The artist’s easel was set up on the highest elevation of East Cemetery Hill with a view facing southwest. Rock outcroppings in the foreground and still be seen today. The gatehouse to Evergreen Cemetery, constructed in 1855, is prominent. It was...
The artist’s easel was set up very near the location for Bryan's House and Meade's Headquarters, this time with the painter facing south. The Nicolas Codori homestead was a red brick structure, also referenced as a guiding point for Pickett’s...
Here the artist has set his easel just to the west side of the Emmitsburg Road (actually not an improved pike at the time of the battle), probably between the Klingle and Wentz homesteads and facing southeast. Round Top (also known at the time as...
This is part of the panorama done in various field paintings from north of the Codori homestead on the Emmitsburg Road. It actually looks west from the Federal skirmish line toward the Confederate position in Spangler Woods and along Seminary...
The artist’s easel was set up on the edge of the Emmitsburg Road (seen in foreground) with a view to the northeast seeing part of Cemetery Ridge. The modest homestead of Abraham Brien (alternate spellings Bryan and Brian) is seen in the center,...
This painting is set in the panorama between FR23 and FR18, facing west northwest. It shows the fields of the William Bliss farm over which Pettigrew and Trimble’s Confederate divisions crossed in the grand assault of July 3 (contrary to the...
This is a continuation of the panorama as seen from the point along the Emmitsburg Road just north of the Codori homestead. The direction faced is north northwest. Barely visible on Seminary Ridge is the cupola above Pennsylvania Hall, now...
This is a section of the panorama from the Emmitsburg road, here facing southwest. In the far distance is Jack’s Mountain, where the Federals had a signal corps outpost. Pickett’s men were concealed mostly in the fields on the back slope of the...
The vantage point here is the same as in FR12. It has not related to Paul Philippoteaux’s famous Cyclorama painting nor the Cyclorama building (1963-2008) at Gettysburg National Military Park. But it is part of a panorama of paintings.