Error message
Notice: Trying to access array offset on value of type null in IslandoraSolrDisplayManagerResults->currentQueryDisplays() (line 222 of /var/www/drupal7/sites/all/modules/islandora_solr_display_manager/includes/islandora_solr_display_manager.inc).
Pages
-
-
Title
-
Unidentified Civil War Soldier or Guerrilla
-
Description
-
Charcoal portrait of unidentified Civil War soldier or guerrilla in uniform with cloak. Drawing is signed by the artist with "93" immediately below the signature. Person in this drawing is from another drawing in this collection (MVO-101F).
-
Object Type
-
Image
-
Date
-
1893
-
-
Title
-
Battle of the Big Blue
-
Description
-
Benjamin D. Mileham painting of the Battle of the Big Blue, which occurred in Jackson County, Missouri, on October 22, 1864.
-
Object Type
-
Image
-
Date
-
1896
-
-
Title
-
Unidentified Guerrilla
-
Description
-
Charcoal portrait of man in typical guerrilla overshirt, wearing a hat with a plume, and holding two crossed pistols. Drawing is signed by the artist with "93" immediately below the signature.
-
Object Type
-
Image
-
Date
-
1893
-
-
Title
-
13th Amendment Print
-
Description
-
Commemorative print of the congressional resolution for the Thirteenth Amendment, which abolished slavery.
-
Object Type
-
Image
-
Date
-
1868
-
-
Title
-
Joseph O. Shelby
-
Description
-
Black and white portrait of Joseph Orville Shelby seated with open coat.
-
Object Type
-
Image
-
-
Title
-
Frank Shepherd
-
Description
-
Charcoal portrait of Frank Shepherd with suit coat, vest, shirt, and tie. Frank Shepherd served under Quantrill and Bill Anderson. He was part of the Lawrence, Kansas, massacre on August 21, 1863. During the Centralia, Missouri, battle on September 27, 1864, he rode on one side of Frank James; Richard Kinney on the other side. Both Kinney and Shepherd were killed, but James escaped unharmed.
-
Object Type
-
Image
-
-
Title
-
View of Manhattan, Kansas
-
Description
-
A civil war drawing by John Gaddis of the 12th Regt. Wisconsin Volunteers on their way to Ft. Riley, Kansas, near Manhattan, Kansas.
-
Object Type
-
Image
-
Date
-
April 24, 1862
-
-
Title
-
Archibald Clements (Arch or Little Archie)
-
Description
-
Charcoal portrait drawing of Archibald Clements (sometimes spelled Clement) with a cigar in his mouth, dressed in a suit with a cravat and holding a pistol. Little Arch, or Archie, at age 17 became William ("Bloody Bill") Anderson's lieutenant. It is said that in one short year Clements eclipsed the record of every known guerrilla by killing 54 men. He was part of William C. Quantrill's famous raid on Lawrence, Kansas, August 21, 1863, and a major player in the Centralia, Missouri, massacre. After the Civil War he took up robbing banks until he was killed December 13, 1866, in Lexington, Missouri, at age 19.
-
Object Type
-
Image
-
-
Title
-
Harrison Trow
-
Description
-
Charcoal portrait of Harrison Trow in suit coat, vest, shirt, and tie. Harrison Trow served under Quantrill and was at the Lawrence massacre, August 21, 1863, and Centralia, September 27, 1864, as well as the Battle of Independence, August 11, 1862. After the war, Trow lived in Blue Springs, Missouri, until 1901 when he moved to Texas where he died February 24, 1925. He identified the body of Jesse James after James was shot.
-
Object Type
-
Image
-
-
Title
-
Charles Robinson, First Kansas Governor
-
Description
-
Portrait of Charles Robinson, early leader of the New England Emigrant Aid Society and the first Governor of the State of Kansas.
-
Object Type
-
Image
-
Date
-
1861
-
-
Title
-
David Rice Atchison
-
Description
-
Photograph of a David Rice Atchison painting by George Caleb Bingham, located in Atchison's home in Clinton County, MO.
-
Object Type
-
Image
-
Date
-
n.d.
-
-
Title
-
Joseph (Joe) C. Lea
-
Description
-
Charcoal portrait of Joseph C. Lea (sometimes Lee) with artist's initials. Son of the noted Lee's Summit physician Dr. Pleasant Lea, Joe Lea was a member of Quantrill's Guerrillas. He was wounded during the raid on Lawrence, Kansas, August 21, 1863. After the Civil War, Lea moved to Roswell, New Mexico, where he became a buffalo hunter, lawman, rancher, banker, and instructor in the military department at the University of New Mexico. He died in 1904 at Roswell. ("The Encyclopedia of Quantrill's Guerrillas" [MVSC Q 973.742 L28e])
-
Object Type
-
Image
-
-
Title
-
Battle of Chancellorsville
-
Description
-
Kurz & Allison print depicting the Battle of Chancellorsville and the wounding of General Stonewall Jackson.
-
Object Type
-
Image
-
-
Title
-
Gale Block, Topeka, Kansas
-
Description
-
Photograph of the Gale block in Topeka, Kansas, where the Kansas state legislature convened in the 1860s.
-
Object Type
-
Image
-
-
Title
-
Unidentified Man in Uniform
-
Description
-
Charcoal portrait of unidentified guerrilla dressed in coat or cloak, shirt, and hat similar to a beret adorned with a plume and three large and two small stars on the headband. Subject holds a pistol. Drawing is signed by the artist with "93" immediately below the signature.
-
Object Type
-
Image
-
Date
-
1893
-
-
Title
-
Julia Louisa Hardy Lovejoy
-
Description
-
Portrait of Julia Louisa Hardy Lovejoy. Lovejoy and her husband, Charles Haseltine Lovejoy, came to the Kansas Territory in 1855, where Rev. Lovejoy was the second traveling Methodist preacher in the territory. They built the first house on the Manhattan Town Company site, but moved to a farm near Baldwin, Kansas Territory, in 1857.
-
Object Type
-
Image
Pages