Portrait of Union soldiers serving with Company H of the 196th Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry Regiment posing in a camp in Springfield, Illinois, October 10, 1864.
Source: Missouri History Museum.
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Portrait of Union soldiers serving with Company H of the 196th Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry Regiment posing in a camp in Springfield, Illinois, October 10, 1864.
Source: Missouri History Museum.
Carte de visite view of a street in Springfield, Illinois, c. 1860′s. By Preston Blair.
Mourners in line to see Abraham Lincoln lying in state in the Old State Capitol building in Springfield, Illinois, May 1865. By Ridgway Glover. Animated stereoview.
A group of mourners posing in front of Abraham Lincoln’s former home in the 1840′s named the Globe Tavern sometime after Lincoln’s assassination in Springfield, Illinois, 1865. By Samuel Montague Fasset.
Two African American reverends posing with Abraham Lincoln’s horse named Old Robin in front of Lincoln’s house in Springfield, Illinois, shortly after Lincoln’s assassination c. 1865. By F.W. Ingmire.
Tintype copy of a lost negative profile portrait of President-elect Abraham Lincoln in Springfield, Illinois, February 9, 1861. By Christopher S. German.
View of Abraham Lincoln’s house surrounded by supporters during his 1860 presidential campaign in Springfield, Illinois, August 8, 1860. Lincoln is the tall man in white standing to the right of the front door. The sign that the supporter is holding up on the right reads "Won't you let me in, Kansas."
Carte de visite view of Union soldiers and other unidentified mourners posing around the receiving vault in Oak Ridge Cemetery where President Abraham Lincoln and his son, William Wallace Lincoln, were temporarily buried in Springfield, Illinois, c. 1865.