Most of the sketch artists, such as Alfred Waud, were working for magazines, such as Harper's Weekly or Frank Leslie's Illustrated. They were not in the army, and were paid by their employer. Some soldiers also drew sketches, but this was for their own enjoyment, and was not their job.
The army was well-supplied and regularly paid
triburary
It became a paid army loyal to its generals.
The Anaconda Plan called for all of the South's major ports, including Florida, to be blockaded to prevent them from getting supplies from foreign sources, and from selling their cash crops, such as cotton.
They got paid by paper money. Whitch was worth nothing because no precious metal backed it up.
Commissions are when one hires someone else to do something. In this case, the artist is getting paid for drawing a sketch for that person.
No he did not. The sketches and drawings he made in his many sketch books were for his reference and to experiment with ideas. An artist in his day was only paid when a wealthy Patron asked for a specific piece of art to be made.
Yes. There was an African American unit in the union army. They were still paid less than the white soldiers and had white officers. A good movie to watch on this is GLORY.
Yes. In the Union Army, for most of the war, the pay was $12 per month. A drummer (or bugler, or fifer) was a full fledged member of his military unit, entitled to uniform, rations, pay and other benefits.
Pakistan Army is the best paid
no, makeup artist was paid on a commission basis.
harriet Tubman
not until 1865, after a congressional act to give them free pay was passed
anonymous, poorly paid workers
they get paid payed $100 per client.
30,000
1,000 $'s i think