Forbes, Edwin, 1839-1895
Forbes, Edwin
Edwin Forbes peintre américain
Edwin Forbes American painter, printmaker and etcher (1839-1895)
Forbes, Edwin (American painter and printmaker, 1839-1895)
VIAF ID: 5203418 ( Personal )
Permalink: http://viaf.org/viaf/5203418
Preferred Forms
- 100 0 _ ‡a Edwin Forbes ‡c American painter, printmaker and etcher (1839-1895)
- 100 0 _ ‡a Edwin Forbes ‡c peintre américain
- 200 _ | ‡a Forbes ‡b Edwin ‡f 1839-1895
- 100 1 _ ‡a Forbes, Edwin
- 100 1 _ ‡a Forbes, Edwin ‡d 1839-1895
- 100 1 _ ‡a Forbes, Edwin ‡g American painter and printmaker, 1839-1895
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Forbes, Edwin, ‡d 1839-1895
-
4xx's: Alternate Name Forms (8)
Works
Title | Sources |
---|---|
The battle of Gettysburg | |
Buffalo Bill's wild west [affiche] | |
Bullet and shell : the Civil War as the soldier saw it | |
Bummers | |
Civil War etchings | |
Kiralfy Bro's "Michael Strogoff" [affiche] | |
Life studies of the Great Army | |
On the picket line, near Freeman's Ford, Rappahannock River | |
Our kitchen near Beverly Ford | |
Phil, study from life, Auburn battlefield, Va. | |
Picket station on Potomac Creek | |
The plains of Manassas, looking towards the Bull Run Mountains, from Gen. T.F. Meagher's headquarters | |
A played-out mule in hospital | |
The Potomac River, near Williamsport, on the morning of the crossing of Gen. Lee's army | |
[Procession for the execution of five deserters from the 118th Pennsylvania Volunteers, 1st Division, 5th Corps, Beverly Ford, Va.] | |
Pursuit of Lee's army. Scene on the road near Emmitsburg - marching through the rain | |
Railroad train crossing Potomac Creek bridge | |
A rainy day. The army on the march | |
The Rappahannock River below the Station, Jan. 28, 1864 | |
Reading the news--off duty | |
Ready for the march | |
The rear of the column | |
Rebel officers take[n] a[t] Petersburg, Va. - sketched on board a steamboat coming down the James River | |
Rebel position near Centreville, Va., at the crossing of the Orange and Alexandria Railway over Bull Run, showing rebel encampment, fortifications, etc. | |
Rebel prisoners and battle flags captured at Chancellorsville, being taken to the rear by cavalry and infantry guards | |
The rebs lament on leaving Penn., "You want us back in the Union, and now we've come you won't let us stay" | |
[Recueil. Oeuvre de Ed. Forbes] | |
The "reliable contraband" | |
Retreat of the Army of the Rappahannock, commanded by Genl. Pope through the town of Centreville. After the battle of second Bull Run | |
Returning from outpost duty | |
Review of Gen. Ord's division, opposite Fredericksburg, by Maj. Gen. McDowall [sic] and staff | |
Ricketts division, (6th Corps), Cold Harbor | |
[Ruins of the Acquia Creek and Fredericksburg R.R. bridge, over Potomac Creek] | |
The sanctuary | |
Scene behind the breastworks on Culps Hill, morning of July 3rd 1862 | |
Scene in Baltimore, Md. Citizens building barricades on receipt of the news of Gen. Lee's march into Penn. | |
A scene on the roadside near Summer Camp | |
Scene on the U.S. ford road, (battle of Chancellorsville) on the night of Apr. 30, 1863 | |
Sentry walking his beat | |
Shoeing a mule | |
The showman in camp--A scene in the streets of Culpepper [sic] | |
The siege of Petersburg | |
The signal officer off duty | |
Signal officers, in attic of farm house, watching the army of General Lee near Williamsport, Maryland | |
The signal station sketched near Culpeper C.H., Va. | |
Sketch of a group of Collis' Zouaves--Gen. Banks bodyguard, now attached to Col. Geary command, near Manassas Gap | |
Sketch of the forts and breastworks near Petersburg | |
Sketches of characters on the roadside | |
Sketches on the line of march. Bucktails | |
Smoking bacon--Army teamsters at hdqters, Brandy Station | |
Soldiers' huts in winter camp | |
Soldier's theatre, (Fourteenth Brooklyn) in an old warehouse in Culpeper Court House, Va. | |
St. Patrick's Day in the army--The steeple chase | |
A stormy march--(Artillery)--Spotsylvania Court House | |
Stuck in the mud ; A flank march across country during a thunder shower | |
Study of a mule team and wagon, with driver | |
Study of an officer. It's almost time for dress parade | |
Study of drummer boys on the march | |
Study of infantry soldier on guard--William J. Jackson, Sergt. Maj. 12th N.Y. Vols.--Sketched at Stoneman's Switch, near Fredricksburg [sic], Va. Jan. 27th, 1863 | |
The supply train | |
The surgeons call | |
Taking his comfort | |
Thirty years after. An artist's story of the great war told | |
Through the wilderness | |
Traffic between the lines | |
Union soldiers crossing the north fork of the Rappahannock on a roap [sic] bridge | |
View from the summit of Little Round Top at 7:30 P.M. July 3rd, 1863 | |
[View of Battle of the Wilderness looking towards the Rapidan River] | |
View of Centreville Va. Bull Run battlefield in the distance. Aug. 1863 | |
View of the city of Fredericksburg, Va. | |
View of the town of Falmouth, Va., looking up stream | |
View of Winchester, Va., from fort on the hill N.E. of the town | |
Waiting for the blacksmith. Artillery forge | |
The war in Louisiana - Gen. Lee's cavalry fording Cane River, March 31 Sketches of Army life - weighing out rations / from a sketch by our special artist, Edwin Forbes. | |
The War in Virginia - Battle of Rappahannock Station, Nov. 7 - a portion of Sedgwick's Sixth Corps, -- and the skirmishers of the 4th New York charging the Rebel works | |
The war in Virginia - Officers and men of Meade's army discovering unburied Union dead on the old battlefield of Bull Run | |
The War in Virginia - rebuilding railway bridge over Goose Creek, near Manassas Gap, by Col. Geary, 28th Pennsylvania Regiment | |
The war in Virginia - the 22nd Colored Regiment, Duncan's brigade, carrying the first line of Rebel works before Petersburg | |
A watched pot never boils ; A tasty supper ; Drummer boys ; Played out | |
The Wilderness, on the Brock road, 2nd Corps--May 11th 1864 | |
Winter camp near Culpepper [sic] Court House, Va. | |
Winter camp of the 16th Michigan | |
Wounded soldier leaning on a pitchfork at Battle of the Wilderness, May 7, 1864 |