How common would it be for a common infantry soldier on the march to have a banjo? There's some evidence in horse sense, understanding army life at the time. Unless you could talk a wagon driver into letting you throw it on the wagon while the unit is on march you sure as heck were not going to add the awkwardly-shaped thing to your personal carry, even though it was relatively light. The boys commonly tossed a lot off to the roadside as they marched, let alone adding a banjo to their load.
If you must have it, you can stretch the meager evidence and claim one of these scenarios: (a) officers were allowed more personal items on wagons, and there are pictures of officers in camp with banjos. (b) winter camps allowed even common soldiers a place for such items as banjos, as did assignment to a veteran reserve unit or a permanent defense works, if your reenactment unit depicts any of those settings. (c) carry a banjo regardless of having an actual citation it was done in your legacy unit, with the reasoning it was at least possible.
That last category is far and away the most common justification banjo players in reenactment units have. That's ok but let's not deceive the visiting public it was truly a common thing, and without evidence let's not talk your unit into it when in reality it's mostly that you just want to do it. It depends on how important authenticity is to you or your unit.
Danny
If you must have it, you can stretch the meager evidence and claim one of these scenarios: (a) officers were allowed more personal items on wagons, and there are pictures of officers in camp with banjos. (b) winter camps allowed even common soldiers a place for such items as banjos, as did assignment to a veteran reserve unit or a permanent defense works, if your reenactment unit depicts any of those settings. (c) carry a banjo regardless of having an actual citation it was done in your legacy unit, with the reasoning it was at least possible.
That last category is far and away the most common justification banjo players in reenactment units have. That's ok but let's not deceive the visiting public it was truly a common thing, and without evidence let's not talk your unit into it when in reality it's mostly that you just want to do it. It depends on how important authenticity is to you or your unit.
Danny
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