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Schell, Frederic B.

 Person

Biography as described by The Becker Collection:

1838-1902

"Frederic B. Schell was born in Philadelphia and studied at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts. He became a “special artist for Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper in 1862 and did drawings at Antietam in that year. In 1863, Frank Leslie assigned him to General Ulysses S. Grant’s army at Vicksburg where he drew the desperate hand-to-hand combat of the second futile assault by Union troops on May 18 and detailed scenes of the subsequent siege of the city. When the Confederate General John C. Pemberton and his exhausted and starving troops surrendered on July 4, Schell sketched the stacking of Confederate weapons while Union troops sat watching the enemy file by. He captured the somber meeting of the two generals and the silent march of the Federal army through the shell-scarred streets of Vicksburg. Leslie published these drawings along with those of Edwin Forbes at Gettysburg in a special supplementary issue of Leslie’s in late July. In all, Leslie’s published 43 of Schell’s wartime drawings. His work was also published in Century magazine and in Battles and Leaders of the Civil War (1884-1887), and he did illustrations for Picturesque Canada (1879) and for The Picturesque Atlas of Australia(1886). He served as art director for Harper [and] Brothers."

NACO Variants

Schell, F. B. (Frederic B.)

Schell, Fred B.

NACO URI(s)

http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/nr90025959

Found in 1 Collection or Record:

"Funeral Procession of General George Meade Passing through Fairmount Park". [approx. 50 copies], post 1872

 Item — Drawer: M-2
Scope and Contents note From the Collection: This collection contains a wide range of items in terms of both content and format. The strongest series contains lithographs, etchings and engravings of various Fairmount Park locations and features- particularly views of and from Historic Houses, park features and the Fairmount Water Works. The bulk of this collection is from the mid to late 19th Century. Eight original carborundum and charcoal prints created by prominent local artists for the Works Progress Administration's...
Dates: post 1872