriate to some of the changes in the Middle East, you know? The 'ruling class' seems to be the last to hear the message from the street. Our own Administration included... I've gotta make time to sit down and read the whole thing again. Important history.
|
|
ScottFromWyoming
Location: Powell Gender:
|
Posted:
Apr 5, 2011 - 7:37am |
|
cc_rider wrote: Thanks, I read this twice yesterday. Kind of an aside, I really liked the last few lines: - When Lincoln finally unveiled the Emancipation Proclamation in the fall of 1862, he framed it in Butleresque terms, not as a humanitarian gesture but as a stratagem of war.On the September day of Lincoln’s edict, a Union colonel ran into William Seward, the president’s canny secretary of state, on the street in Washington and took the opportunity to congratulate him on the administration’s epochal act.
- Seward snorted. “Yes,” he said, “we have let off a puff of wind over an accomplished fact.”
- “What do you mean, Mr. Seward?” the officer asked.
- “I mean,” the secretary replied, “that the Emancipation Proclamation was uttered in the first gun fired at Sumter, and we have been the last to hear it.”
=========== Makes me wonder how things would have turned out if Seward had been elected president at some point.
|
|
Antigone
Location: A house, in a Virginian Valley Gender:
|
Posted:
Apr 5, 2011 - 7:05am |
|
An interesting article in the Washington Post about a new exhibit of rare photographs at the Library of Congress.
|
|
|