Re: Sweaters???
Greetings,
This subject, like so many others, is vexing. However, I would submit that some troops did wear sweater-type garments based on the following:
1. When or if these were available either commercially or from home.
2. Soldiers got just as cold (or colder) as everyone else.
3. Soldiers, as a rule, weren't idiots and didn't want to freeze any more than their citizen counterparts.
Some other items of interest: There is an illustrated 1862 pattern in "Godey's Lady's Book" for a gentleman's "neck warmer." It is identical to a modern "dickey" and anyone handy at knitting could have easily made this item. I have copied this item and can provide it on request.
In lieu of a sweater or "dickey," why not just wear two or three shirts plus a period-style undershirt? This was common practice. Just the other day, I noted a published coroner's inquest in an Indiana newspaper describing a soldier found drowned in the Ohio River in, as I recall, late 1862: He was reportedly wearing at least two shirts plus an undershirt. The Franklin Expedition men whose bodies were exhumed (see my previous posts) were also found to be wearing multiple shirts.
Regards,
Mark Jaeger
Greetings,
This subject, like so many others, is vexing. However, I would submit that some troops did wear sweater-type garments based on the following:
1. When or if these were available either commercially or from home.
2. Soldiers got just as cold (or colder) as everyone else.
3. Soldiers, as a rule, weren't idiots and didn't want to freeze any more than their citizen counterparts.
Some other items of interest: There is an illustrated 1862 pattern in "Godey's Lady's Book" for a gentleman's "neck warmer." It is identical to a modern "dickey" and anyone handy at knitting could have easily made this item. I have copied this item and can provide it on request.
In lieu of a sweater or "dickey," why not just wear two or three shirts plus a period-style undershirt? This was common practice. Just the other day, I noted a published coroner's inquest in an Indiana newspaper describing a soldier found drowned in the Ohio River in, as I recall, late 1862: He was reportedly wearing at least two shirts plus an undershirt. The Franklin Expedition men whose bodies were exhumed (see my previous posts) were also found to be wearing multiple shirts.
Regards,
Mark Jaeger
Comment