4 results for your search
Big Picture, Episode 348, Historic Fort Monroe
in Records of the Office of the Chief Signal Officer (RG111), of United States. National Archives and Records Administration. Federal Records, in Big Picture, Episode 348 (District of Columbia: United States. Army Pictorial Service, 1956), 27 mins
This episode of The Big Truth covers activities at historic Fort Monroe, Virginia, Headquarters, Continental Army Command. Here is an Army post which almost breathes tradition and in recent years has become an attraction for tourists from all over the country. MSgt. Stuart Queen, the series' host-narrator, takes h...
Sample
in Records of the Office of the Chief Signal Officer (RG111), of United States. National Archives and Records Administration. Federal Records, in Big Picture, Episode 348 (District of Columbia: United States. Army Pictorial Service, 1956), 27 mins
Description
This episode of The Big Truth covers activities at historic Fort Monroe, Virginia, Headquarters, Continental Army Command. Here is an Army post which almost breathes tradition and in recent years has become an attraction for tourists from all over the country. MSgt. Stuart Queen, the series' host-narrator, takes his audience into the old walled fort, the only one of its kind in this country surrounded by a moat. It was in one of the small rooms o...
This episode of The Big Truth covers activities at historic Fort Monroe, Virginia, Headquarters, Continental Army Command. Here is an Army post which almost breathes tradition and in recent years has become an attraction for tourists from all over the country. MSgt. Stuart Queen, the series' host-narrator, takes his audience into the old walled fort, the only one of its kind in this country surrounded by a moat. It was in one of the small rooms of the fort that Confederate President Jefferson Davis was imprisoned, today known as the "Casemate Museum." A standout job in photography has been accomplished in filming the interior of the lovely Chapel of the Centurion which serves as a post chapel. Hanging from the walls of the chancel and nave are the flags and colors of old regiments of the United States Army. The stained glass windows of the Chapel are dedicated to the military men who have served at Fort Monroe. On such a window is inscribed, "He died so the kids next door may live." Additional coverage is given to activities of test boards in six different locales of the U.S. and the arctic test branch at Fort Greely, Alaska. Although old in history, Fort Monroe, home of the Continental Army Command, still plays a prominent and vital role in the national security of the United States.
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Field of Study
The American Civil War
Content Type
Documentary
Contributor
Stuart Queen
Date Published / Released
1956
Publisher
United States. Army Pictorial Service
Series
Big Picture
Speaker / Narrator
Stuart Queen
Person Discussed
Jefferson Davis, 1808-1889
Topic / Theme
Churches, Military parades, Military personnel, Museums, Tourist attractions, War memorials, Weapons testing, Battle at Hampton Roads, VA, March 8-9, 1862, Black Hawk War, 1832, U.S. Civil War, 1861-1865, American History, Post-war Era (1945–1960), 20th Century in World History (1914--2000)
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Big Picture, Episode 511, Army Digest, no. 8
in Records of the Office of the Chief Signal Officer (RG111), of United States. National Archives and Records Administration. Federal Records, in Big Picture, Episode 511 (District of Columbia: United States. Army Pictorial Service, 1960), 29 mins
The Mathew Brady Story' brings to the television screen the work of the famed photographer who, during the Civil War, earned the title of "The First Combat Photographer." In this documentary, Brady's crisp visual account of the Civil War and its men is brought to life as music, sound, and movement team up with Bra...
Sample
in Records of the Office of the Chief Signal Officer (RG111), of United States. National Archives and Records Administration. Federal Records, in Big Picture, Episode 511 (District of Columbia: United States. Army Pictorial Service, 1960), 29 mins
Description
The Mathew Brady Story' brings to the television screen the work of the famed photographer who, during the Civil War, earned the title of "The First Combat Photographer." In this documentary, Brady's crisp visual account of the Civil War and its men is brought to life as music, sound, and movement team up with Brady's photographic skill to give THE BIG PICTURE audience an authentic sense of what it was like to live and fight through the years whe...
The Mathew Brady Story' brings to the television screen the work of the famed photographer who, during the Civil War, earned the title of "The First Combat Photographer." In this documentary, Brady's crisp visual account of the Civil War and its men is brought to life as music, sound, and movement team up with Brady's photographic skill to give THE BIG PICTURE audience an authentic sense of what it was like to live and fight through the years when our nation's unity hung in the balance. In the "Clara Barton Story," the personal chronicle of the woman who was instrumental in founding the Red Cross - the accounting, in her own words, of her part in a single day of the Battle of Antietam - is documented through scenes shot at the actual site of the battle, near Hagerstown, Maryland. Hagerstown residents ably portray Miss Barton and those with whom - and for whom - she worked, in the midst of that tragic day and night of fighting, adding visual drama to a narrative excerpted from words written by Clara Barton herself.
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Field of Study
The American Civil War
Content Type
Documentary
Contributor
Stuart Queen
Date Published / Released
1960
Publisher
United States. Army Pictorial Service
Series
Big Picture
Speaker / Narrator
Stuart Queen
Person Discussed
Clara Barton, 1821-1912, Abraham Lincoln, 1809-1865, Mathew Brady, 1823-1896
Topic / Theme
Medical corps, Military life, Nurses, Photographers, Photography, Portraits, Abraham Lincoln, Assassination, Washington, DC, April 14, 1865, Battle of Antietam, MD, September 17, 1862, U.S. Civil War, 1861-1865, American History, Civil War (1860–1865), Industrialization and Western Global Hegemony (1750–1914)
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Discussion of South Carolina Secession and Robert Anderson's Command of Fort Moutrie and Fort Sumter, 1860-1861
in The Conflict Begins, Disc 1, Civil War Journal (New York, NY: A&E Television Networks, 1993, first release 2001), 11 mins
The History Channel's acclaimed series, Civil War Journal, takes viewers beyond the battles and into the personal stories of the War Between the States. Drawing on diaries, photographs and dramatic re-enactments, the intimate side of the epic conflict is exposed. In this gripping, 2 DVD set, the earliest days of t...
Sample
in The Conflict Begins, Disc 1, Civil War Journal (New York, NY: A&E Television Networks, 1993, first release 2001), 11 mins
Description
The History Channel's acclaimed series, Civil War Journal, takes viewers beyond the battles and into the personal stories of the War Between the States. Drawing on diaries, photographs and dramatic re-enactments, the intimate side of the epic conflict is exposed. In this gripping, 2 DVD set, the earliest days of the war come alive through four favorite episodes: John Brown's War, Destiny at Fort Sumter, The Battle of 1st Bull Run, The 54th Massac...
The History Channel's acclaimed series, Civil War Journal, takes viewers beyond the battles and into the personal stories of the War Between the States. Drawing on diaries, photographs and dramatic re-enactments, the intimate side of the epic conflict is exposed. In this gripping, 2 DVD set, the earliest days of the war come alive through four favorite episodes: John Brown's War, Destiny at Fort Sumter, The Battle of 1st Bull Run, The 54th Massachusetts.
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Field of Study
The American Civil War
Content Type
Documentary
Date Published / Released
2001, 1993
Publisher
A&E Television Networks
Series
Civil War Journal
Person Discussed
Robert Anderson, Abner Doubleday, 1819-1893, Abraham Lincoln, 1809-1865
Topic / Theme
Army bases, Commanders (Navy), Secession, First Battle of Fort Sumter, SC, April 12, 1861, South Carolina Secedes, December 20, 1860, American History, Civil War (1860–1865), Industrialization and Western Global Hegemony (1750–1914)
Copyright Message
Copyright 2008 A&E Television Networks
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Lincoln and Lee at Antietam: The Cost of Freedom
directed by Robert Child, 1963-; produced by Robert Child, 1963- (Harrington Park, NJ: Janson Media, 2005, originally published 2005), 1 hour 28 mins
Lincoln and Lee at Antietam – The Cost of Freedom focuses on the single bloodiest day in American history. The film features commentaries from renowned historians who explain the significance of this first Civil War battle fought on northern soil. Through first person accounts, an original music score, and scarc...
Sample
directed by Robert Child, 1963-; produced by Robert Child, 1963- (Harrington Park, NJ: Janson Media, 2005, originally published 2005), 1 hour 28 mins
Description
Lincoln and Lee at Antietam – The Cost of Freedom focuses on the single bloodiest day in American history. The film features commentaries from renowned historians who explain the significance of this first Civil War battle fought on northern soil. Through first person accounts, an original music score, and scarce Antietam commemorative battle footage from reenactments, this film tells the tale of the 14-hour epic Battle of Antietam.
Field of Study
The American Civil War
Content Type
Documentary
Contributor
Robert Child, 1963-, Ronald F. Maxwell, 1949-
Author / Creator
Robert Child, 1963-
Date Published / Released
2005
Publisher
Janson Media
Speaker / Narrator
Ronald F. Maxwell, 1949-
Person Discussed
Ambrose Everett Burnside, 1824-1881, Ambrose Powell Hill, 1825-1865, Thomas Jonathan Jackson, 1824-1863, Robert Edward Lee, 1807-1870, Abraham Lincoln, 1809-1865, James Longstreet, 1821-1904, George Brinton McClellan, 1826-1885, John Pope, 1822-1892
Topic / Theme
Heads of state, Military maneuvers, Military personnel, Battle of Antietam, MD, September 17, 1862, American History, Civil War (1860–1865), Industrialization and Western Global Hegemony (1750–1914)
Copyright Message
Copyright © 2005 by Inecom Entertainment Company. Used by permission of Janson Media.
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