Voltaire Combe's remarkable wartime lithograph
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By John B. Green III
The September 11, 1865 edition of the New Berne Daily Times, bears the first notice, seen below, of the existence of a large and handsome lithograph of New Bern which could be "obtained from Mr. V. Combe, or at the stores of E. Young and J.E. West, on Pollock street." Voltaire Combe was the artist responsible for the creation of this lithograph, and, aside from being an artist, he was also a Union soldier stationed in New Bern.
New Berne Daily Times, September 11, 1865. |
Detail of left-hand side of lithograph. |
When Voltaire Combe wasn't participating in the activities of his regiment, he must have been busily sketching scenes of interest in and around New Bern. Combe produced at least two lithographs of New Bern: the large view of the town and harbor seen here and a smaller print of Camp Oliver of the Twenty-fifth Massachusetts Regiment. In both instances he turned to the firm of Major & Knapp of New York to transform his art into a colored lithograph that he might sell.
Detail of right-hand side of lithograph. |
Voltaire Combe's rendering of New Bern exhibits considerable detail, mostly accurate. The layout of the town is shown with its streets, public buildings, churches, wharves, and some individual houses. The harbor, though more crowded than it probably ever was on any given day, displays the wide variety of ships which the Union Army and Navy used in the shallow waters of eastern North Carolina.
Only a few copies of Voltaire Combe's great lithograph of New Bern survive and ours is, doubtless, the worst of the bunch. It has been trimmed to fit an inappropriate frame, losing in the process, more than a foot of sky as well as some of its side and bottom margins. It is acid-browned from the wooden backing in the frame, water-stained, scraped, gouged, torn, and bug-bitten. Yet, for all that, the most important parts of the image survive along with the title and publication information. It's ours, and we like it.