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Collection Reference Number GLC00493.24
From Archive Folder Confederate war etchings 
Title Prayer in Stonewall Jackson's tent
Date ca. 1880-1890
Author Volck, Adalbert John (1828-1912)  
Document Type Artwork
Content Description Depicts a scene of quiet piety and great reverence in an army camp. Shows most of the men with their heads bowed in prayer, some weeping. Stonewall Jackson, a man known for his great religiosity, appears to be delivering a sermon to the men. Also shows a black man kneeling beside Jackson. Volck made a sketch of the actual event at Ball's Bluff, Virginia, which he later used to make this etching. Size in extent is for the mount. The actual size of the etching is 20.2 x 26.7 cm. Title in pencil on verso.
Subjects Religion  Confederate General or Leader  Confederate States of America  Military History  Civil War  Military Camp  African American History  Slavery  Contrabands  Art, Music, Theater, and Film  Propaganda  Union Forces  
People Volck, Adalbert John (1828-1912)  
Place written s.l.
Theme Government & Politics; The American Civil War; Slavery & Abolition
Sub-collection Papers and Images of the American Civil War
Additional Information Adalbert John Volck was a dentist, political cartoonist, and a caricaturist who sympathized with the Southern cause. During the Civil War, Volck supported the Confederacy through his satirical political cartoons. He also smuggled drugs and medical supplies for the Confederate army, and served as a personal courier to President Jefferson Davis.
Copyright The Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History
Module Civil War, Reconstruction and the Modern Era: 1860-1945