Ruins of Gallego Flour Mills, Richmond

Alexander Gardner American, Scottish
Formerly attributed to Mathew B. Brady American, born Ireland

Not on view

In 1861, at the outset of the Civil War, the Confederate government moved its capital from Montgomery, Alabama, to Richmond, Virginia, to be closer to the front and to protect Richmond’s ironworks and flour mills. On April 2, 1865, as the Union army advanced on Richmond, General Robert E. Lee gave the orders to evacuate the city. A massive fire broke out the following day, the result of a Confederate attempt to destroy anything that could be of use to the invading Union army. In addition to consuming twenty square blocks, including nearly every building in Richmond’s commercial district, it destroyed the massive Gallego Flour Mills, situated on the James River and seen here. Alexander Gardner, Mathew B. Brady’s former gallery manager, then his rival, made numerous photographs of the "Burnt District" as well as this dramatic panorama from two glass negatives. The charred remains have become over time an iconic image of the fall of the Confederacy and the utter devastation of war.

Ruins of Gallego Flour Mills, Richmond, Alexander Gardner (American, Glasgow, Scotland 1821–1882 Washington, D.C.), Albumen silver prints from glass negatives

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Panorama consisting of 33.65.11 and 33.65.226