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- A battle-field Vulture, Godfor by name, one of those inhuman creatures who follow in the wake of armies, robbing the field of blankets, clothing, turning the pockets of the dead, etc.
- Stereograph: Portrait of man in dirty clothing.
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- Group, Messrs. Allen, Hammond, Fargo, and Hall
- Stereograph: Five gentlemen posed for a group portrait; man standing at left appears to be Lincoln; 'Allen' is Allan Pinkerton, head of the Secret Service. Written on the back of stereograph, 'Major Allen Pinkerton-Secret Service head.', Allan Pinkerton (25 Aug. 1819-1 July 1884) Asked by General McClellan to gather intelligence against Confederate enemies at the start of the Civil War. He headed an army spy system in Virginia, called the Secret Service, under the name Major E.�J. Allen. After General McClellan was dismissed in 1862, Pinkerton returned to his private detective business, the National Detective Agency. Abraham Lincoln (February 12, 1809-April 15, 1865) was the sixteenth President of the United States. As Commander in Chief of the United States, he led the Union during the Civil War. On April 15, he was shot in the back of the head at Ford's Theater by John Wilkes Booth, and died shortly after from his wounds.
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- Jim Kerrigan, the 'mollie' squealer
- Stereograph: Man in civilian clothing seated in front of brick wall., Jimmy Kerrigan, a member of the Molly Maguires, a group known for their activism amongst Irish American coal miners in Pennsylvania. Kerrigan became a state's witness against other members of the Molly Maguires and gave details about the murders of a mine boss and a night watchman at a mine.
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- Special artist of Harper's Weekly sketching battle field of Gettysburg.
- Stereograph: Artist Alfred R. Waud, seated with his sketchbook. Note on back of stereograph reads Alfred R. Waud, artist (1828-1891.), Alfred R. Waud (2 Oct. 1828-6 Apr. 1891) Artist and illustrator who worked as an artist-journalist during the Civil War. In April 1861 the�News�named him a 'special artist' and assigned him to cover the Army of the Potomac where he met commander-in-chief, General�Winfield Scott. Waud would go on to cover every battle fought by the Army of the Potomac from First Manassas in 1861 to Petersburg, Virginia, in 1865. He worked for Harper's Weekly following the Civil War.