ROCHESTER, N.Y. (AP) —  Portraits of John Wilkes Booth and his fellow conspirators in the plot  to assassinate President Abraham Lincoln are among prized Civil War  images going on display at a museum of photography and film in upstate  New York. A four-month exhibition opening Saturday at George  Eastman House in Rochester features vintage cameras and 130 framed  photographs from the war that began 150 years ago. A warship collection  includes one-of-a-kind pictures of the Confederate raider Alabama. Among  the museum’s treasures are a retired Union officer’s album illustrating  the assassination plot. It contains portraits of nine people implicated  in the conspiracy and an albumen print of a famous Alexander Gardner  photograph of three men and a woman standing on the gallows as their  nooses are adjusted. “What’s unique about the album is the  photographs were assembled from many different sources to tell the story  of the Lincoln conspiracy,” Alison Nordstrom, the museum’s curator of  photographs, said Friday. “It’s a real page-turner, a heart stopper that  culminates in the photographs of the hanging.” A facsimile  version of the “Between the States” show hits the road in May with stops  in Chattanooga, Tenn., Elmhurst, Ill., and Manassas, Va. The museum  expects bookings will extend the tour over the next four years as the  war’s sesquicentennial is commemorated. The museum owns 1,100  Civil War artifacts and “not only is this material very rare, but it’s  very fragile,” Nordstrom said. “Our holdings are recognized as among the  best in the world, so when we have the opportunity to show off what we  have, we’re anxious to do it.” Lincoln was mortally wounded by  Booth at Ford’s Theater in Washington on April 14, 1865, five days after  Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee surrendered to end the war. A 12-day  manhunt for Booth ended in his death, and eight suspected accomplices in  a larger conspiracy intended to rally Confederates were convicted that  summer. Four were hanged. Photographic portraiture came into its  own during the Civil War era. Lincoln was the first U.S. president to be  extensively photographed — more than 125 highly collectible portraits  of him survive. “It’s right around the period of the Civil War  that having your portrait made photographically became within reach of  anyone,” Nordstrom said. “It wasn’t a rich person’s practice anymore.  Portraits are by far the most common kind of Civil War period  photograph.” More than 400,000 highly valued photographs have been  gathered up since 1947 at Eastman House, a landmark Colonial Revival  mansion that was home to Kodak founder George Eastman. Until the start of the 20th century, the American Revolution was the nation’s most celebrated historical event, Nordstrom said. “Around  1900, which is actually the beginning of our imperial adventure when we  started to get involved in wars far, far away from us, the Civil War  became the image of union,” she said. “I do believe the Civil War is the  historical lens still by which we understand our country.”
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