:When a pair of collectors, Franklin Miller and Bob Joseph,
purchased a painting in London by the French-Belgian painter
Alexandre-Thomas Francia (1820-1884), they could see immediately
that it portrayed the burning of Richmond on April 3, 1865 - even
though it was not so identified by the sellers.
The question that hung in the air was this: had Francia actually
been in the Confederate States in 1865?
The pair queried readers of the Civil War News, a
publication based in Tunbridge, Vt., but unfortunately, no reader
was able to provide any details on Francia. As luck would have
it, a recent trip to Richmond, which included visits to the
Virginia Historical Society and the Museum of the Confederacy,
produced a gold mine of information, according to Miller, and the
pair recently related what they found:
Richmond, capital of the Confederacy, was set ablaze on April 3,
1865, during the evacuation of Southern forces. The fire would
burn and smolder for several days. The best known depiction of
the fire was circulated by Currier & Ives. The Currier &
Ives piece, however, was not based on eyewitness accounts.
Currier & Ives had published a lithograph of Richmond years
before the war, and, on hearing the news of the fire, the
enterprising print makers had one of its artists in New York add
flames to the previous image and rushed it into print.
The Francia painting represented a challenge, according to
Miller, because it presents a different view of the burning city.
The view is from Manchester, looking across the pontoon bridge
built by Union forces. Furthermore, unlike the Currier & Ives
lithograph, many of the burned out buildings in the Francia
painting conform to surviving photographs taken at the time.
After failing to discover information that would have placed
Francia in Richmond in 1865, Miller and Joseph reversed course
and sought to discover an image similar to that painted by
Francia. Virginia Historical Society experts recalled seeing an
image similar to Francia's and suggested exploring contemporary
editions of the Illustrated London News. "The very helpful
staff of the Museum of the Confederacy produced the 1865 copies
of the News from the museum's back rooms - and therein lay
the answer," said Miller. The May 20, 1865, edition carried a
long letter, accompanied by sketches, from a T.W. Kennard, chief
engineer of the Atlantic and Great Western Railway, describing
his April 7, 1865, visit to Richmond, and a subsequent meeting
with President Abraham Lincoln.
The News introduced the story as follows: "The first
vessel that went up the James River to Richmond after the
evacuation of that city by the Confederates on Monday, April 3,
was a private yacht, the steamer Octavia, of 430 tons,
built in America but belonging to an English gentleman, Mr T.W.
Kennard, the chief engineer of the Atlantic and Great Western
Railway, who was accompanied by his son and several other
gentlemen in this early visit to the fallen capital of the
South... He gives the following account of his visit to the
ruined city:
...Upon arriving at Manchester, on the south side of the James
River, we found the fine railway bridge, three-quarters of a mile
long, destroyed by fire. Nothing remained but the stone piers.
All the other bridges were destroyed in the same way, and we
entered the town over a bridge of boats thrown across by the
Federal troops. The scene of ruin and devastation presented on
entering the place is beyond description. The main street and the
entire blocks of buildings stretching down to the river had been
totally destroyed by fire...
In all excursions some of the party get adrift. One of ours
did on this occasion, a circumstance he had no reason to regret,
as he passed the evening with General Weitzel, who occupies
Jefferson Davis's house, and visited points of interest in the
fugitive President's carriage. Saturday was spent at City Point
in making our adieus to all those who had shown our party such
great and unusual attentions. We saw a train of 2,000 men
dispatched to bring back some 12,000 prisoners captured on
Thursday, including General Ewell and five other generals. Upon
our way back to the yacht, the English portion of the party
called upon the President, who had been there for some time on
board the River Queen steamer. The President received us with the
greatest courtesy, and we enjoyed a long and interesting
conversation with him, not the least amusing part of it being a
history he gave of General Grant's career...The President looked
very careworn, and with feeling expressed his delight at the
prospect of a speedy close of this dreadful war.
Francia, moved by the sketch when he saw it in London, used it as
the basis of his painting. Thus, his depiction of the fire that
made headlines around the world is the only known contemporary
painting of that historic event based on an eyewitness
representation (and that recorded less than 100 hours after the
fall of the city). As such, it is more accurate than the widely
published Currier & Ives image, which is popularly thought of
as depicting the conflagration.
The painting, like most of Francia's known works, is done in
watercolor. Further research revealed that Alexandre-Thomas
Francia was the son of Louis Francia, also an artist. In an 1985
catalog, titled Louis Francia and his Son Alexandre,
Davidson University scholar Anthony Reed writes of Alexandre:
"During a long and energetic career, he bustled around Europe,
exhibiting regularly in London, Paris and Brussels, the city in
which he eventually settled. Medals and honors were heaped on
him, among them the portentous title of Artiste Chevalier des
Orders de Leopold... It was undeniably impressive. No wonder,
after he died in 1884, one of the streets of Calais was re-named
rue Francia."
Following the discoveries by Miller and Joseph, the painting was
displayed this past April at the National Parks Services' special
exhibit commemorating 140th anniversary of the fall of Richmond.
For information, email nmjoseph1@verizon.net.