Antietam Revisited

After reading Rick Snow's great post on the anniversary of Antietam, I was spinning around on Wikipedia and came across a photograph of Lincoln visiting the Antietam site to speak with McClellan and other officers. One thing that jumped out at me immediately from the description of the photo was that the figure farthest to the right in the photo is none other than George Armstrong Custer. Here is a link to the photo (maybe someone with more computer skills could reproduce the photo):
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/c3/Lincoln_and_generals_at_Antietam.jpg
Upon closer examination of the photo, I have to wonder what is going on with Custer's legs and even better, what is going on with the remnants of a figure to the right of Custer? I assume this has something to do with photography in the 1860s but really have no idea. Any thoughts from the historically-inclined collectors out there? I know I am a little OT here but I'm in the ballpark and suspect there's some folks here with some good answers. Thanks!
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/c3/Lincoln_and_generals_at_Antietam.jpg
Upon closer examination of the photo, I have to wonder what is going on with Custer's legs and even better, what is going on with the remnants of a figure to the right of Custer? I assume this has something to do with photography in the 1860s but really have no idea. Any thoughts from the historically-inclined collectors out there? I know I am a little OT here but I'm in the ballpark and suspect there's some folks here with some good answers. Thanks!

"Look up, old boy, and see what you get." -William Bonney.
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I believed they needed very long exposures, therefore anything in motion would tend to disappear depending on how fast they were moving
Back in 1966 I was taking a nighttime photo of main street of my home town when a car drove across the middle of the shot. I was using 75 speed Polaroid color film. When I peeled the picture from Polaroid developer strip, the car was nothing but thin steam light. I thought that was cool.
<< <i>The exposure times were very long in those days. The cover photo on the Ken Burns DVD Civil War CD set has a headless horse because of that.
Back in 1966 I was taking a nighttime photo of main street of my home town when a car drove across the middle of the shot. I was using 75 speed Polaroid color film. When I peeled the picture from Polaroid developer strip, the car was nothing but thin steam light. I thought that was cool.
In '66 I would have really grooved on it!!
Read Stephen Sears book for a great narrative about Antietam.
Given the actors involved, it truly is an amazing photo.
"Look up, old boy, and see what you get." -William Bonney.
Could get dragged into collecting them without too much kicking and screaming, too, if the really interesting ones weren't so bloody expensive.
I believe that is not Gen. Custer, but Major General Hugh Judson Kilpatrick also a Calvalry general .
I have to correct myself the beard threw me, it isn't Kirpatrick but a Colonel, it appears Captain Custer (promoted to brevet general june 1863) is in the October 3 1862 photo though.
He was on McClellans staff at the time. I think he may be the one with the white hat on ? See the photo link with the names I found
http://www.flickr.com/photos/usnationalarchives/4100754309/
Krueger
Link to Photo with names
<< <i>Lord M I have seen one of the rarest of all civil war images it is known as "soldier standing at attention" in certain circles. .....this soldier is standing for his portrait with his musket leathers shoes hat.....uhh and nothing else...and he is fully " standing at attention". An amazing image the purpose of which we can only imagine..... >>
Wow. I'll bet that IS truly rare and exceptional.
Not so sure it would be something I'd want in my collection, though, haha. Eeeew!
Old tintypes and daguerreotypes and such are something I would collect in a heartbeat, but I don't know very much about them. I do know enough to have discovered quickly that my tastes far outpace my budget. So I'll not be going there anytime soon.
I remember back in 2004 or 2005 or so when Tim Buck, aka "phut", (who dug those Massachusetts silvers recently) was just starting out as a relic hunter, and he dug a small cache of early photographs, which emerged from the ground quite nice. I can't remember if they were still behind glass or not. Think there was a baby picture and one of a married couple. Maybe even a third piece. I forget. Guess they must have been silvered plates? Wouldn't a lot of metal plates have rusted away otherwise? Wish I could find the pictures he posted on the MD Forum, but the Advanced Search feature is dead, and they might not still be working anyway. It was really neat. At the time he was lamenting how he always seemed to find relics but not too many good coins. He's made up for that considerably, since! Used to call himself "the reluctant relic hunter".
Me, I like all sorts of groovy old stuff. Not just coins.
Lafayette Grading Set
<< <i>I will stand corrected, but as a long time civil war buff and holding a book of photos/ portraits from the civil war
I believe that is not Gen. Custer, but Major General Hugh Judson Kilpatrick also a Calvalry general .
I have to correct myself the beard threw me, it isn't Kirpatrick but a Colonel, it appears Captain Custer (promoted to brevet general june 1863) is in the October 3 1862 photo though.
He was on McClellans staff at the time. I think he may be the one with the white hat on ? See the photo link with the names I found
http://www.flickr.com/photos/usnationalarchives/4100754309/
Krueger
Link to Photo with names >>
Thanks for even more information -- this stuff is pretty incredible. I agree that the person to the far right that Wikipedia identifies as Custer doesn't bear much likeness to him. The guy in the light hat might just be him.
"Look up, old boy, and see what you get." -William Bonney.
The Penny Lady®
Cropped image with names
<< <i>This country needs more fighters like Custer !! >>
Sorry, as others have noted, he was a glory hunter who only had one speed, forward, and this was not always a good tactical or strategic paradigm to follow.
WOW! just love that colorized version!! Thanks for sharing.
I still think Custer is the one in the white hat. I have never seen any picture of him (except his west point photo) wearing any other style of hat.
He was 22 years old at the time, and the fellow in that white hat looks very very young, certainly the youngest in the group.
Excellent bio write up on Custer. Worth a read. .Great short Bio of Custer.
Also see the movie "They died with there boots on" Staring Errol Flynn. A very good movie about Custer's life
Krueger
Historic day.
Antietam is a great place to visit, the battlefield and the town there I found had and erie feel to it .
Felt like going back in time, just like it was.
Krueger
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<< <i>That is a very cool photo, just amazing! >>
Link to article
If you are interested in Civil War history and not reading this series, you are missing a lot of good stuff!
Lincoln needed the victory (although it's hard to call the carnage of Antietam a victory) to change the nature of the war from one of union (War of Southern secession or Northern aggression) to a war to end slavery. The timing was also a political move to advance the Republican's in Congress in the mid-term elections just a few weeks away and to thwart any European recognition of the Confederacy. Oh, and a few million slaves would now be free when the war ended.
Also, 150 years ago, patriotic and merchant cent tokens were starting to be sold in Cincinnati by John Stanton. Cents were being hoarded even though the copper and nickel in them were not worth more than a cent.
<< <i>Also, 150 years ago, patriotic and merchant cent tokens were starting to be sold in Cincinnati by John Stanton. Cents were being hoarded even though the copper and nickel in them were not worth more than a cent. >>
Just adding a picture for fun regarding a 1863 token from Cinci
1863 Cinci Token
Edited: Well, the pic tab didn't work for me today, so a hyperlink will have to do!
"Got a flaming heart, can't get my fill"