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During the Civil War, McArdle joined the Confederacy as a draftsman. Later in the war, he joined the staff of General Robert E. Lee as a mapmaker. After the war, he and his wife Jennie moved to Independence, Texas, where he taught art at Baylor Female College (now The University of Mary Hardin-Baylor).
Dawn at the Alamo and The Battle of San Jacinto remain among the best known of his surviving works. Exhaustively researched, the two paintings attempt to reproduce as accurately as possible the persons, events, accoutrements, and settings of the events they portray. To do this, McArdle amassed a body of documents, photographs, maps, and personal recollections that would later be sold to the state along with the two canvases that now hang in the Texas Senate Chamber. Although he had created the paintings with an eye to their being purchased by the state, McArdle had difficulty obtaining payment, even when he allowed the paintings to be displayed in the capitol building. The two battle paintings were not purchased until nineteen years after his death on February 16, 1908. In 1927 the 40th Legislature approved $25,000 to purchase both paintings and the accumulated research materials. Introduction | The
Notebooks | The
Paintings | The Artist |