Back last year, I wrote a column on how Greensboro
and Guildford County were the most written-about locations in North Carolina
during the war. With five books on the subject, I still hold to that. But New
Bern, I believe, is the most-illustrated part of North Carolina during the war.
New Bern, scenes of battle,
Harper's Weekly, April 19, 1862.
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Following a battle just south of the town, Federal
forces captured New Bern in March 1862. They held it for the remainder of the
war, and often used it as a staging area for raids toward the east. Even though
parts of New Bern were burned during the Confederate retreat, large portions of
the colonial capital survived.
New Bern, reception of Edward
Stanley,
Harper's Weekly, July 19,
1862.
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There were wood-cut illustrations of the battle of
New Bern, along with scenes of the city itself, over the next few years in
various newspapers from the North. And, there were photographs as well.
Photographer E. J. Smith visited the two in 1863. The North Carolina Collection
Photographic Archives at UNC-Chapel Hill has 27 carte-de-visite prints
attributed to Smith taken in New Bern. These, coupled with the newspaper
illustrations, make New Bern the most illustrated place during the 1860s.
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