Photos & Videos

Atlanta Cyclorama Photos

The absence of a historically preserved battlefield means that visitors seeking firsthand knowledge about the places and events that figured prominently in the Battle of Atlanta must go beyond the almost effortless engagement with history available at well-preserved Civil War sites, such as Kennesaw Mountain, Gettysburg, and Vicksburg. Visits to the Atlanta battlefield, even via virtual tour, require greater self-reliance and a more active process of combining historical accounts, maps, and images with present-day visual evidence to ferret out what happened, where, and why. The rewards are great. By juxtaposing information from then and now, visitors traveling through contemporary Atlanta gain a new and powerful perspective on the city, its neighborhoods, and their place in history. Exploring seemingly ordinary sites is a way to gain a new awareness of history, even if the sites are often encountered during our everyday routines. Landscape historian John R. Stilgoe encourages us to scrutinize those places, put them in spatial context, and arrange them in time. "Enjoy the best kept secret around," Stilgoe writes, "the ordinary everyday landscape that rewards any explorer, that touches any explorer with magic." — From The Battle of Atlanta: History and Remembrance by Daniel A. Pollock (2014)

Educational Videos

Sherman's Headquarters

This 3-min video, which was recorded at the 1864 site of Sherman's HQ (now the Carter Center) provides context for the overall battlefield.

Video by: ExploreATL

Sherman Makes Georgia Howl

This 58-min documentary provides an excellent overview of the Atlanta Campaign and offers unique insights into what the city of Atlanta was like during this period.

Video by: Georgia Public Broadcasting & Atlanta History Center

Troop Positions

This 19-min video provides details about the battlefield and troop positions during the Battle of Atlanta.

Video by: American Battlefield Trust

Historical Photos Contextualized

This 15-min video places historical photos (taken around the time of the Battle of Atlanta) in context with our modern-day city.

Video by: American Battlefield Trust

Historical Photos

Photograph by Walter Sparks, Atlanta Journal-Constitution, June 24, 1929 (taken in area between Maynard Terrace and Moreland Avenue looking west)

Union Station

Union Station

The "Gulch"

Roundhouse

Atlanta's roundhouse, which housed the city's rail infrastructure hub, was left in ruins following the city's sack by Union forces in 1864. The destruction of Southern rail lines devastated the Confederacy. Photo by George N. Barnard, Library of Congress

Union Station

Rolling Mill