A Bit of War History: The Veteran
Thomas Waterman Wood, 1866
About this artwork
**A Bit of War History The Veteran** (1866) by Thomas Waterman Wood captures human toll of the American Civil just a year after its end. in oil on canvas—a medium prized for its luminous depth and ability to render fine textures like weathered uniforms and expressive faces—this intimate portrait (28¼ × 20¼ inches) depicts a solitary soldier, embodying the era's reflections on sacrifice and survival. Wood, a prominent American genre painter, specialized in everyday scenes of 19th-century life, often highlighting ordinary heroes with realistic detail and emotional resonance. Housed in The Metropolitan Museum of Art's American Wing, this work gifted by Charles Stewart Smith in 1884 underscores the war's lingering impact on national identity. The title evokes storytelling: the "veteran" as a living archive of battles fought, evoking both pride and pathos amid Reconstruction. Wood's straightforward style, rooted in the American realist tradition, avoids glorification, inviting viewers to ponder the quiet dignity of those who returned home changed. A poignant reminder of Civil War legacy, it humanizes history through one man's gaze, blending artistry with cultural memory.