Search Constraints

You searched for: Acquisition Source Cook, Roy Bird Remove constraint Acquisition Source: Cook, Roy Bird Topical Subjects Civil War--Portraits--Jackson, General Stonewall. Remove constraint Topical Subjects: Civil War--Portraits--Jackson, General Stonewall.
Number of results to display per page

Search Results

Drawing of Stonewall Jackson on his death bed, surrounded by doctors and officers.  Published by Currier and Ives.
Portrait of Stonewall Jackson on a horse with his arm extended holding his cap.
Portrait of Stonewall Jackson standing, cavalry and encampment in distant background.
Drawing of Lee and Jackson on their horses.  Note on card mount reads 'A good likeness of Traveller, when Gen. Lee purchased him of me in Feby 1862.  Charles Town, W. Va., Nov. 1st 1904, Thos. L. B?
Drawing of Stonewall Jackson walking and carrying his cap.
Upper left one of a series of C.S.A. cards sold in the North.  Showing a fraudulent  'collar'.  Center is a sample of the Brady print showing same fraudulent uniform.  Brady probably never saw Jackson, but sold thousands of these pictures, which is an 1851 portrait.
Portrait of Stonewall Jackson.
Portrait of General Thomas J. 'Stonewall' Jackson.
Stonewall Jackson at Chancellorsville. This old photo was presented to Col. S.A. Cunningham, editor of the Confederate Veteran by Mrs. Thomas J. Jackson and reproduced in that publication.
Portrait of Thomas J. Jackson in a chair outside of his tent with his sword.
Engraving of Stonewall Jackson, from a photograph by Tanner and Van Ness.
Portrait of General Thomas J. 'Stonewall' Jackson.
Portrait of Stonewall Jackson on the front of a card telling significant facts about his life.
Thomas J. Jackson, originally from Lewis County, (West) Virginia. One of two portraits of Jackson taken during the Civil War.
Engraved portrait of Thomas J. Jackson.
Portrait of Stonewall Jackson.
Portrait of Stonewall Jackson.
Grave of Stonewall Jackson prior to building of monument.
Portrait of Stonweall Jackson centered among images of his boyhood home, Jackson's Mill.
Portrait of Stonewall Jackson centered among images of his boyhood home, Jackson's Mill, Lewis County, (West) Virginia.
Portrait of Stonewall Jackson seated in a chair.
Sketch of Stonewall Jackson and his men praying.
Display of Stonewall Jackson exhibit featuring pictures, books, clippings, letters and other artifacts.
Portrait of Stonewall Jackson engraved by A.B. Walter from a photograph by Matthew Brady.
Portrait of Stonewall Jackson as well as a depiction of him being mortally wounded made from an ambrotype from Matthew Brady.
Sketch of Stonewall Jackson sitting on a bench holding an umbrella and reading a newspaper.
Jackson resigned his U.S. Army commission in 1851 and accepted a teaching position at Virginia Military Institute in Lexington, Virginia until the outbreak of the Civil War in 1861. He would earn the rank of lieutenant general in the Confederate Army and the sobriquet, "Stonewall".
Portrait of Stonewall Jackson.
Portrait of Stonewall Jackson.
'Photograph of a painting of Jackson hanging in the Murphy Hotel, Richmond, painted by William Washington.  Photo by H.P. Cook, 1937, 'The painting has been restored and is fine condition.  It shows Jackson on horse, a dying soldier lifts his hand to Jackson.  Washington is said to have been a skilled painter whose work was done just before and during the Civil War.  He had studied at Duseldorf and lived in the valled of Virginia near Lexington.  He was lame and very tempermental.  He carried the Burial of Latane to Europe at the end of the war, got into financial difficulties and sacrificed it.' H.P.C. to R.B.C. October 21, 1937.
Portrait of Jackson posing in front of a tent with his sword.
Stonewall Jackson and his boyhood home situated on the West Fork River in Lewis County, W. Va.
Portrait of Stonewall Jackson taken by Mr. n. Routzahn in Winchester, Va.
Engraved portrait of Thomas J. Jackson.
Portrait of John A. Elder presented to Corcoran Gallery by founder, William Wilson Corcoran.
Sketch of Stonewall Jackson just before Chancellorsville by Lieutenant Fred Fousse of the 22nd Infantry, Confederate States Army.  Liet. Fred Fousse was a Frenchman by birth, enlisted in W. Va. was captured at the Battle of Chancellorsville and imprisoned at Fort Delaware to the end of the war.  He there finishes a number of excellent sketches which he sent to his friends to provide funds.
Portrait of Stonewall Jakcson.
Portrait of General Thomas J. 'Stonewall' Jackson.
Portrait ofStonewall Jackson taken from an authentic photograph from life.
Statue of Stonewall Jackson.   According to the Wheeling Intelligencer, September 11, 1875, the statue was brought over from England on the S.S. Novia Scotia and donated by B. Hope and others.
Portrait of General Thomas J. 'Stonewall' Jackson made from a photograph.
Portrait of Stonewall Jackson.
Portrait of Major General T.J. Jackson, C.S.A.
Portrait of Stonewall Jackson found int he back of the Col. Edward Jackson Bible at Jackson's Mill in 1920.  Had been mounted on glass, which was badly cracked.  A copy of the Brady 'fake uniform' portrait.  Copied by J.B. Gissey, Weston.
Paited portrait of Jackson, Johnston and Lee.
Stonewall Jackson Monument in Richmond Virginia.<br /><br />
Portrait of Thomas J. 'Stonewall' Jackson.
Portrait of Stonewall Jackson.
Postcard of Old Sorrel, Stonewall Jackson's Civil War horse. He died at Soldiers' Home, Richmond, Virginia on April 10, 1888 at the age of 32 years.
Interior of the deserted room in which Stonewall Jackson died, Guinea Station, VA. Fireplace, saw horse and scattered pieces of wood are visible.
A copy of an original sketch by J. H. Diss Debarr, allegedly at Mineral Wells ca. 1860 Made on edge of a newspaper.
Thomas J. 'Stonewall' Jackson's sword with sheath and strap.
An engraved portrait of Thomas J. 'Stonewall' Jackson. The engraving is an likeness from an authentic photograph from life.
A postcard of General Stonewall Jackson. Photo from Life by Miley.
a postcard of the Stonewall Jackson Shrine, Guinea, V., a part of the Fredericksburg and Spotsylvania National Military Park, Fredericksburg, VA. In this house Stonewall Jackson died May 10, 1863. In a visit to this area in 1928 Winston Churchill is reputed to have said, "That little house witnessed the downfall of the Confederacy."
Plaster model of Thomas Jonathan "Stonewall" Jackson bust which was cast in bronze for the State Capital Building in Charleston, West Virginia and unveiled in Sept 1959. The sculptor of the bust, Bryant Baker, 222 West 50th Street, New York City autographed this photo to Roy Bird Cook in 1959.
Portrait of General "Stonewall" Jackson by William Frye. Only portrait ever made from life of the General.
Earliest portrait of Thomas J. Jackson. The photograph was made in Mexico City, during the Mexican War.