Click on the broken link graphic and fill in the form
-
Civil War Broadsides and Ephemera
From the University of Vermont, Bailey/Howe Library, Special Collections. Contains items from the Wilbur Collection of Vermontiana that were printed and circulated from 1861 to 1865.
-
Fashion plates, fashion 'chit-chats', links to museum originals, resources, definitions, sewing and constructions tips.
-
Rochester Images - Many Roads to Freedom
Has links to Rochester, New York area Underground Railroad house sites, Civil War soldier data, and searchable scanned newspapers. Useful for researching soldiers and abolitionists.
-
United States Sanitary Commission records 1861-1879 [bulk 1861-1872]
From the New York Public Library, Archives & Manuscripts. Full details about the collections and how to access them. The United States Sanitary Commission (USSC), 1861-1879, was a civilian organization authorized by the United States government to provide medical and sanitary assistance to the Union volunteer forces during the United States Civil War (1861-1865). As the USSC broadened the scope of its work during the war, Regular troops, sailors and others also benefited from its services. The collection consists of correspondence, memoranda, minutes, reports, military service claim files, registers, diaries, financial records, scrapbooks, posters, illustrations, photographs, printed matter, maps, ephemera and artifacts concerning the Commission's sanitary, medical and relief work during the Civil War, as well as its post-war relief work and publication activities. The collection also includes the records of the American Association for the Relief of the Misery of Battle Fields, founded in 1866 by USSC officers and former associates.