President in Petticoats! Civil War Propaganda in Photographs

32;As the American Civil War ground to a dispiriting and unheroic end after the surrender of General Robert E. Lee's rebel forces and the shocking assassination of President Abraham Lincoln in mid-April 1865, Jefferson Davis, President of the Confederate States, became a political fugitive. At dawn on May 10, 1865, a contingent of Michigan cavalry captured Davis in a makeshift camp outside Irwinville, Georgia. In his haste to flee, Davis grabbed his wife's overcoat rather than his own. News reports immediately circulated that Davis had been apprehended in women's clothes and that he was attempting to disguise himself as a woman. Northern artists and caricaturists seized upon these rumors of cowardly escape and created wildly inventive images, some using photomontage, to sensationalize the political story. Photographers circulated and even pirated dozens of fanciful photographic cards; many used a photographic portrait of Davis on a hand-drawn body in a woman's dress, hat, and crinoline, but wearing his own boots, the detail that supposedly betrayed him to his captors. The exhibition is organized by Assistant Curator of Collections Erin Barnett.
38 Items
  • "Jeff Davis and His Last Ditch"
  • [Jefferson Davis]
  • Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper
  • Harper's Weekly: A Journal of Civilization
  • The Capture of an Unprotected Female, or the Close of the Rebellion
  • The Last Ditch of the Chivalry, or a President in Petticoats
  • [Jefferson Davis in women's clothing]
  • Jeff Davis in disguise, as he appeared at the time of his capture
  • A Wolf in Sheep's Clothing, or Jeff in Crinoline
  • Jeff's Last Extremity (so far)
  • [Jefferson Davis in women's clothing, holding pail]
  • [Capture of Jefferson Davis in women's clothing]
  • Final "Clothes" (Close) of the Chivalry
  • The Last of the Chevaliers (End of the Play)
  • Jeff's Soliloquy: To Be or Not to Be (Hanged) That's the Question
  • "Jeff. Davis and His Last Ditch"
  • The Stern Statesman; Mrs D. Please don't provoke the President, or he might hunt some of You'ns
  • Mrs. Davis, "Please gentlemen, don't disturb the Privacy of ladies before they are dressed" Corp. 'We'll wait marm: Put on yer duds."
  • "Waiting for the Hour"
  • [Jefferson Davis in a dress, holding a bowie knife]
  • Mrs. Jeff. Davis--"Don't provoke the President or he may hurt some of you."
  • "We are about making a movement that will astonish the world," J.D.
  • Don't provoke me (the President) or I shall do some one harm
  • A Distinguished Arrival
  • [Capture of Jefferson Davis in women's clothing]
  • [Capture of Jefferson Davis in women's clothing]
  • The Confederacy in Petticoats
  • The Capture of Jeff Davis
  • Last Act of Rebellion: Jeff. Davis as Madame Vanderpants, Scene I
  • Last Act of Rebellion: Jeff. Davis as Madame Vanderpants, Scene III
  • Jeff Davis as Madame Vanderpants
  • "Your men had better not provoke the President, for he might hurt 'em"  Mrs. Jeff Davis
  • Now therefore I, Jefferson Davis, President of the Confederate States of America,--all I want is to be let alone!
  • "Come out of them Petticoats--I see your Boots"
  • The Clothes of the Confederacy
  • Jeff Davis in His Traveling Costume
  • [Child's drawing of Jefferson Davis in women's clothing]
  • Oh Jeff! Oh Jeff! How Are You Now?