Historic Framed Print, Winter Campaigning. The Army of the Potomac on the move. Sketched near Falmouth. Jan. 21st - 2, 17-7/8" x 21-7/8"

Snapshots of the Past

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AMZ-SOTP-HPA-216506
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Historic Framed Print, Winter Campaigning. The Army of the Potomac on the move. Sketched near Falmouth. Jan. 21st - 2, 17-7/8" x 21-7/8", Image: 16" x 20"

Beautiful historic reproduction print from the Library of Congress collections.

Created 1863 January 21 Signed lower right: Alf. R. Waud. Title inscribed below image. Published in: Harper's Weekly, February 14, 1863, p. 104-5 as Fruitless attempt of the Army of the Potomac to move toward the Rappahannock on 20th January 1863. Gift (color film copy transparency) cph 3g02392 (b&w film copy neg.) cph 3a04150 1919 (DLC/PP-1919:R1.2.718) Reference print available in the Civil War Drawings file -- S. Reference print available in Ray

Note: Some images may show issues such as color bars or other artifacts from the digital scanning process at the Library. We clean up these artifacts and digitally restore the image before framing your work.

[Unique Vintage Prints] Historical maps, photos and prints as home decor artworks. Tasteful reproductions restored from the archives at the Library of Congress.
[Satisfied Customers] Snapshots of the Past, founded in 2001, was the first company to offer Library of Congress images as museum-quality, fine-art reproduction prints. Prominent buyers include over 200 bookstores and other retailers as well as tens of thousands of Internet customers. Snapshots of the Past was selected as a vendor for the White House redecoration project of 2008.
[American Memory] A great revolution in the history of poster prints was the development of printing techniques that allowed for inexpensive, mass production. Notably, lithography, was invented in 1796. In 1989 a Library of Congress pilot project aptly titled American Memory laid the foundation for the National Digital Library Program which began in 1995. This program works to digitize selected collections of the Library that emphasize the complex history of an American cultural heritage.
[Museum Quality] Reproduction prints are created using some of the most respected brands of fine art and archival paper in the industry. Prints made with archival paper and pigmented inks can be enjoyed for a lifetime and passed down for generations to come.
[Great Gifts] Wouldn't it be a conversation starter to display an old Halloween, Mother's or Valentine's Day poster? Or one of the earliest aerial views of Manhattan, Boston, Chicago or San Francisco? Posters in the retro style add an air of elegance to your home, study or workplace. And they make great gifts.

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