Alfred Rudolph Waud 
Attack of Smith's Corps at Cold Harbor, Virginia
⚈ Sold
American (1828-1891)

Pen & Ink on Board Dated 1864
7 x 12 ¾ Inches 15 x 19 Inches Framed
LL: ARW  
   

Alfred Rudolph Waud 
 
American (1828-1891)
 
Attack of Smith's Corps at Cold Harbor, Virginia
⚈ Sold

Pen & Ink on Board Dated 1864
7 x 12 ¾ Inches 15 x 19 Inches Framed
LL: ARW  
   

Inscription verso: "Flight on June 1, 1864 (Smith's Corps) near Cold Harbor. Prisoners and wounded coming in from the front. The lines face the Chickahominy which is beyond the distant crest held by the Rebels."

While the photographic process evolved rapidly from its inception in 1839 and the wet plate process of taking photographs was coming into widespread use by the start of the Civil War, it was a cumbersome process in the field as well as the studio. More significantly, at that time the photographs themselves could not be reproduced as illustrations accompanying written reports of the war.

As a result, publishers of newspapers and other periodicals in major cities, primarily in the North, employed a number of sketch artists who traveled with armies to draw the scenes that they witnessed. These sketches, most frequently pencil on paper with brief identifications of people and places, were then sent back by courier to the periodical publishers. The battlefield sketches received by the publishers were then copied by engraving artists onto wooden blocks, which were used in printing presses to illustrate printed articles covering the war.

This illustration would have been done while Alfred Waud was a sketch artist working exclusively for Harper's Weekly.

The Battle of Cold Harbor was fought from May 31 to June 12, 1864, with the most significant fighting occurring on June 3. It was one of the final battles of Union Lt. Gen. Ulysses S. Grant's Overland Campaign during the American Civil War, and is remembered as one of American history's bloodiest, most lopsided battles. Thousands of Union soldiers were killed or wounded in a hopeless frontal assault against the ... Read More


Provenance: Century Magazine Collection of Civil War artwork; David L. Hack Civil War Art Collection