Career
William Waud, trained as an architect in England, was an assistant to Sir Joseph Paxton and worked on the design of the Crystal Palace for the Great Exhibition in 1851. William was first employed with Frank Leslie"s Illustrated Newspaper. While working as a "Special Artist" for Leslie’s, William covered art correspondent assignments in the South, including the inauguration of Jefferson Davis as President of the Confederacy and the bombardment of Fort Sumter.
He covered Sherman’s March in the south and Lincoln’s funeral after the war.
The only known likeness of Waud is a depiction of himself sketching in the rigging of the United States. Steamer Mississippi in action against confederate gunboats. This detail from Waud’s illustration of a naval engagement during Farragut’s expedition against New Orleans was published in the May 31, 1862 edition of “Frank Leslie"s Illustrated Newspaper”.
Original sketch of the Burning of McPhersonville, South Carolina by William Waud, left, and as printed in Harper"s Weekly, March 4, 1865, right.