The
four pictures immediately above appeared on two facing pages
in the April 25, 1865 edition of Frank Leslie's Illustrated
Newspaper. To the left is an excerpt from the text which
accompanied the graphics.
While the full-page picture seems to celebrate the black soldiers
who are depicted marching triumphantly into Richmond and the
African-Americans seen cheering their arrival, the images on
the second page offer views which draw upon racial stereotypes.
The two images in the left hand column might well have been
regarded as comic when they were first published because of
their "droll" representation of the facial characteristics,
gait, dress, and accoutrements of the African-Americans.
While the refugees in the picture upper left may quite rightly
evoke a sympathetic response from the viewer, the image of a
motley procession being reviewed by a pipe-smoking freedwoman
may also have struck nineteenth century readers as "grotesque."
Even more clear is the case of the picture of the freedmen
marching in their tattered clothes with rakes and shovels over
their shoulders: a clear parody of a real army. The title of
the illustration dubs the group the "Sanitation Commission,"
investing the graphic with yet another layer of parody as the
reader contrasts this rag-tag group setting off to clean the
streets with the dignified body of philanthropists who had organized
medical operations during the war. |