6 Matching Results

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Godey's Fashions for May 1865

Print of "Godey's Fashions for May 1865." Color artwork of five women wearing dresses with very large, hoop skirts. The color on the image has faded. The background is composed of trees, sky and fountains.
Date: 1865
Creator: Godey's
System: The Portal to Texas History

The Promenaders, or Bazille and Camille

Access: Use of this item is restricted to the UNT Community
The painting is of a bearded gentleman wearing a hat and suit, looking at and standing next to and to the left of a woman who is wearing a long dress with a jacket and hat, looking away from the gentleman with her back to the viewer. They are standing in a shaded area of a garden.
Date: 1865
Creator: Monet, Claude
System: The UNT Digital Library

Washerwomen at the Oise River near Valmondois

Access: Use of this item is restricted to the UNT Community
Forested area is depicted on the left side of the composition, water in the foreground, and low hills in the background. Washerwomen along the shore are extremely small in the immense landscape.
Date: 1865
Creator: Daubigny, Charles François
System: The UNT Digital Library

Ville-d'Avray

Access: Use of this item is restricted to the UNT Community
None
Date: 1865~
Creator: Corot, Jean-Baptiste-Camille
System: The UNT Digital Library

[Harper's Weekly: Camp Ford, Texas Sketch]

Hand-colored print of the Civil War camp, Camp Ford taken from an 1865 issue of Harper's Weekly, page 132. Camp Ford, located near Tyler, Texas was established in 1863 as a Confederate prison camp during the Civil War. Over the course of two years, the camp held about 6,000 prisoners and was one of the largest Confederate prison camps west of the Mississippi River.
Date: March 4, 1865
Creator: Simmons, G. W.
System: The Portal to Texas History

[Harper's Weekly: Camp Ford, Texas Sketch]

Hand-colored print of the Civil War camp, Camp Ford took from an 1865 issue of Harper's Weekly, page 132. Camp Ford, located near Tyler, Texas was established in 1863 as a Confederate prison camp during the Civil War. Over the course of two years, the camp held about 6,000 prisoners and was one of the largest Confederate prison camps west of the Mississippi River. George Washington Simmons, pictured holding a pail, was the paymaster of the USS Clifton, captured at Sabine Pass on September 8, 1863. The crew was initially incarcerated at Camp Groce near Hempstead, but the prisoners were all moved to Camp Ford in December 1863. Simmons was in the Prisoner exchange that occurred at Red River Landing on February 25, 1865. The lithograph made from his sketch was published in New York on March 4, 1865, only a week after his exchange.
Date: March 4, 1865
Creator: Simmons, G. W.
System: The Portal to Texas History