Star of the South (1853 ship)
Star of the South was a wooden-hulled, propeller-driven steamship launched in 1853. She was one of the first mechanically reliable and economically profitable propeller-driven steamships. Her success foretold the end of paddlewheel propulsion on ocean-going steamships.
Star of the South
Confederate prisoners on the deck of the Star of the South in New York Harbor in 1862
1st New York Engineer Regiment
The 1st New York Engineer Regiment was an engineer regiment that served in the Union Army during the American Civil War. It was also known as Serrell's Engineers, New York Volunteer Corps of Engineers, or Engineer's and Artizans. The regiment served initially in the Lower Seaboard Theater, and later in the Richmond–Petersburg Campaign.
1st New York Engineer Regiment
Staged photograph of the 1st NY Engineers demonstrating sapping on Morris Island.
Company F, after the capture of Fort Pulaski in 1862
The famed Marsh Battery featuring the Swamp Angel, after it had misfired and exploded on August 22, 1863