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Marking my blanket for Identification

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  • Marking my blanket for Identification

    A few of us in my battery have gotten the same blanket, easily explainable to spectators as having an issue request filled (blankets came from same batch, etc). So how do I properly and authentically mark my blanket as mine? I would rather sew/embroider than use ink or "paint". And which is more authentic: a last name only? initials? 2-letter initials, or 3-letter initials? Should I include unit identification (and make my old Operational Security Officer pass a brick), or not? And where should the marking go? Lower left or right? Near a side? Across the middle?

    I would appreciate an answer with some "documentary" evidence, a picture, reference by book and page number, or other published source, etc...

    Thank you.
    [COLOR="Black"][/COLOR][FONT="Georgia"][SIZE="4"][COLOR="Red"][/COLOR][/SIZE][/FONT]

    2nd Lt. James Ward
    Adjutant
    1st Maryland Artillery (Dement's Battery)

  • #2
    Re: Marking my blanket for Identification

    If they are all the same blanket, does it really matter? As long as you go home with one at the end of the event ...
    Joe Smotherman

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Marking my blanket for Identification

      The blanket, as clothing, belongs to you, so you have some discretion in how to mark it. The first example that comes to mind is from Si Klegg, p. 184, who embroidered a "K" on his blanket -- "His 'housewife' furnished the necessary materials." This didn't help; the man who stole it claimed to have the same initial.

      A more somber example comes from Documents of the U.S. Sanitary Commission, Issue 96, 1870, p. 467:

      The work is now going on; some fifty bodies have already been removed, and in one or two weeks it will be completed. The bodies are taken up, and a record is made of everything which will help friends to recognize them. I select a few names from the record, to illustrate:

      Unknown soldier—brown hair, full beard, cavalryman, shot in side by shell, five feet eight inches high, aged about twenty-two; buried to the left of Hillsboro' pike, near I. Compton's; body covered with tent cloth. A gum blanket, near grave, was marked "W. Hall, [or Hale,] 100th 0. V. I." No. of grave, 12,274.


      I've marked my gum blankets with pen and ink but haven't yet done anything with the wool blanket.

      I'm sure other examples are out there.
      Michael A. Schaffner

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Marking my blanket for Identification

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Marking my blanket for Identification

          Originally posted by A Baltimore Confederate View Post
          A few of us in my battery have gotten the same blanket, easily explainable to spectators as having an issue request filled (blankets came from same batch, etc). So how do I properly and authentically mark my blanket as mine? I would rather sew/embroider than use ink or "paint". And which is more authentic: a last name only? initials? 2-letter initials, or 3-letter initials? Should I include unit identification (and make my old Operational Security Officer pass a brick), or not? And where should the marking go? Lower left or right? Near a side? Across the middle?

          I would appreciate an answer with some "documentary" evidence, a picture, reference by book and page number, or other published source, etc...

          Thank you.
          There are various photos in the EOG series that show names handpainted and stenciled on various equipment. There is a nice example of a Fed issue blanket on page 214 of the union volume showing Lt. J.R. Royers blanket. I attached photos as well. I am sure others can expand more on the details and documentation but to answer your question shortly YES. Some soldiers personaized their gear to prevent theft or ease of identification. You have to remember though, this equipment was issued to them and property of the US government so not evrything was or should have your name on it.
          [SIZE=0]PetePaolillo
          ...ILUS;)[/SIZE]

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Marking my blanket for Identification

            Thanks Chris, you beat me to the punch on this.

            Corp Klegg just stitched his name in the corner....any of us regardless of sewing talent can do that.

            I chain stitch a script "D" into the corner of each of my blankets. In the middle of the night, I can still find my blankie!
            [COLOR="DarkRed"] [B][SIZE=2][FONT=Book Antiqua]Christopher J. Daley[/FONT][/SIZE][/B][/COLOR]

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: Marking my blanket for Identification

              I've used a Federal blanket for the past 20 years, identical to many of the blankets in my unit, and have never had it confused with the others....
              Tom "Mingo" Machingo
              Independent Rifles, Weevil's Mess

              Vixi Et Didici

              "I think and highly hope that this war will end this year, and Oh then what a happy time we will have. No need of writing then but we can talk and talk again, and my boy can talk to me and I will never tire of listening to him and he will want to go with me everywhere I go, and I will be certain to let him go if there is any possible chance."
              Marion Hill Fitzpatrick
              Company K, 45th Georgia Infantry
              KIA Petersburg, Virginia

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: Marking my blanket for Identification

                Originally posted by PetePaolillo View Post
                Some soldiers personaized their gear to prevent theft or ease of identification. You have to remember though, this equipment was issued to them and property of the US government so not evrything was or should have your name on it.
                Excellent point that bears repeating.

                For both US and CS, our uniform, shoes, and blankets (rubber and wool) come out of our clothing allowance and belong to us. This is stuff we can legitimately mark with our name.

                Our knapsacks, canteens, and haversacks belong to the company, and instructions for marking them are in the Regs. But it's not an invariable rule -- in the CS service, I think knapsacks at one point were provided by Ordnance. Also, there seems to have been a tradition of counting the knapsack and haversack as personal property on inventories of effects.

                All leather belts, cartridge and cap boxes, and plates pertaining to them are ordnance, belong to the captain, and should not be defaced with our names or initials. Despite this, folks who collect relics have found plenty of examples of personalized ordnance, some of which they can date to the war.

                Oddly enough, while our caps and uniform hats belong to us, any brass on them belongs to the company.

                But I'm sure practice varied.
                Michael A. Schaffner

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: Marking my blanket for Identification

                  Hallo!

                  Not me, I prefer my own stink to that of others.

                  ;) :)

                  "The afternoon was spent...sewing our names on the blankets."

                  John Mead Gould, 1st Maine Infantry, 1861

                  The Wartime Journals of John Mead Gould edited by William B. Jordan

                  Curt
                  Curt Schmidt
                  In gleichem Schritt und Tritt, Curt Schmidt

                  -Hard and sharp as flint...secret, and self-contained, and solitary as an oyster.
                  -Haplogroup R1b M343 (Subclade R1b1a2 M269)
                  -Pointless Folksy Wisdom Mess, Oblio Lodge #1
                  -Vastly Ignorant
                  -Often incorrect, technically, historically, factually.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Re: Marking my blanket for Identification

                    Originally posted by Secesh View Post
                    I've used a Federal blanket for the past 20 years, identical to many of the blankets in my unit, and have never had it confused with the others....
                    If your equating that to reenacting I agree, where everything is relatively controlled, deliberate and hopefully theft-free.

                    But it terms of the true period experience...you're among thousands, perhaps tens of thousands of men, dropping packs / rolls, using comunal shelter and blankets, combined with those intent on theft it makes complete sense.

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Re: Marking my blanket for Identification

                      I thought about Si Klegg's blanket, too. The veteran thief retained Si's the blanket as I recall.

                      Repaired burn holes in my blanket set my blanket apart from other Julius Jones blankets I've seen. Some of the holes were about larger than fist size before I stitched some jeancloth to the edges of the fabric.

                      The repairs add a little character to the blanket. A blazing fire at a snowy bivouac in the mountains caused some of the holes. It was one of those, "what's that smell" moments shortly after bedding down for the night with feet to the flames. An unattended candle and subsequent ground fire caused the others.
                      Silas Tackitt,
                      one of the moderators.

                      Click here for a link to forum rules - or don't at your own peril.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Re: Marking my blanket for Identification

                        From the collection of the MOC (the number is the accession number):

                        0985.13.1322 "Capt. J. C. Haselett / Zainesville Guards" stitched in red.

                        0985.13.1323 "Henry T. Wight / Powhatan Artillery" cross stitched in red.

                        For more information, please join the museum and support their preservation. http://www.moc.org
                        Last edited by hta1970; 09-03-2009, 08:58 AM. Reason: added link
                        Harry Aycock

                        Chief Surgeon
                        Southern Division

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Re: Marking my blanket for Identification

                          I marked my own blanket with a cross stitching based upon the Powhatan Artillery blanket in the MOC as cited above. While I no longer have a picture copy of the original (It used to be on the Powhatan CWRT site) , here's my own rendition of it. The markings on the Powhatan blanket are much more extensive than mine, but you get the drift.
                          Bob Williams
                          26th North Carolina Troops
                          Blogsite: http://26nc.org/blog/

                          As [one of our cavalry] passed by, the general halted him and inquired "what part of the army he belonged to." "I don't belong to the army, I belong to the cavalry." "That's a fact," says [the general], "you can pass on." Silas Grisamore, 18th Louisiana

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Re: Marking my blanket for Identification

                            Hallo!

                            Is it a "RAW" wool blanket then?

                            Just a-funnin'...

                            Curt
                            Whose grandmother always hated her monograph, "ASS"
                            Curt Schmidt
                            In gleichem Schritt und Tritt, Curt Schmidt

                            -Hard and sharp as flint...secret, and self-contained, and solitary as an oyster.
                            -Haplogroup R1b M343 (Subclade R1b1a2 M269)
                            -Pointless Folksy Wisdom Mess, Oblio Lodge #1
                            -Vastly Ignorant
                            -Often incorrect, technically, historically, factually.

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Re: Marking my blanket for Identification

                              By God, I believe it is! Makes me feel kinda sheepish that I didn't know that sooner. Pretty b-a-a-a-d.
                              Bob Williams
                              26th North Carolina Troops
                              Blogsite: http://26nc.org/blog/

                              As [one of our cavalry] passed by, the general halted him and inquired "what part of the army he belonged to." "I don't belong to the army, I belong to the cavalry." "That's a fact," says [the general], "you can pass on." Silas Grisamore, 18th Louisiana

                              Comment

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