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YER FOODBAG,
RATIONS, &c.
By Corporal Mike Bilbo
One of our pards was asking me what's the deal and how
to deal with the haversack. The haversack was - and is - the food bag and
nothing more. Prisoners of war were nearly always allowed to keep their
haversacks for it was to be their ration bag. Most reenactors stuff their
haversacks with a lot of stuff and occasionally even some food. Stop it.
Use it only for food. It really looks great to the public when you pull out
your poke bags and one of them is salt pork - and because of that - it's a
good reason not to have a bunch of junk in there but only food because it's
better to have food items pre-flavored by salt pork than all your knick
knacks.
WEIGHT
On the food you carry, you would watch the weight,
given that you're also carrying a canteen of water (2 pounds), a cartridge
box of 40 rounds - that's forty .58 caliber miniballs - heavy, and if you're
just nothing more than a fresh fish or unlucky to have a commander who's a
stickler for knapsacks, it all gets really heavy really fast, and I mean
within one mile! Typically at an event, here's what's in mine, how it's
used and where you get it:
Fist-sized ration bag with ground coffee or roasted
whole beans to be crushed later (Albertson's-type store).
Cone of piloncillo - hard sugar of molasses that you
scrape off with your knife (Albertson's-type store or Mexican food store).
Fist-sized ration bag or string-wrapped wax paper with
chunk of salt pork or salt horse (beef), various dishes, (Albertson's-type
store).
Ration bag with 5 hardtacks (stationary) and 8-10 for a
march (Make your own or order them from Bent's Crackers). I think I already
gave out the recipe I use - it's from Fort Laramie Natl Historic Site.
Having coordinated with my other three messmates, we
each have one of the following: onion, potato, carrot, tin pot. To cut the
weight you can agree upon desecrated (desiccated) vegetables where you've
removed the modern flavored cooking powders and just carry the vegetable in
a ration bag: corn, peas, especially potatoes (from scalloped box). Dried
vegetables are quite authentic (Albertson's-type store). Have the guy with
the pot bring a small bottle of vinegar.
That's it - that's all you need for one or two days, at
which time you might expect to get issued more rations at authentic
campaigner events, or if you plan for a static event to have a ration issue.
Using the stuff (for that's what it soon becomes) for
dinner (noon) and supper:
You can cut everything in half and use for noon
dinners, or one for noon dinner and the same again for supper. Slice the
fat off the salt pork and save it. Dice everything up, dump in the pot, add
water and boil until the fats and salts make it taste like something. Serve
it out to the mess and dump vinegar all over it. Very tasty and nutritious,
actually.
BREAKFAST
The fat that you saved - or using bacon because you
brought salt horse for the main meals - you make skillygally, either the
pastry type or basic.
Pastry style - Boil up some coffee or hot water and
break three hardtacks into it (each square into 3 pieces) so it softens up.
The reason for putting it in coffee is it slightly flavors it and you may
only have time enough to do it that way. Fry the bacon or heat up the fat.
When you have the hot grease, take out the bacon and put in the "softtack"
pieces and fry it. Add piloncillo or brown sugar. Fry it both sides until
hot, dump the grease, let it cool and eat it.
Gulp down the coffee but first skim off the weevils,
fake or real. The fake ones are actually just crumbs from soaking but you
can play it up. The real ones are from correctly letting your hardtack sit
around between events.
Basic - Don't add the sugar.
RATIONS AND AN ARMY ON
THE MOVE
Here's a little bit of interesting history that I
actually teach to my Army Reserve and National Guard students. I'm in the
Transportation Corps and in a training battalion where we teach soldiers how
to drive 5-ton cargo's. The deuce-and-a- half's are still around but they
have been converted to M35A3 automatics (sweet).
As a Yankee, the reason you should expect rations every
one to two days is due to the massive logistical support it took to support
an Army on the move. If you're pursuing Rebels, don't expect to live off
the land, unless your commanders surprised the Rebs and they're in too much
of a hurry to skedaddle. You can live off the land if you've got a smart,
devilish commander, like Grant before Vicksburg, east of town, that is, and
no one has interfered with you or the local farmers and townsmen for a
while.
Moving an army and its supplies required quite a bit of
logistical planning and hope the supplies, especially food, arrived on a
timely basis. Because food got delayed, that explains weevils and worms,
etc. You can imagine the huge amount of wagons and teamsters it took to
keep the trains, wagons, as in wagon train, going. The contemporary U.S.
Army concept of 2 & 1/2-ton and 5-ton cargo trucks is a holdover from the
1840s and possibly earlier. Thus, we in the Army have always had
deuce-and-a-half's and five tons, first freight wagons, then trucks.
Amazing. You can find out this story by visiting the U.S. Army
Transportation Museum at Ft. Eustis, VA and the U.S. Army Quartermaster
Museum at Ft. Lee, VA. Here's a website excerpt from the Transportation
Corps website:
HISTORY OF THE
TRANSPORTATION CORPS
(http://www.eustis.army.mil/overview.htm)
"The Transportation Corps was established 31 July 1942
by Executive Order 9082. Transporters have a long history of answering the
nations call. As far back as the Revolutionary War when General George
Washington appointed the first Wagon Master, Transporters have been there to
move and sustain American fighting forces. Prior to the war of 1812,
military transportation had taken a back seat in the national military
strategy. It was apparent after the war that some form of organized
transportation support was needed to guarantee the new nation's ability to
successfully engage and defeat an enemy.
In response to this need, General Thomas S. Jesup was
appointed as Quartermaster General in 1818. Later General Jesup initiated
programs that not only improved the transportation capability of the U.S.
military, but also encouraged the United States expansion to the west. These
programs included the building of the Great Military Road of 1836, which
linked the far-flung ports of the west with the industrial bases of the east
and the use of the steamship for amphibious landings.
During the Civil War, transportation proved to be an
integral part of military logistics through the organization of railroads as
a viable and efficient means of military transportation. By 1864 five of the
nine divisions in the Quartermaster Department dealt exclusively with
transportation. A substantial number of battles were won because of the
field commander's ability to swiftly and effectively move troops and
supplies.
DEVELOPMENT OF U.S. ARMY
RATIONS (http://www.qmmuseum.lee.army.mil/index.html)
Feeding Our Soldiers
By MAJ. Louis C. WILSON Q. M. C.
The Quartermaster Review - May-June 1928
Overview of Army Rations from the Revolutionary War
to 1928
FROM THE wielding of a club by the primitive cave man
to the handling of modern scientific and effective implements of warfare by
the professional or emergency defender of a nation, the physical condition
of the fighter is recognized as the basic factor in the matter of
efficiency, and such physical condition depends in great degree, if not
wholly, upon food.
Harking back to the primitive man of cave days and
following the course of human events through the ages when food statistics,
as well as other historic data, are rare or lacking, to comparatively recent
years, we can only say that, in general, man, in his struggle for existence,
ate what he, as an individual, could get, and that he continued to live and
progress in spite of the fact that dietetic principles which are now
recognized as scientific and proper were not then known and were, therefore,
not applied.
Coming down to later times, when it was seen that the
proper study of mankind is man, both from the viewpoint of the individual
and that of the individual as a member of the community, state, or nation,
study and experience produced growth and advancement in the producing of
foods and in their application to the best interests of human beings, food
being not only life but energy as well.
This evolution of food, generally, has been of untold
benefit to mankind in general to an extent which can only be fully
appreciated by a study of the subject, but it has been of incalculable value
from the viewpoint of the soldier. It is, in these modern days, recognized
that not only must the soldier be fed but that he must be fed properly,
i.e., that, in order to get the best result from him, his food should not
only be sufficient in quantity but that it should be "good tasting" and such
as to cause him enjoyment in eating it; that it must be of sufficient
variety to maintain his interest; that it must be of a character to keep his
body and his mental attitude in the desired condition and his body and
spirit full of work and enthusiasm for his mission. There are many
sidelights in the mind of Uncle Sam in meeting these food requirements for
his soldiers, such as economy in purchasing food supplies to the best
financial advantage; close supervision of their quality by inspection;
proper management in their storage and use so as to prevent deterioration or
loss otherwise; their proper preparation, so that they may be cooked and
served to the soldier in a palatable manner; the prevention of unnecessary
losses by the garbage-can route; and the affording of well-balanced menus,
etc., considering all the factors of proteins, calories, carbohydrates,
mineral matter and the respective principles which each of these represents.
With the foregoing general survey of the Evolution of Food, we come down to
our immediate interest in food for the troops of our country. Such a survey
would cover the period from the days of the War of the Revolution, when
rationing troops was turned over to sutlers or contractors, which experience
was very unsatisfactory, down to the present day.
Further on in this article is a series of tables
showing the rations prescribed for our Army during the various war periods
of the nation, and also the present components of the ration. A comparative
study of these tables will be of interest in indicating the growth and
improvement in the problem of feeding our troops to the best advantage, and
while it is not impossible that further progress in the continuing effort to
improve the food of the soldier will be made, it is believed that our
soldier today is better fed than ever before and better fed than the soldier
of any other nation. As a running review of the various changes in the Army
ration from the Revolutionary period to date, introductions to the study of
the detailed tables following the items herewith may be of interest:
The problem of feeding the colonial troops at the
beginning of the Revolutionary times was, naturally, a serious and, to some
extent, a difficult one. The basic difficulty was that of procuring articles
of subsistence, because supplies of foods previously imported were shut off,
and home products were limited and not located where supply to a moving
army could be readily effected. As will be noted from the table, the ration
was very limited, and none of the articles which are now furnished, and
which could not be termed in any sense of the word, were provided. The
sutler or contractor systems were tried out and were found to be decidedly
inefficient and unsatisfactory. From these unsatisfactory methods has
developed the present system of food supply by a special and distinct
military organization, The Quartermaster Corps, U. S. Army. It will be
noted from the tables that during certain periods in the early history of
the nation, spruce beer, cider, rum, brandy or whiskey have been components
of the soldiers ration. The elimination of these, as was as the abolishing
of the later Army canteen, is worthy of notation in the progress of the
country's fighting forces.
Changes Authorized From Time to Time in the
Established Ration
Contracts entered upon under a resolution passed by
Congress, April 12,1785, provided for 1 gill of common rum per ration in
lieu of the 1 quart of spruce beer or cider provided in the ration
established by resolution of November 4, 1775.
By Section 10, Act of April 30,1790, the spirit ration
was reduced to one-half gill of rum, brandy or whiskey.
Section 3, Act of June 7,1794, authorized the issue, in
the discretion of the President, of not to exceed one-half gill of rum or
whiskey in addition to each ration, to troops employed on the frontiers, and
under such special circumstances as, in his opinion, might require an
augmentation of some parts of their rations.
By Section 6, Act of July 10, 1795, the spirit ration
was increased to one (1) gill.
Section 22, Act of March 3,1799, again reduced the
spirit ration to one-half gill, commanding officers being authorized to make
extra issue, at the rate of one-half gill per ration, "in cases of
fatigue-service, or other extraordinary occasions." A vegetable component
consisting of 15 pounds of beans or peas, or 10 pounds of rice or hominy,
per 100 rations, was added to the ration by Executive Order under authority
of the Act of April 14,1818.
By Act of March 2,1819, "an extra gill of whiskey or
spirits" per day was allowed to "noncommissioned officers, musicians and
privates" engaged in "work on fortifications, in surveys, in cutting roads,
and other constant labor, of not less than ten days." Issue of spirits as a
component part of the ration was discontinued by Executive Order in 1832
(General Orders No.100, A.G.O., 1832), and an issue of coffee and Sugar, at
the rate of 4 pounds of coffee and 8 pounds of sugar per 100 rations, was
substituted therefore. Under this provision, Section 22, Act of March 3,
1799, which authorized the issue of spirits "in cases of fatigue-service, or
other extraordinary occasions," became operative. This made the spirit
ration an extra issue, subject to the discretion of the President.
By Act of July 5, 1838, the allowance of coffee and
sugar was increased to 6 pounds of coffee and 12 pounds of sugar per 100
rations.
Section 4, Act of May 19, 1846, allowed commutation in
money for the extra spirit ration allowed enlisted men engaged in the
construction of fortifications, in surveys, etc., by the Act of March
2,1819.
Section 4, Act of June 21, 1860, increased the
allowance of coffee and sugar per 100 rations to 10 pounds and 15 pounds,
respectively.
By Section 13, Act of August 3,1861, the components of
the ration were increased as follows: "Bread or flour, 22 ozs., with an
alternate issue of 16 ozs. of hard bread; a vegetable ration, to consist of
16 ozs. of potatoes, to be issued at least three times per week, if
practicable." These increases were for the war period only; at the end of
the war the ration was to be reduced to the articles and quantities as
authorized by law or regulations on July 1, 1861.
Paragraph 2150, AR, 1861, authorized the issue to
troops in the field, when necessary, of 4 pounds of yeast powder to the 100
rations of flour.
Section 10, Act of July 5, 1862, authorized issue of
extract of coffee in lieu of the coffee and sugar ration. Pepper was added
to the component articles of the ration by Section 11, Act of March 3, 1863,
issue to be made at the rate of 4 ounces per 100 rations.
Section 2, Act of June 20, 1864, provided "that the
Army ration shall hereafter be the same as provided by law and regulations
on the first day of July, eighteen hundred and sixty-one" with the addition
of the pepper ration authorized by the Act of March 3,1863.
By General Order No. 120, June 29, 1865, the War
Department discontinued the issue of the spirit ration altogether.
Section 5, Act of June 16, 1890, added a pound of
vegetables to the ration, "the proportion to be fixed by the Secretary of
War." Issue of syrup or molasses, at the rate of 2 gallons in lieu of 15
pounds of sugar, was authorized in 1895.
General Order No.78, A.G.O., April 21,1899, added 2
ounces of dried fruits to the ration.
Section 40, Act of February 2, 1901, authorized the
President to prescribe the components of the ration and to direct issue of
substitutive articles therefore when, in his opinion, such issues are
required either by economy or a due regard for the health and comfort of the
troops. The average cost of the garrison ration for each of the fiscal years
since this authorization has been as follows:
F.Y. Cents F.Y. Cents
1902 16.24 1915 24.96
1903 17.56 1916 28.01
1904 17.33 1917 33.22
1905 16.18 1918 48.20
1906 15.16 1919 49.75
1907 15.74 1920 52.83
1908 18.66 1921 46.15
1909 21.05 1922 32.74
1910 21.44 1923 29.78
1911 23.35 1924 31.65
1912 23.78 1925 31.50
1913 23.41 1926 36.12
1914 24.39 1927 34.77
From monthly reports received from the field, it is
estimated that the average cost during the current fiscal year (1928) will
be approximately 50 cents.
During the World War the ration furnished troops of the
American Expeditionary Forces, was, basically, the garrison ration, with
certain prescribed changes and modifications therein from time to time as
conditions warranted. For instance, fresh vegetables other than those
specified in the garrison ration, when procurable locally, were authorized;
substitutions were permitted in wider latitude than in the garrison ration
at home; the allowances of meat, coffee and sugar were increased for troops
engaged in work involving hard manual labor of eight hours or more per day;
tobacco, smoking, and cigarette papers were added as ration components, with
tobacco, chewing, or cigarettes, as substitutes; and candy was added as a
component of the ration as a recognized essential for the welfare and
comfort of the soldiers.
Daily Rations Per Man
REVOLUTIONARY WAR, Established by resolution of
Congress November 4, 1775.
Basic Ration
Beef 16 ozs.
Flour 16 ozs.
Peas 6.857 ozs.
Milk 16 ozs.
Rice 1.143 ozs.
Spruce beer 1 qt.
Candle 0.0686 oz.
Soap 0.183 oz.
WAR OF 1812, Established by Act of Congress March 16,
1802.
Basic Ration:
Beef 20 ozs.
Flour 18 ozs.
Rum 1 gill
Vinegar 0.32 gill
Salt 0.64 oz.
Soap 0.64 oz.
Candle 0.24 oz.
MEXICAN WAR RATION, Established in 1838.
Basic Ration
Beef 20 ozs.
Flour 18 ozs.
Beans. dry 2.4 ozs.
Coffee, green 0.96 oz.
Sugar 1.92 ozs.
Vinegar 0.16 gill
Salt 0.64 oz.
Candle 0.0686 oz.
Soap 0.183 oz.
CIVIL WAR RATION, 1860-1865
There were three rations in effect during this period,
the first established in 1860, the second in 1861 and the third in 1864.
There was not a material difference in these three rations, a few of the
component articles being slightly increased, others decreased, and finally,
the addition of yeast powder to the ration in 1864. The 1864 ration is used
in this demonstration and is as follows:
Basic Ration
Beef 20 ozs.
Flour 18 ozs.
Yeast powder
0.045 oz.
Beans, dry 2.56 ozs.
Coffee, green 1.6 ozs.
Sugar 2.4 ozs.
Vinegar 0.32 gill
Salt 0.64 oz.
Pepper, black 0.04 oz.
Soap 0.64 oz.
Candle 0.24 oz.
SPANISH-AMERICAN WAR RATION, 1898
Basic Ration:
Beef 20 ozs.
Flour 18 ozs.
Baking powder 0.64 oz.
Beans, dry 2.4 ozs.
Potatoes, fresh
16 ozs.
Coffee, green
1.6 ozs.
Sugar 2.4 ozs.
Vinegar 0.32 gill
Salt 0.64 oz.
Pepper, black 0.04 oz.
Soap 0.64 oz.
Candle 0.24 oz.
GARRISON RATION USED DURING THE WORLD WAR PERIOD,
1917-1918
At the time the United States entered the World War
(April 6, 1917), the Army was using a ration established in 1913. This was
the ration used in the Continental United States throughout the war, except
that in 1918 two articles (sweet potatoes and oatmeal) were added to the
list of substitutive articles. Following is the ration:
Basic Ration
Beef 20 ozs.
Flour 18 ozs.
Baking powder 0.08 oz.
Beans, dry 2.4 ozs.
Potatoes, fresh 20 ozs.
Prunes 1.28 ozs.
Sirup 0.32 oz.
Coffee, R. & G 1.12 ozs.
Sugar 3.2 ozs.
Milk, evaporated 0.5 oz.
Vinegar 0.16 gill
Salt 0.64oz.
Pepper, black 0.04 oz.
Cinnamon, ground 0.014oz.
Butter 0.5oz.
Lard 0.64oz.
Flavoring extract, lemon
014 oz.
Soap 0.64 oz.
Candle 0.24 oz.
PRESENT GARRISON RATION
Prescribed by the President by Executive Order dated
February 3, 1927, effective July 1, 1927.
Basic Ration
Beef, fresh
18 ozs.
Bacon
6 ozs.
Flour, wheat 18
ozs.
Baking powder 0.08
oz.
Beans, dry
1.2 ozs.
Rice
0.8 oz.
Potatoes
17 ozs.
Onions
5 ozs.
Tomatoes, canned 2 ozs.
Prunes
0.384 oz.
Jam
0.64 oz.
Apples, evaporated 128
oz.
Peaches, evaporated 128 oz.
Macaroni
0.5712 oz.
Cheese
0.5712 oz.
Flavoring extract
0.014 oz.
Coffee, roasted or roasted ground 1.5 ozs.
Tea
0.05 oz.
Cocoa
0.3 oz.
1917
Sugar
4 ozs.
Milk, evaporated 1oz.
Butter
1.75 ozs.
Oleomargarine 25
oz.
Vinegar
.08 gill
Pickles, cucumber .08
gill
Salt
.5712 oz.
Pepper, black .04
oz.
Lard
.32 oz.
Lard, substitute
.32 oz.
Sirup
.1427 gill
Cinnamon
.014 oz.
Conclusion
As above stated, special activities of the
Quartermaster Corps are constantly engaged in the study of
subsistence for the Army. Components of the ration and
articles kept for sale at commissary sales stores are covered by detailed
specifications prescribing all the requirements of such commodities and
based on Government Master Specifications with such modifications as are
peculiar to the Army, such requirements including manner of packing and
marking the articles, sizes of containers, etc.
The benefits being derived from the Quartermaster
Subsistence School at Chicago have been marked. The schools for bakers and
cooks have been productive of much good in the furnishing of high grade
breads and in the furnishing of cooks who are far ahead of the enlisted men
detailed in the days of old to cook without previous instruction and
training.
In the effort to keep step with the latest information
on the subject of canned foods, the army has had the advantage of research
information furnished by such Organizations as the National Canners
Association, and keeps in close touch with the Department of Agriculture,
the Navy and Marine Corps in matters of mutual interest on food subjects.
The Quartermaster General is now preparing a permanent
exhibit of the rations prescribed during the Wars of 1776, 1812, 1846,
1860-1865, 1898 and 1917, together with the present garrison ration, which
is to be placed in the War Department at Washington, D. C. Every article
in the respective groups will be the actual commodity, or, in the case of
perishable articles, a simulated model, and in all cases the exact quantity
of the article as prescribed in the several rations will be shown. This
exhibit will be artistically displayed and will, it is believed, be of
considerable interest. An exhibit of this kind was placed on view by the
Quartermaster Corps at the Military Exposition and Carnival for the Army
Relief Society, recently staged at Washington Barracks, D. C., and was the
subject of considerable favorable interest and comment.
In the study of the various rations of the Army, it
will be noted that, in the most recent of these rations, care has been taken
to incorporate articles which will supply all of the following components
which have been determined by scientific investigation to be essential in
the proper maintenance of the human body:
Proteins.-To replace muscular wastage and to furnish
nitrogen to build up tissues.
Fats.-To produce fuel and heat, and to promote
palatability.
Carbohydrates.-To produce fuel and energy.
Mineral matter. -As found in fruits and vegetables and
certain cereals-To form bony structure and blood, and to aid digestion.
Vitamines.-Found in milk and certain fruits,
vegetables, etc. To maintain the body in health.
Water.-As found in foods. To promote elimination of
waste material and to act as a solvent.
Roughage.-To assist intestinal functioning.
Bilbo Note - Then They Invented C-Rations and
Reverted to 1898.
Instructions for the Quartermaster
Submitted by Quartermaster Sgt. Mike
Williams
February 14, 2005
"Instructions for the Quarter-Master Sergeant
He is an assistant to the quarter-master of the regiment, and in his
absence is to do his duty, unless an officer be specially appointed for that
purpose. He should therefore acquaint himself with all the duties of the
quarter-master before mentioned. When the army marches, he must see the tents
properly packed and loaded, and go with the baggage, see that the Wagoner's
commit no disorders, and that nothing is left out of the wagons."
Major General Frederick Wilhelm, Baron von Steuben
March 29, 1779
These instructions have not changed since they were written. These were the
principal instructions for Quartermaster Sergeants during the Civil War era.
Army and
Navy Quartermasters
Submitted by Quartermaster Sgt. Mike
Williams
May 22, 2004
There are quartermasters in the Army and quartermasters in
the Navy, neither of which are anything alike. The Quartermasters in the army
are concerned with supply and transportation. They get their nomenclature from
being Masters of Quarters--Quartermasters. The Navy (and Coast Guard) get
their nomenclature from Master of the Quarterdeck--Quartermaster. The naval
Quartermaster stood next to the Pilot on the quarterdeck of the old ships of
sail, and directed the Pilot in which direction to go. He was a Navigator!
Modern ships, such as submarines and aircraft carriers still have
Quartermasters. Submarines have some 10 or 12 Quartermasters (Navigators), and
aircraft carriers have some 25 or 30 on board. Even the small Coast Guard
cutters have some half dozen Navigators. And all of the naval Quartermasters
(Navigators) are all NCOs. These NCOs have some half dozen rankings of
Quartermasters. There is also a Quartermaster rank in the Boy Scouts of
America, in the Sea Scout program. They, too, are Navigators. Thought you
might be interested.
About
Service Chevrons
Submitted by Quartermaster
Sgt. Mike Williams
April 8, 2004
The 1861, 1872, and 1881 Regulations read almost exactly
the same, word for word, in regard to the wearing of Service Chevrons.
They authorize the wearing of Service Chevrons on the Uniform Coat (the Frock
Coat). They do not RESTRICT the wearing of Service Chevrons to the
Uniform Coat, they do not PROHIBIT the wearing of Service Chevrons on the Sack
Coat. In fact, they do not even MENTION the Sack Coat or the Overcoat!
So the wearing of Service Chevrons on the Sack Coat is just as LEGAL (and is
as historically CORRECT) as the Zouave uniforms, the Black Hat Brigade, the
Scottish plaids, the green of Berdan's Sharpshooters, the Pennsylvania
Bucktails, and Ulysses Grant wearing general's stars on a private's frock
coat.
Paragraph 1558, Page 487, of the Revised Regulations For
The Army Of The United States, 1861, states, and I quote:
"To indicate service--all noncommissioned officers,
musicians, and privates, who have served faithfully for the term of five
years, will wear, as a mark of distinction, upon both sleeves of the uniform
coat, below the elbow, a diagonal half chevron, one-half and inch wide,
extending from seam to seam, the front end nearest the cuff, and one-half an
inch above the point of the cuff, to be of the same color as the edging on the
coat. In like manner, an additional half chevron, above and parallel to
the first, for every subsequent five years of faithful service; distance
between each chevron one-fourth of an inch. Service in war will be
indicated by a light or sky blue stripe on each side of the chevron for
Artillery, and a red stripe for all other corps the stripe to be one eighth of
an inch wide."
Under the 1861 and 1872 Uniform Regulations, Service
Chevrons were authorized for wear on uniform coats with NO mention of
overcoats or field/fatigue blouses. From photographs taken between 1861
and 1880, it is clear that troopers wore Service Chevrons on OTHER THAN their
dress coats! With the Uniform Regulations of 1881, quartermaster
clothing designers undoubtedly SANCTIONED THE ONGOING PRACTICE when they
prescribed Service Chevrons for wear on overcoats and field blouses.
Contrary to popular belief, the Regular Army's Civil War
uniform was NOT uniform. In actuality U.S. Army uniforms never have
been!
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