This volume is the first comprehensive pictorial history interpreting
the events that occurred on the Virginia Peninsula during the war that
forever changed our nation.
The Civil War on the Virginia Peninsula offers over 200 fascinating
images from museums, archives, and private collections throughout
America; together they tell powerful stories of valor, leadership,
technology, and strategy. Photographers and famous artists alike vividly
portrayed soldiers, leaders, and innovations in a compelling manner that
brings alive the glory and sadness of the American Civil War. This
enthralling visual history chronicles the war's first year, during which
the Virginia Peninsula was the focus of Union efforts to capture the
Confederate capital 70 miles away at Richmond. Beginning with Union
General Benjamin F. Butler's arrival at Fort Monroe in May 1861, until
the time of Major General George B. McClellan's pivotal march on
Richmond in the spring of 1862, the Virginia Peninsula was the scene of
some of the Civil War's most critical events, including the contraband
of war issue; the Battle of Big Bethel, the war's first land battle; the
Monitor-Merrimac engagement, the first battle between ironclad ships;
and the Peninsula Campaign.