60th Tennessee Infantryman
Photographic portraiture flourished during the Civil War. Ambrotype and tintype photographs were not only affordable, but a finished portrait could be produced in a matter of minutes. Some soldiers visited photographic studios before they went off to war, leaving their portrait at home with loved ones. Union forces captured Confederate soldier James Bishop White on May 17, 1863. He spent the remainder of the war as a prisoner at Point Lookout, Maryland.
Photographic portraiture flourished during the Civil War. Ambrotype and tintype photographs were not only affordable, but a finished portrait could be produced in a matter of minutes. Some soldiers visited photographic studios before they went off to war, leaving their portrait at home with loved ones. Union forces captured Confederate soldier James Bishop White on May 17, 1863. He spent the remainder of the war as a prisoner at Point Lookout, Maryland.