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X-WR-CALNAME:National Museum of Civil War Medicine
X-WR-CALDESC:The premier center for the preservation and research of the le
 gacy of Civil War medical innovation.
X-WR-TIMEZONE:America/New_York
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TZID:America/New_York
X-LIC-LOCATION:America/New_York
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DTSTART:20131103T020000
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UID:/?post_type=ai1ec_event&#038;p=437&#038;instance_id=
DTSTAMP:20130121T075115Z
CONTACT:
DESCRIPTION:<p style='text-align: center\;'><strong>“Bringing the Story of 
 War to Our Doorsteps:</strong> <strong>Rediscovering Alexander Gardner’s A
 ntietam Photographs”</strong><br />A special exhibit at the<br /><strong>N
 ational Museum of Civil War Medicine</strong></p>\n<p>For the first time s
 ince the Civil War\, Mathew Brady’s famous 1862 photographic exhibition “T
 he Dead of Antietam\,” will be exhibited at the National Museum of Civil W
 ar Medicine\, in Frederick\, MD. A partnership among the Museum\, the Fred
 erick County Civil War Roundtable\, and Hood College has recreated the ori
 ginal photographs of battlefield dead captured by Alexander Gardner after 
 the battle of Antietam. During the Civil War\, Gardner’s photography revol
 utionized how the public would see the human cost of war.</p>\n<p>On Septe
 mber 17\, 1862\, Union and Confederate armies clashed at the small town of
  Sharpsburg\, MD. The battle left more than 23\,000 Americans killed\, wou
 nded\, or missing\, making it the bloodiest day in United States history. 
 Two days later\, Mathew Brady’s photographer Alexander Gardner and his ass
 istant James Gibson began photographing the battlefield and the soldiers w
 ho had died. By October 6th\, 1862\, Brady had these photographs on displa
 y and ready for sale at his New York City gallery.</p>\n<p style='padding-
 left: 30px\;'><em>“The living that throng Broadway care little perhaps for
  the Dead at Antietam\, but we fancy they would jostle less carelessly dow
 n the great thoroughfare\, saunter less at their ease\, were a few drippin
 g bodies\, fresh from the field\, laid along the pavement.</em></p>\n<p st
 yle='padding-left: 30px\;'><em>Mr. Brady has done something to bring home 
 to us the terrible reality and earnestness of war. If he has not brought b
 odies and laid them in our dooryards and along the streets\, he has done s
 omething very like it.”</em></p>\n<p style='padding-left: 30px\;'><em>New 
 York Times October 20\, 1862</em></p>\n<p>“Bringing the Story of war to ou
 r Doorsteps\,” was initially hosted at the Pry House Field Hospital Museum
 \, the National Museum of Civil War Medicine’s satellite museum at Antieta
 m National Battlefield\, during October and November. The exhibit has been
  so popular that the Museum decided to extend its duration and bring it to
  downtown Frederick\, MD.</p>\n<p>“This has been a memorable experience\,”
  said event organizer Robert Kozak. “We have restaged the original exhibit
  so people can experience what viewers saw 150 years ago.” Display prints 
 have been made to the same dimensions and style of the originals from high
 -definition Library of Congress digital files. “We are also privileged to 
 have on display several original Gardner photos from the collection of Rob
 ert Zeller\,” said Kozak.</p>
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20121214T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20130225T170000
EXDATE:20121225T050000Z,20121224T050000Z,20121231T050000Z,20130101T050000Z,
 20130102T050000Z,20130103T050000Z,20130104T050000Z,20130105T050000Z,201301
 06T050000Z
LOCATION:48 East Patrick Street Frederick\, MD 21705
SUMMARY:War On Our Doorsteps
URL:/ai1ec_event/war-on-our-doorsteps/?instance_id=
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