Hey everyone,
I have been doing research on my unit, the 11th Connecticut, and I came across a newspaper article from 1861, and it has raised some questions for me. Here is the part of the article that interests me:
"Uniforms of dark blue, in the rifleman style, facings of the same color, with heavy black leather leggings, reaching nearly to the knee, and confining the pantaloon at that point, were worn by several companies. Other dispensed with the leggings, and wore green facings. All but the flank companies A and B were armed with improved Springfield Minie muskets, the former carrying breech-loading Sharpe's rifles, with sabre bayonets."
Does anyone know what the green facings would signify? Would these have been the two flank companies, designated as sharpshooters, perhaps?
I have been doing research on my unit, the 11th Connecticut, and I came across a newspaper article from 1861, and it has raised some questions for me. Here is the part of the article that interests me:
"Uniforms of dark blue, in the rifleman style, facings of the same color, with heavy black leather leggings, reaching nearly to the knee, and confining the pantaloon at that point, were worn by several companies. Other dispensed with the leggings, and wore green facings. All but the flank companies A and B were armed with improved Springfield Minie muskets, the former carrying breech-loading Sharpe's rifles, with sabre bayonets."
Does anyone know what the green facings would signify? Would these have been the two flank companies, designated as sharpshooters, perhaps?
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