<P> Isaac Griffith (1833--1913) and Charles John (1838--1906) Tyson . Though residents of Gettysburg in July 1863, the Tysons' "Tyson's Excelsior Photographic Gallery" wasn't as yet properly equipped to take photographs in the field, for which there was basically no demand at the time . The Tysons evacuated town, as did most of the residents, prior to the Rebel shelling and occupation on July 1 . Soon after Gardner's and Brady's July visits, the Tyson brothers were making their own lucrative stereoviews of the battlefield . On November 19, the brothers would record their historic views of the procession to the dedication of the Soldier's National Cemetery, one of which captured President Lincoln on horseback . </P> <P> George Stacy (1831--1897) George Stacy was a Civil War, field photographer and later a prolific publisher of stereoviews, not necessisarily his own . The first reference to George Stacy being a photographer may be in New Brunswick Canada . A photographer by that name placed and advertisement in a Federicton, New Brunswick newspaper dated July 7, 1857 . The advertisement stated: SOMETHING NEW just received in Stacy's Ambrotype room and advertised stereoscopes and other photographic needs . The earliest confirmed Stacy, stereoveiws are a series he took of the Prince of Whales' visit to Portland, ME. Oct. 20, 1860, and the renowned Fortress Monroe series in June 1861 . George Stacy had a storefront at 691 Broadway in NY, NY from 1861 to 1865 . He visited Fort Monroe where his future brother in law Colin Van Gelder Forbes who was serving with Duryee's Zouaves 5th NY Volunteer Infantry at the time at Fort Monroe in VA in June 1861 and took his Fort Monroe series, which was sited in the NY Times by a letter from a Duryee soldier (CVGF?) on June 15, 1861 . An industry census shows that Stacy was still marketing his stereoviews in 1870 . By 1880 he had taken up horticulture in Patterson N.J. </P> <P> Frederick Gutekunst (1831--1917) Leading, Pennsylvania photographer, Gutekunst opened two studios in Philadelphia in 1856 . On July 9, the same day that Alexander Gardner's photographers days after the Battle of Gettysburg, the "Dean of American Photographers" produced a series seven plates of exquisite quality, including the first image of local hero John Burns . A portrait of Gen. Ulysses S. Grant stirred national interest and helped set Gutekunst apart from his contemporaries . By 1893 Gutekunst had been in business almost forty years and was residing in the upscale suburb of Germantown . Gutekunst suffered from Bright's Disease, which may have precipitated a fall down some stairs eight weeks before his death . </P> <P> Edward Tompkins Whitney (1820--1893) In 1844, Whitney, born in New York City, quit the jewelry business to learn the daguerreotype process from Matrin M. Lawrence, before moving to Rochester New York in 1846, as an operator in the studio of Thomas Mercer . In 1850, J.W. Black of Boston instructed Whitney in the "new art" of wet - plate collodion photography . Whitney opened his own "Skylight Gallery" in Rochester in 1851, and made regular trips to the New York City studios of Matthew Brady and Jeremiah Gurney in order to study the latest improvements in photography . In 1959, after recovering from the ill effects of cyanide poisoning, Whitney sold his Rochester business and moved to New York City, opening a gallery at 585 Broadway with Andrew W. Paradise, Mathew Brady's "right - hand man ." Nevertheless, during the winter of 1861--62, Brady would commission Whitney to take "views of the fortifications around Washington and places of interest for the Government ." These would include scenes in and around Arlington, Falls Church and Alexandria, VA . In March 1862, Brady again dispatched Whitney and Brady operator, David Woodbury, to take photographs on the Bull Run battlefield . Whitney also relates that he took views at Yorktown, Williamsburg, White House, Gaines' Mill, and Westover and Berkeley Landings during McClellan's Peninsula Campaign . Whitney personally appears in an unusually large number of photographs from 1861 to 1863, and while there is no question that Whitney took photographs for Brady, alas, there are no wartime views specifically ascribed to him . Whitney's last documented self - portrait (Anthony, Views in Washington City, 2733) is on March 27, 1863 during which time he documented the Southern Plains Indian Delegation inside the White House's well lit conservatory (2734, 2735). In addition to Anthony's post-war views with back label attributions to Whitney & Paradise, Whitney is also listed as working with a Mr. Beckwith in Norwalk, Connecticut . from 1865 to 1871, and then alone in Norwalk from 1873 to 1880 . Lastly he can be placed in Wilton, Connecticut from 1879 to 1886 . </P>

Where was most of the civil war fought brainly