THE CHRISTMAS CAROL - framed executive canvas
Opequon Presbyterian Church
Kernstown, Virginia - Winter of 1862
3/4 Publishers Proof Executive size
Canvas Size 30" x 40"
Framed Size approximately. 41"tall x 51"wide
Very Nice Frame
The years of 1861 and 1862 had been momentous for Thomas J. Jackson. He had gone from being an unknown VMI professor with a Major's commission, to the rank of Lieutenant General commanding the Il Corps in General Lee's Army of Northern Virginia. In battle after battle Jackson's army had defeated those who opposed them. "Stonewall" was now one of the most famous and feared generals of the war.
Snow blanketed the countryside on November 22 as Confederate divisions gathered in Winchester.
General Lee's communiqués to Jackson made it clear that it was time to consolidate the army, preparing for the Union Army's next move. Jackson's Corps numbered 33,000 troops, the largest he had ever commanded. The task of organizing and preparing the new II Corps was daunting, but the General was up to the challenge and kept on the move.
On an early November morning at the Opequon Presbyterian church, members of the choir practiced a favorite Christmas carol for the passing Stonewall Jackson and his men. With the fate of his army and possibly the South to be decided in the coming days, the beautiful melody of a Christmas carol in the distance uplifted General Jackson and his men as they prepared to leave for Fredericksburg.
3/4 Publishers Proof Executive size
Canvas Size 30" x 40"
Framed Size approximately. 41"tall x 51"wide