The print may have appeared soon after the Confederate Congress passed a national conscription act on April 16, 1862, to strengthen its dwindling army of volunteers. The artist characterizes regular Confederate troops as unsavory, criminal types. Two of them (in uniform, left and center) have a well-dressed young gentleman in tow. The leader pulls on a rope around the reluctant recruit's neck, saying, "Come along you rascal! and fight for our King Cotton." The man protests, "Let me go, I tell you I'm a Union Man, and don't believe in your Southern Confederacy." He is prodded by the bayonet of a second soldier, gin flask protruding from his pocket, who urges, "Blast your Union! Them as won't go in for the war must be made to do it. Go ahe...
This color print features a solider dressed as an infantryman in the Confederate Army during the Ame...
The chromolithograph features a color image of a group of men dressed in Union uniforms. Five of the...
On May 27, 1861, Benjamin Butler, commander of the Union army in Virginia and North Carolina, decree...
A satire on Southern recruitment efforts during the early part of the Civil War. In a scene before a...
The Confederate leaders are portrayed as a band of competing opportunists led by South Carolina gove...
The image satirically depicts the Sickle\u27s Brigade, a disreputable group of men who were (alleged...
The chromolithograph features a color image of five men dressed in Confederate uniforms. Two of the ...
This color print features a solider dressed as an infantryman in the Confederate Army during the Ame...
A scornful portrayal of the poor caliber of American volunteers for the Mexican War. The print evide...
Two men in Confederate uniform with swords. Handwritten below photograph: Southern Chivalry. Written...
Color bookplate from unidentified volume: Battle of Spotsylvania... Copyright 1887, by L. Prang,...
This color print features a solider dressed as a cavalryman in the Confederate Army during the Ameri...
An imaginative portrayal of the violent suppression of abolitionist propagandizing and insurrectioni...
This color print features a solider dressed as an artilleryman in the Confederate Army during the Am...
This color print features a solider dressed as a zouave in the Confederate Army during the American ...
This color print features a solider dressed as an infantryman in the Confederate Army during the Ame...
The chromolithograph features a color image of a group of men dressed in Union uniforms. Five of the...
On May 27, 1861, Benjamin Butler, commander of the Union army in Virginia and North Carolina, decree...
A satire on Southern recruitment efforts during the early part of the Civil War. In a scene before a...
The Confederate leaders are portrayed as a band of competing opportunists led by South Carolina gove...
The image satirically depicts the Sickle\u27s Brigade, a disreputable group of men who were (alleged...
The chromolithograph features a color image of five men dressed in Confederate uniforms. Two of the ...
This color print features a solider dressed as an infantryman in the Confederate Army during the Ame...
A scornful portrayal of the poor caliber of American volunteers for the Mexican War. The print evide...
Two men in Confederate uniform with swords. Handwritten below photograph: Southern Chivalry. Written...
Color bookplate from unidentified volume: Battle of Spotsylvania... Copyright 1887, by L. Prang,...
This color print features a solider dressed as a cavalryman in the Confederate Army during the Ameri...
An imaginative portrayal of the violent suppression of abolitionist propagandizing and insurrectioni...
This color print features a solider dressed as an artilleryman in the Confederate Army during the Am...
This color print features a solider dressed as a zouave in the Confederate Army during the American ...
This color print features a solider dressed as an infantryman in the Confederate Army during the Ame...
The chromolithograph features a color image of a group of men dressed in Union uniforms. Five of the...
On May 27, 1861, Benjamin Butler, commander of the Union army in Virginia and North Carolina, decree...