Fashioning Insurrection

From Imperial Resistance To American Orientalisms

About the Exhibit

New York Zouave Stationery

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Hand-colored engraving
New York City, New York: F. K. Kimmel, 1861
Brown University, Lincoln Collection


Premade envelopes emerged toward the end of the eighteenth century and rapidly developed with the introduction of penny postage. By the mid-nineteenth century, bespoke stationery gained popularity among a wide range of consumers. American printing firms that operated during the Civil War began publishing striking pictorial envelopes illustrating barracks, fortifications, battle scenes, and even famous militia corps. On the left of this envelope, a New York Zouave holds a rifle in front of a fort flying the Union flag. Under him, the date and printer’s address reveal details about the municipal registration of such products with the clerk’s office of the District Court of the Southern District of New York. Most of such surviving envelopes came from New York firms, while others were printed in Boston, Cincinnati, Philadelphia, Hartford and Chicago. Production of this type of elaborate martial stationery ceased after 1861, possibly due to the gravity of the war and restrictions on indulgences.