Very few locations at
National Military Parks offer as many amazing photographic opportunities as
Little Round Top at Gettysburg. The vistas from that little hill can be
spell-binding for the viewer and offer gifts of every variety for
photographers. If there is one commanding feature on LRT, it is the statue of
federal general Gouverneur K. Warren.
The General with Cemetery Ridge in the distance. |
The general is so well posed that it
is almost impossible to walk by without looking in the distance and imagining
what he saw and did on July 2, 1863. Warren is a genuine hero of Gettysburg.
His contribution to the Union victory in that battle can’t be overstated. If
you should happen to have a camera in your hand it is almost impossible to
ignore the general when you walk the hill.
Even if you already have hundreds of
images of the statue.
Your Loyal Blogger went looking for a
new view of the general in June, new for this blog anyway. Other photogs
have certainly captured these same angles at one time or another through the
years, but they are new here. Different views of a tried and true subject can
be a photographer’s joy.
One challenge was to capture the
general with both the Pennsylvania Memorial and the Codori barn in the same
frame. It sounded easy, but so did
learning to drive a stick-shift. This
collection started with the goal of collecting all three battlefield features
in one image. The Memorial is to the right in the images, the barn is to the
left.
The other challenge was to keep the
general’s interest while photographing features outside of his view. Well, you
can’t win ‘em all.
Also included in this collection is an
image that does not include the general. Instead, the prominent feature is the
monument to the 155th Pennsylvania Volunteers. This monument’s
soldier is looking in the proper direction for the barn and the Pennsylvania
Memorial because that unit fended off an attack from the direction of the
Wheatfield, which he is looking at.
YLB hopes you appreciate the effort
involved here, even if the results might not be perfect. And thanks for
reading.
No comments:
Post a Comment