Fashioning Insurrection

From Imperial Resistance To American Orientalisms

About the Exhibit

Philadelphia Zouave Corps: Pennsylvania Volunteers

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James Queen (artist, 1824–c. 1877)
Chromolithograph
Auguste Feusier (lithographer, b. 1833)
P. S. Duval & Son, 1861
Brown University Library, Anne S. K. Brown Military Collection


From summer to fall of 1861, eight Union Zouave regiments and several companies organized to join Northern forces during the first ninety days of the Civil War. This military parade highlights the formation of one of those Zouave volunteer regiments from Philadelphia. Led by drummers, all militia members appear dressed in the characteristic Ottoman-inspired turban wrapped around a red fez, with loose pantaloons and a short jacket ornamented with gold cord. The officers sport more westernized uniforms, with knotted cord accenting their forearms and colors matching their troops. If one looks closely, a lone woman marches with these troops behind her officer, only discernible by the knee-length dark skirt added to her uniform. A small barrel strapped around her torso identifies her as a vivandière or cantinière (canteen keeper). These civil merchants were sometimes soldiers’ wives who sold provisions to armies. During the American Civil War, they became known for nursing the wounded.