We know it happened some....but it is under-represented?
I have seen several threads lately raise the discussion of whether or not rebs carred yank gear and wore their clothes. I can remember one where someone suggested that men would not want to wear the pants off of a dead man. When reading General Lee's Army by Joseph Glatthaar, I ran across the following documentations:
1. "The federal government also issued superior equipment to its men, and the Confederates liked to 'trade' for it." "I swaped canteens with a prisoner, " a Confederate lieutenant alerted his wife. "Their things are much better quality than ours and our soliders are quite eager to get them. The truth is, all of them have them." This makes me wonder what else they might have "traded."
2. Earlier in the book, soldiers talked about observing dead bodies on the field...naked from being stripped by confederate soldiers. "At Cedar Mountain, Jackson's men prayed on the wounded, "emptying their pockets and stealing their clothes.""
3. "A North Carolina officer commented that, "our men went to work robbing the dead...they were stripped to the skin by our soldiers who have long since lost all delicacy on the subject." "All the Yank dead had been stipped of every rag of their clothing and looked like hogs that had been cleaned."
4. This one is my favorite and goes beyond my imagination. "In some instances, Confederates dug up buried Yankee dead to get their clothes."
This gives us 4 methods Lee's army used to obtain federal gear/clothing. Trading prisoners, Robbing the wounded, stealing form the dead, digging up soldiers.
Is federal gear under-represented? You see the occassional federal cartridge box and cap pouch...but not often a fatigue blouse, forage cap...and according to this, trousers, drawers, undershirts, etc! By the way, all the above references are early war....things hadn't even got bad yet!!!!!!!!!!
I have seen several threads lately raise the discussion of whether or not rebs carred yank gear and wore their clothes. I can remember one where someone suggested that men would not want to wear the pants off of a dead man. When reading General Lee's Army by Joseph Glatthaar, I ran across the following documentations:
1. "The federal government also issued superior equipment to its men, and the Confederates liked to 'trade' for it." "I swaped canteens with a prisoner, " a Confederate lieutenant alerted his wife. "Their things are much better quality than ours and our soliders are quite eager to get them. The truth is, all of them have them." This makes me wonder what else they might have "traded."
2. Earlier in the book, soldiers talked about observing dead bodies on the field...naked from being stripped by confederate soldiers. "At Cedar Mountain, Jackson's men prayed on the wounded, "emptying their pockets and stealing their clothes.""
3. "A North Carolina officer commented that, "our men went to work robbing the dead...they were stripped to the skin by our soldiers who have long since lost all delicacy on the subject." "All the Yank dead had been stipped of every rag of their clothing and looked like hogs that had been cleaned."
4. This one is my favorite and goes beyond my imagination. "In some instances, Confederates dug up buried Yankee dead to get their clothes."
This gives us 4 methods Lee's army used to obtain federal gear/clothing. Trading prisoners, Robbing the wounded, stealing form the dead, digging up soldiers.
Is federal gear under-represented? You see the occassional federal cartridge box and cap pouch...but not often a fatigue blouse, forage cap...and according to this, trousers, drawers, undershirts, etc! By the way, all the above references are early war....things hadn't even got bad yet!!!!!!!!!!
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