Anna Harrison Chase

Scanned by
ProQuest
Notes
Cropped, sized, and prepared for use here by John Osborne, Dickinson College, February 22, 2013. 
Image type
photograph
Use in Day View?
No
Courtesy of
ProQuest Historical Newspapers
Permission to use?
Yes
Source citation
Washington Post , December 27, 1936, p. M5

George Ellis Pugh, detail

Scanned by
Library of Congress
Notes
Cropped, sized, and adjusted for use by John Osborne, Dickinson College, February 22, 2013.
Image type
photograph
Use in Day View?
No
Courtesy of
Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division
Permission to use?
Public
Original caption
George E. Pugh, Senator from Ohio, Thirty-fifth Congress, half-length portrait
Source citation
Miscellaneous Items in High Demand Collection, Library of Congress

George Ellis Pugh

Scanned by
Library of Congress
Notes
Cropped, sized, and adjusted for use by John Osborne, Dickinson College, February 22, 2013.
Image type
photograph
Use in Day View?
No
Courtesy of
Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division
Permission to use?
Public
Original caption
George E. Pugh, Senator from Ohio, Thirty-fifth Congress, half-length portrait
Source citation
Miscellaneous Items in High Demand Collection, Library of Congress

Prince Rivers, artist's impression, January 1, 1863, detail

Scanned by
Don Sailer, Dickinson College
Scan date
Notes
Cropped, sized, and prepared for use here by John Osborne, Dickinson College, February 22, 2013. 
Image type
engraving
Use in Day View?
No
Permission to use?
Yes
Original caption
"Emancipation Day in South Carolina" The color sergeant of the 1st South Carolina (Colored) Volunteers addressing the regiment, after having been presented with the Stars and Stripes at Smith's Plantation, Port Royal, January 1
Source citation
Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper, January 24, 1863, p. 276.
Source note
Cropped from a larger image, also available, here.
 
 

Sergeant Prince Rivers receives the colors of the First South Carolina Volunteers, Port Royal, South Carolina, January 1, 1863,

Scanned by
Don Sailer, Dickinson College
Scan date
Notes
Cropped, sized, and prepared for use here by John Osborne, Dickinson College, February 22, 2013. 
Image type
engraving
Use in Day View?
No
Permission to use?
Yes
Original caption
"Emancipation Day in South Carolina" The color sergeant of the 1st South Carolina (Colored) Volunteers addressing the regiment, after having been presented with the Stars and Stripes at Smith's Plantation, Port Royal, January 1
Source citation
Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper, January 24, 1863, p. 276.
Source note
Cropped from a larger image, also available, here.
 
The 1st South Carolina Volunteer Infantry had been formed late in 1862 from escaped slaves mostly from South Carolina and Florida.  The unit was stationed on the former slave plantation of John Joyner Smith, near Port Royal, South Carolina, then designated as Camp Saxton, after the region's military governor, Brigadier-General Rufus Saxton.  On New Years Day 1863, as part of a wide celebration of emancipation in which hundreds of formerly enslaved men and women came from Port Royal, nearby Beaufort, and beyond, the regiment received its colors from its Colonel, Thomas Higginson.  Sergeant Prince Rivers, the new color sergeant, addressed the crowd followed by General Saxton and others.  The 1st South Carolina was the first federally authorized African American regiment and became the 33rd United States Colored Regiment on February 8, 1864.  (By John Osborne)
 
 

Sergeant Prince Rivers, January 1, 1863, artist's impression.

Scanned by
Google Books
Notes
Cropped, sized, and adjusted for use by John Osborne, Dickinson College, February 22, 2013.
Image type
photograph
Use in Day View?
No
Permission to use?
Yes
Original caption
Flag Presented by Citizens of New New York to the First S.C. Volunteers ... The Colonel (Higginson) commanding charging Sergeant Prince Rivers, as color bearer, never to give it up
Source citation
Thomas Wentworth Higginson, "The First Black Regiment," The Outlook - A Weekly Magazine, July 2, 1898, p. 521.
Source note
Cropped from a larger version of this image, also available here
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