Folks,
Over the last few years of making literally hundreds of dozens and dozens of different types of garment, only one has consistently entertained me and driven me to look forward to constructing it every time I receive an order. That is the simple four button jacket.
There are presently FIVE known surviving examples of the jacket, the most famous of which is the T.V. Brooke jacket that is erroneously listed as a "sack coat" in EoG. Four of these jackets are housed in public collections across the country, with a fifth in private hands. What is more, literally DOZENS of pictures have surfaced with soldiers wearing these jackets, most linked to late-war soldiers serving in Virginia.
This image was found in a small antique shop in Michigan showing what is likely a young confederate soldier wearing a unique style of the four button jacket. Notice that a top buttonhole is not to be found, but that the placement of the pocket, the fullness of the sleeves, and the overall patterning of the collar and front are similar, if not identical to other four buttons surviving today. The date on the image of March of 1865 gives this image a late war provenance much like the other surviving jackets.
Some interesting questions to pose to everyone:
1. Where did the jacket come from? Obviously the similar pattern and construction speak of a single production point, and the number of original surviving examples and surviving photographic examples point toward a depot producing the jackets. But what depot? The operating hypothesis I'm currently working with is a smaller depot in the southwest Virginia area, such as an installation at Lynchburg, Staunton, or other medium-sized town away from the federal army. Another more remote possibility is a soldier's aide society stationed in the same area, but with the increasing price of woolen cloth in the final year of the war I find the idea of even a well-funded citizen's group supplying this many garments impractical.
2. When were they issued? Our soldier above seems to be wearing a relatively new garment. A few wrinkles and wear spots but no staining, rips, or tears. Many other images and the provenances of the surviving originals point to a general timeline from the early fall of '64 up until the end of the war. Could these be an example of the last widely produced garment made from domestically woven yardgoods issued in the eastern theater?
I hope that others will chime in on this discussion with some further information about these extraordinary garments. I have a pile more of info about them that I will be happy to share as the discussion goes on, and I simply don't want to pile it all on at once. So have at it folks!
Best Regards,
Over the last few years of making literally hundreds of dozens and dozens of different types of garment, only one has consistently entertained me and driven me to look forward to constructing it every time I receive an order. That is the simple four button jacket.
There are presently FIVE known surviving examples of the jacket, the most famous of which is the T.V. Brooke jacket that is erroneously listed as a "sack coat" in EoG. Four of these jackets are housed in public collections across the country, with a fifth in private hands. What is more, literally DOZENS of pictures have surfaced with soldiers wearing these jackets, most linked to late-war soldiers serving in Virginia.
This image was found in a small antique shop in Michigan showing what is likely a young confederate soldier wearing a unique style of the four button jacket. Notice that a top buttonhole is not to be found, but that the placement of the pocket, the fullness of the sleeves, and the overall patterning of the collar and front are similar, if not identical to other four buttons surviving today. The date on the image of March of 1865 gives this image a late war provenance much like the other surviving jackets.
Some interesting questions to pose to everyone:
1. Where did the jacket come from? Obviously the similar pattern and construction speak of a single production point, and the number of original surviving examples and surviving photographic examples point toward a depot producing the jackets. But what depot? The operating hypothesis I'm currently working with is a smaller depot in the southwest Virginia area, such as an installation at Lynchburg, Staunton, or other medium-sized town away from the federal army. Another more remote possibility is a soldier's aide society stationed in the same area, but with the increasing price of woolen cloth in the final year of the war I find the idea of even a well-funded citizen's group supplying this many garments impractical.
2. When were they issued? Our soldier above seems to be wearing a relatively new garment. A few wrinkles and wear spots but no staining, rips, or tears. Many other images and the provenances of the surviving originals point to a general timeline from the early fall of '64 up until the end of the war. Could these be an example of the last widely produced garment made from domestically woven yardgoods issued in the eastern theater?
I hope that others will chime in on this discussion with some further information about these extraordinary garments. I have a pile more of info about them that I will be happy to share as the discussion goes on, and I simply don't want to pile it all on at once. So have at it folks!
Best Regards,
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