I'm still slogging through the Citizens and Business File on Footnote.com. I just found a nice invoice from the Clothing Bureau at Huntsville, Texas in which W. H. Haynes bought a number of items from Charles Peine, mostly dealing with dyes and the dyeing process, including 64 lbs of red sanders at 80 cents per pound and 1 barrel of red sanders (168 1/2 lbs) also at 80 cents per pound. The date is May 18, 1863. I found this definition of red sanders:
red sanders
n : tree of India and East Indies yielding a hard fragrant
timber prized for cabinetwork and dark red heartwood used
as a dyewood [syn: red sandalwood, red sanderswood, red
saunders, Pterocarpus santalinus]
I've done some work in Civil War era civilian dyeing, and most of the reds I've seen are madder or cochineal. Has anyone else seen red sanders mentioned in military sources? This dye must have either been left over pre-war, or it came in through the blockade.
Vicki Betts
Texas
red sanders
n : tree of India and East Indies yielding a hard fragrant
timber prized for cabinetwork and dark red heartwood used
as a dyewood [syn: red sandalwood, red sanderswood, red
saunders, Pterocarpus santalinus]
I've done some work in Civil War era civilian dyeing, and most of the reds I've seen are madder or cochineal. Has anyone else seen red sanders mentioned in military sources? This dye must have either been left over pre-war, or it came in through the blockade.
Vicki Betts
Texas
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