Re: Painting Knapsacks
Everyone went crazy with that. At the beginning of the war, the Report of Clothing, Camp and Garrison Equipage, was quarterly. In response to early war procurement scandals, Congress required it monthly, submitted to the Third Auditor of the Treasury instead of the QMG. QMG Meigs was sufficiently incensed that he required copies to his office.
As a result of all that, a report that originally was submitted by every company quarterly in two copies became submitted monthly in four -- a twelve-fold increase in paperwork. It could be one of the reasons it took the US army awhile to get into full swing.
Or not. All that accountability meant that someone paid when stuff got thrown away. A soldier at the time would have been as tempted as you to toss excess baggage, but they would have known that it was coming out of their pocket in the end -- at least in the Union army. As the Confederate dollar inflated, the cost to the rebel soldier of ditching government property would become less and less significant. By the beginning of 1864, for example, a Confederate dollar was less than a twelfth of a greenback.
So maybe the price of a Masonic symbol on the knapsack wouldn't have been so great after all -- if the soldier could afford the paint.
Originally posted by unclefrank
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As a result of all that, a report that originally was submitted by every company quarterly in two copies became submitted monthly in four -- a twelve-fold increase in paperwork. It could be one of the reasons it took the US army awhile to get into full swing.
Or not. All that accountability meant that someone paid when stuff got thrown away. A soldier at the time would have been as tempted as you to toss excess baggage, but they would have known that it was coming out of their pocket in the end -- at least in the Union army. As the Confederate dollar inflated, the cost to the rebel soldier of ditching government property would become less and less significant. By the beginning of 1864, for example, a Confederate dollar was less than a twelfth of a greenback.
So maybe the price of a Masonic symbol on the knapsack wouldn't have been so great after all -- if the soldier could afford the paint.
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