April 1863: Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, America’s premier visual newsmagazine, documented the world even as the Civil War consumed the nation. This 1963 centennial reissue preserves that original April 11th edition, including a wood-engraved illustration of the Victoria and Albert yacht in English waters—a snapshot of Victorian maritime life that contrasts sharply with the bloodshed unfolding across America.
Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper was the nation’s window to distant events before mass photography could fill newspaper pages. Leslie employed field artists and correspondents who sent sketches from battlefields back to New York, where engravers transformed them into the detailed wood engravings readers demanded. The magazine set the standard for illustrated war reporting during the Civil War’s four brutal years.
This 1963 reissue—published during the centennial moment when America revisited its Civil War legacy—represents a deliberate act of historical preservation. The timing matters: the nation was reassessing that conflict through the lens of 1960s civil rights struggles, making this republication of 1863 journalism historically resonant.
A rare window into 19th-century illustrated journalism’s mechanics, and tangible evidence of how one generation’s news becomes another generation’s contested history.




