ASSONET ART
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Don Troiani
click on picture for larger image
Band
of Brothers ~ $375
Culp’s Hill, Battle of Gettysburg, 1 July 1863
Print Number: 274/1250 - Issue Date: 1993
Bayonet
~ $550
20th Maine charges the Confederates
on Little Round Top on
2 July 1863 with Joshua Chamberlain
leading the action.
Print Number: 36/1000 -
Issue Date: 1988
Before
the Storm - Artist Proof ~ $2,000
General “Stonewall” Jackson leading his corps
on the Orange Plank Road around
the flank of Union General Hooker during the Battle
of Chancellorsville, May 1863.
Print Number: 40/48 - Issue Date: 1983
May have slight damage
The
Bonnie Blue Flag ~ $375
The Mule Shoe, Spotsylvania, 12 May 1864, Brigadier-General
Stephen Dodson Ramseur’s
North Carolina Brigade.
Print Number: 317/1000 - Issue Date: 1990
The
Boy Colonel ~ Sold
Battle of Gettysburg, 1 July 1863. This print is dedicated
to the youngest
colonel in the Confederacy, 21-year old Colonel Henry
King Burgwyn, Jr.
commander ofthe 26th North Carolina Infantry Regiment
who was killed
in the engagement against the Iron Brigade at McPherson’s
Ridge. Of the
895 men who had started the Battle of Gettysburg,
only 3 officers and 67
men remained present for duty. The regiment’stotal
loss was a staggering
697; of those 174 were killed outright or died of
wounds.
Print Number: 407/1000 - Issue Date: 1988
Bronze
Guns and Iron Men ~ $1,300
This is a very popular print among Civil War art collectors
– a Don Troiani
classic. This depicts the actions of young John Pelham,
a 24-year old Alabamian
artillery officer during the Battle of Fredericksburg
in December 1862. There
is great detail in the gun crew working the cannon
and the counter-battery
action depicted by the shell splintering the pines
in the background.
Print Number: 796/950 - Issue Date: 1986
Burnside's
Bridge ~ $400
Battle of Antietam, 17 September 1862. On the southern
part of the battlefield,
General Burnside tries for hours to gain the stone
bridge that would bear his
name to prevent General Robert E. Lee from shifting
his forces from one sector
of the front to the other.
Print Number: 548/1500 - Issue Date: 1995
Decision
At Dawn ~ $575
General Robert E. Lee at Gettysburg on 2 July 1863
agonizing over his decision
as to how to proceed the next day when he would order
Pickett’s Division to charge
the center of the Union line on Cemetery Ridge.
Print Number: 754/1000 - Issue Date: 1992
“Old Abe” was the American bald eagle mascot of the
8th Wisconsin
Infantry Regiment that fought in the Western theater
including
Vicksburg.
Print Number: 880/1000 - Issue Date:
1988
Emblems
of Valor ~ $425
The most precious item of each soldier was his unit’s
standard. The practice of
adding battles and campaigns to the battle flag started
with the 11th Mississippi
Regimental flag, which was presented with the battle
MANASSAS inscribed for
their stand on 21 July 1861. From then on other regimental
standards began to
bear the names of battles the unit had participated
in to the end of the war. This
began a time-honoredtradition – today in the form
of streamers attached to the
pole top of the regimental standards.
Print Number: 660/1000 - Issue Date: 1989
Fight
for the Colors - Framed ~ $1,850
Battle of Gettysburg, 1 July 1863. Soldiers of the
Union 6th Wisconsin try to seize the
regimental standard of the 2nd Mississippi.
Print Number: 699/950 - Issue Date: 1985
The
Forlorn Hope ~ $500
1st Maine Heavy Artillery, Battle of Petersburg, 18
June 1864. Ordered to charge
the Confederate defenses around the strategically
important city of Petersburg,
this unit had the highest record for casualties in
a single battle of any regiment
in the war. Out of 900 men who started the attack,
240 were dead or dying and 364
lay wounded.
Print Number: 657/1000 - Issue Date: 1989
General
Robert E. Lee ~ $300
A Confederate band plays for General Robert E. Lee
and his
staff as they ride through a town.
Print Number : 636/950 - Issue Date: 1988
Give
Them Cold Steel, Boys ~ Sold
Battle of Gettysburg, 3 July 1863 showing Pickett’s
Charge at Cemetery
Ridge with Brigadier-General Lewis A. Armistead leading
his five regiments
across the field. This is the second of Don
Troiani’s original Gettysburg
trilogy prints –great detail – can look and study
it for hours.
Print Number: 918/950 - Issue Date: 1987
The
Gray Commanches ~ Sold
The Battle of Brandy Station, 9 June 1863, the largest
cavalry battle of the war.
The print depicts Confederate Colonel Elijah White
leading the 35th Battalion
Virginia Cavalry into the center of the battle. The
Gray Comanches also had the
distinction of being the only Confederate cavalry
at Gettysburg the first two days –
it was with General Jubal Early in the north.
Print Number: 221/1000 - Issue Date: 1990
The
Gray Wall ~ $1,800
1864 Campaign in the West showing one of many skirmishes
along the road to
Atlanta and beyond.
Artist Proof #7 - Pencil remarqued and framed
Edition Size: 950 - Issue Date: 1985
The
High Water Mark ~ $1,350
Print similar to Give Them Cold Steel, Boys but from
a different angle showing
General Armistead leading Pickett’s Charge up and
onto Cemetery Ridge before
being mortally wounded…Battle of Gettysburg, 3 July
1863.
Print Number: 639/1250 - Issue Date: 1994
The
Last Salute ~ $1,400
12 April 1865 at Appomattox. Union General Joshua L.
Chamberlain of Maine
takes the final salute of Confederate General
John B. Gordon.
Print Number: 23/1000 - Issue Date: 1988
Lee's
Texans ~ Sold
6 May 1864 at the Battle of (Second) Wilderness, Lee
begins to personally lead Gregg’s
Texas Brigade into battle. These troops raise a cheer,
“Lee to the rear!”
Print Number: 77/950 - Issue Date: 1984
Little
Round Top ~ $275
Battle of Gettysburg, 2 July 1863, the 5th Texas at
the Little Round Top battling the
20th Maine before Chamberlain led the charge down
the hill.
Print Number: 936/1500 - Issue Date: 1997
Louisiana
Tiger Rifles - Framed ~ $1700
Edition Size: 600 - Issue Date: 1982
Major
General J.E.B. Stuart ~ $1200
The famous Confederate cavalry leader during one of
his many actions during a
thunderstorm. One of the best prints done of this
famous Southern cavalier.
Print Number: 745/850 - Issue Date: 1984
The
Men Must See Us Today ~ $750
This is the first of Don Troiani’s Gettysburg trilogy
depicting events on 2 July 1863.
This shows Union Colonel Van Horne Ellis, commanding
officer of the 124th New York
Infantry repelling the attack of the Confederate 1st
Texas at the Devil’s Den. At a
particular time, Ellis,Major James Cromwell and many
of the “Orange Blossoms”
will be killed in a counter-attack to dislodge the
Texans.
Print Number: 376/950 - Issue Date:
1986
Old
Jack ~ $400
Confederate troops cheer their commanding officer,
Major General
Jonathan J.“Stonewall” Jackson during his 1862 Valley
Campaign.
With him is aide Henry Kyd Douglas of Maryland who
designed the
Confederate Battle Flag after the Battle of First
Manassas.
Print Number: 590/950 - Issue Date:
1986
Opdycke's
Tigers ~ $750
Battle of Franklin, 30 November 1864.
Print Number: 273/1000 - Issue Date: 1990
Rebel
Yell - Framed ~ $1350
Print Number: 859/950 - Issue Date: 1985
Saving
the Flag - Framed ~ Sold
Battle of Gettysburg July 2, 1863. Matted and
framed with overall
dimensions of 30" x 28 1/2". There are a few
small nicks in the
wood frame, see pictures below. The print, itself,
is in excellent
condition.
Issue Date: 1988
Stars
& Bars ~ $650
The First National Flag of the Confederate States of
America replaced
after the First Battle of Manassas with the “Stainless
Banner”.
Print Number: 43/950 - Issue Date: 1987
Union
Standard Bearer - Framed - Artist Proof ~ $3,060
Print Number: 14/48 - Issue Date: 1983
Until
Sundown ~Sold
Sunken Road, Battle of Antietam, 17 September 1862.
Colonel John B. Gordon
and his 6th Alabama.
Edition Size: 1000 - Issue Date: 1992
For more information about these prints, please
send your
questions and email address and we will forward on
to the owners
of the respective prints.
jmbiszko@assonetart.com
*Assonet Art is not responsible for any lost or damaged prints sold through this consignment page.