Re: "The Simple Four Button Jacket"
Greetings,
I have wondered for awhile if these garmets aren't indeed a citizen sackcoat pattern that was militarized for the Rebellion. Let me explain a little for my reasoning on this subject.
From the 1840's on you see the informal sackcoat become a common fixture in the wardrobe of the American male. These early sackcoats were a pattern that had narrow sleeves and fairly close fitting body that lasted as the "instyle" cut until the middle part of the 1850's when the looser baggier sack coat begins to be introduced. However, the earlier pattern was still being sold as a more conservative cut and with the Panic of 1857 somewhat retarding the proliferation of modern fashions to some areas of the US, these garments are still seen in numbers by the time the Rebellion starts and into the early 1860's until they're mostly replaced by more modern cuts.
These early sackcoats fit in a different way than the more modern late 1850's garments, and would be close fitting in the body...giving the appearence to the modern reenactors eye as a "shell jacket fit" of sorts. Especially when one considers that many of the reproduction citizen sack coats on the market seem to follow the later baggier looser late 1850's style.
I wonder if these aren't some of the "worker coats" being referred to in this thread, as the more conservative styles fell out of fashion they would be implemented as work clothing...an activity you see taking place pretty much across the entire 19th century in regard to mens wear.
Being that the sack coat was a cheap mass produced untailored men's garment during the period, I could with educated conjecture easily see for the same reasons these garments with a now militarized pattern being produced and distributed by state agencies, the central goverment, and through the communtation system. Perhaps these "4 button shell jackets" are a militarized sackcoat pattern with a conservative cut.
Recently this summer a citizen's sack coat that follows this early pattern came out of the woodwork along with a pair of citizens trousers dating from cut to the early to mid 1850s. The provanance for the pieces state they were worn by an Iowa soldier when he enlisted in the Rebellion. At this time they are undergoing research and verification by the owner of the private collection they reside in. However, I had an opportunity to examine this linen summer sack coat and without the fold down lapel, the fit of the garment in the body appears very similar to that of a shell jacket.
Just my thoughts,
Darrek Orwig
Greetings,
I have wondered for awhile if these garmets aren't indeed a citizen sackcoat pattern that was militarized for the Rebellion. Let me explain a little for my reasoning on this subject.
From the 1840's on you see the informal sackcoat become a common fixture in the wardrobe of the American male. These early sackcoats were a pattern that had narrow sleeves and fairly close fitting body that lasted as the "instyle" cut until the middle part of the 1850's when the looser baggier sack coat begins to be introduced. However, the earlier pattern was still being sold as a more conservative cut and with the Panic of 1857 somewhat retarding the proliferation of modern fashions to some areas of the US, these garments are still seen in numbers by the time the Rebellion starts and into the early 1860's until they're mostly replaced by more modern cuts.
These early sackcoats fit in a different way than the more modern late 1850's garments, and would be close fitting in the body...giving the appearence to the modern reenactors eye as a "shell jacket fit" of sorts. Especially when one considers that many of the reproduction citizen sack coats on the market seem to follow the later baggier looser late 1850's style.
I wonder if these aren't some of the "worker coats" being referred to in this thread, as the more conservative styles fell out of fashion they would be implemented as work clothing...an activity you see taking place pretty much across the entire 19th century in regard to mens wear.
Being that the sack coat was a cheap mass produced untailored men's garment during the period, I could with educated conjecture easily see for the same reasons these garments with a now militarized pattern being produced and distributed by state agencies, the central goverment, and through the communtation system. Perhaps these "4 button shell jackets" are a militarized sackcoat pattern with a conservative cut.
Recently this summer a citizen's sack coat that follows this early pattern came out of the woodwork along with a pair of citizens trousers dating from cut to the early to mid 1850s. The provanance for the pieces state they were worn by an Iowa soldier when he enlisted in the Rebellion. At this time they are undergoing research and verification by the owner of the private collection they reside in. However, I had an opportunity to examine this linen summer sack coat and without the fold down lapel, the fit of the garment in the body appears very similar to that of a shell jacket.
Just my thoughts,
Darrek Orwig
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