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The U.S. Army Buildings which John Brown took possession of. Harpers Ferry, W. VA. Junction of the Potomac and Shenandoah Rivers. Meeting of the States of MD., W. VA., and VA.  Arsenal captured, October 16, 1859.

1. Drawing of Harpers Ferry Arsenal , Captured By John Brown

Sketched by David Hunter Strother for Harper's Weekly; issue published May 11, 1861.

2. Rendezvous of Virginians at Halltown, Virginia, 5 P.M. on April 18, 1861, to March on Harper's Ferry.

Camp Hill at Harpers Ferry was situated above the lower section of the town. During their occupations both Confederate and Union Armies tried in vain to fortify the area.

3. Earthworks on Camp Hill, Guarding the Road to Charles Town, Va. (W. Va.)

4. Pictorial Battles. Gen. Banks' Division Crossing the Potomac, Near Harper's Ferry. Sandy Hook in the Foregound.

Sketch of soldiers burying a casket as other soldiers watch.  Loudon Heights on the Right and Maryland Heights on the Left, in the Distance.

5. Soldiers' Graveyard at Bolivar Heights, Near Harper's Ferry

Sandy Hook in the foreground.

6. Pictorial Battles. Gen. Banks' Division Crossing the Potomac, Near Harper's Ferry. Sandy Hook in the Foregound.

Blowing up the highway-railroad bridge at Harpers Ferry in the early morning of June 14, 1861 when Confederate Brigadier General Joseph E. Johnston and his Army evacuated the town. The bridge was completely destroyed - a fate it was to suffer by fire and flood nine times during the civil war. From a sketch in Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper. See West Virginia Collection Pamphlet 6610 and Boyd Stutler's 'West Virginia in the Civil War.'

7. Destruction of the Harpers Ferry Highway - Railroad Bridge, Jefferson County, Va. (W. Va.)

The War Correspondents Monument, a 50 foot high structure which sits in the middle of Crampton Gap, South Mountain, a few miles east of Harpers Ferry. Erected through the efforts of George Alfred Townsend, himself a famous war correspondent in the Civil War, known as 'Gath,' the monumental arch was dedicated on October 16, 1896. Now under the care of the National Park Service, surrounded by Gathland Park, a Maryland recreation center, the arch was re-dedicated  on October 16, 1946, to the correspondents of all wars. Marble tablets bear the names of 147 Civil War correspondents and artists, while ranged at the end four bronze tablets tell the action in Crampton Gap, and important phases in the battle of South Mountain. See West Virginia Collection Pamphlet 6610 and Boyd Stutler's 'WV in the Civil War.'

8. War Correspondents Monument

Burning of the U.S. Armory and Arsenal at Harpers Ferry on the night of April 18, 1861. From a sketch in Leslies Weekly. See West Virginia Collection Pamphlet 6610 and Boyd Stutler's 'WV in the Civil War.'

9. Burning of the U. S. Armory and Arsenal at Harpers Ferry

Letters mailed from W. Va. Post Offices bearing Confederate postmarks. In the lot are ones from Travellers Repose 'now Bartow', Shepherdstown, Union, Harpers Ferry, Lewisburg, Romney, and Fayetteville. Comes from the Collections of Col. Harvey E. Sheppard, Fort Hood, TX and Geo. N. Malpass, St. Petersburg FL. See West Virginia Collection Pamphlet 6610 and Boyd Stutler's 'WV in the Civil War.'

10. Letters Mailed from W. Va. Bearing the Confederate Postmark

Railroad tunnel at end of bridge which crosses the confluence of the Potomac and Shenandoah Rivers.

11. Bridge Across Potomac River at Harpers Ferry, W. Va.

Engraving of Harpers Ferry by moonlight.  Entered according to Act of Congress A.D. 1874 by D. Appleton and Coin the Office of the Librarian of Congress, Washington.

12. Harpers Ferry by Moonlight