The
Painting of the Battle of Gettysburg
The oil on canvas painting below is on display in the
main lobby of the Advance America Headquarters in downtown Spartanburg.
It measures about 20 feet wide by 7 1/2 feet high. It is
from the private collection of George Dean Johnson, Jr., founder of
Advance America. There is an audio program available from the
nearby receptionist. To visit the painting, go one short block
north on Church Street from Main Street and look on your right.
You gain access to the lobby by pressing the button on the
intercom inside the outer door, and tell the person who answers you
that you wish to view "the picture".
The artist was James Walker, who began working on it in 1864, and
finished 1870. It depicts the field of battle near the end
of Pickett's Charge the afternoon of July 3rd, 1863. In the
distance you can see the Confederate troops trying to breach the stone
wall which gave the Union soldiers considerable cover. In the
foreground lies Gen. Armistead, dying, offering his gold watch to an
enemy officer who was attending to him. Veterans from both armies
viewed the painting after its unveiling and said that it depicted the
events at that point in the battle exactly. Note that on the far
left are the Round Top's, and on the far right is the village of
Gettysburg. A large number of soldiers on both sides are
identified by name in the legend that stands to the right of the
painting.
Click on a link below to
zoom in on the painting.

Armistead Close-up of Armistead Round Tops Right Middle Right Middle Center1 Center 2
Stonewall Ft. Sumter Surrender
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