Civil War Art
The paintings in the collection dealing with the Civil War reflect the time during the war from 1861 to1865 and the Reconstruction period afterward. The hostilities, which began with the first shots fired at Fort Sumter, South Carolina, on April 12, 1861, destroyed the optimism of the antebellum period. The Confederate States lost a war that would forever alter the landscape of the South. Their men had been killed and their once booming economy shattered. Yet, while the conflict between the federal government and the Confederate States devastated the South, it also strengthened a new Southern identity. The paintings in the Morris Museum's collection reflect a Southern perspective on the War.
| Highlights (Click on an image for object details) | ||
Battle of the Kearsarge & Alabama By Xanthus Russell Smith 1892 |
Battle of Shiloh—"The Hornet's Nest" By Thure de Thulstrup 1888 |
Columbia Welcoming the South Back into the Union By Constantino Brumidi c. 1876 |
Floyd's Command, Gauley Bridge, Virginia By William D. Washington 1864 |
The Infantryman By William Gilbert Gaul c. 1905 |
The Lost Cause By Henry Mosler (attrib.) 1869 |
Merrimac in the Bay (C.S.S. Virginia) Unknown artist c. 1863 |
Naval Engagement Unknown artist c. 1863 |
Surprise Attack Near Harpers Ferry By John A. Mooney c. 1868 |

