Photo detail

Camera Maker Canon Camera Model Canon EOS 20D
Aperture f/14 Color Space Uncalibrated
Exposure Value 0 EV Exposure Program Program
Exposure Time 1/250 sec Flash No Flash
Focal Length 28 mm ISO 400
Metering Mode Pattern Date/Time 2006:12:23 11:35:25
Copyright © 2006 Jason O. Watson. All rights reserved. Orientation 1: Normal (0 deg)
Resolution Unit Inch X Resolution 300 dots per ResolutionUnit
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Exposure Mode 0 Keywords travel United States of America United States America USA US Virginia VA Washington County history historical historic historical marker famous landmark road side highway popular Place of Interest Places of Interest Tourist Attraction Tourist Attractions Tourist Destination Tourist Destinations Travel Destination Travel Destinations tour tourism tourist attraction destination Sign Signs American Day Daytime Historical Sites Vertical Education Historical Site Marker Markers Outdoor Outdoors Outside Road Road Signs Roadside Roadsign information display General Joseph E. Johnston boyhood home Joseph Eggleston Johnston Judge Peter Johnston Abingdon Male Academy U.S. Military Academy West Point Robert E. Lee Civil War Army of the Potomac Army of Northern Virginia Confederate Army of Tennessee February 3 1807 March 21 1891 Green Mount Cemetery historic marker historic site no people nobody sign with text
Caption Boyhood Home of Gen. Joseph E. Johnston Born in Prince Edward Co. on 3 Feb. 1807, Joseph Eggleston Johnston, the son of Judge Peter Johnston, moved a mile north of here with his family in 1811. He attended Abingdon Male Academy and graduated from the U.S. Military Academy at West Point in 1829 with fellow Virginian Robert E. Lee. During the Civil War, he was the only officer to command both of the major Confederate armies, the Army of the Potomac (later Army of Northern Virginia) in 1861-62 and the Army of Tennessee in 1863-65; he surrendered at present-day Durham, N.C., on 26 Apr. 1865. He died on 21 March 1891 in Washington, D.C., and is buried in Green Mount Cemetery, Baltimore, Md. Department of Historic Resources, 2002