While doing search for CS blankets I came across a reference to a CS pea ridge blanket. It was sold several years ago by the Wisconsin Veterans Museum. Can anyone tell me details on this blanket? Color? size? historical documentation? etc? Jim Hensley
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Wisconsin Veterans Museum confederate Pea ridge blanket?
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Re: Wisconsin Veterans Museum confederate Pea ridge blanket?
Jim,
The blanket was lightweight, two pieces sewn down the middle. It is based on a blanket in the collection of the Wisconsin Vets Museum in Madison.
You might be able to get information from them directly, Google them, and ask to e-mail Bill Brewster if possible.
Steve Sullivan
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Re: Wisconsin Veterans Museum confederate Pea ridge blanket?
The blanket in question would make for an excellent night during the warm summer months. It is a awesome copy of the original. The others are right, don't count on keeping you warm if it is cool outside. If memory serves me correctly, the color is off white with a couple of brown stripes on each end. I don't recall the size or construction details though. :confused_- David Cortez
Independent
"The greatest happiness is to scatter your enemy, to drive him before you, to see his cities reduced to ashes, to see those who love him shrouded in tears, and to gather into your bosom his wives and daughters."
- Genghis Khan
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Re: Wisconsin Veterans Museum confederate Pea ridge blanket?
John Schwarz had one of these things a couple of years ago... It's a really thin wool, white or off-white in color, made of two lengths of material sewn together with a center seam. It's small... John is not a real large guy, maybe 5'4" if we stretched him out and pulled real hard, and this blanket fit him about like a bath towel, but not as warm.
Last time I saw it was at the Mansfield living history in 2000, when he was trying to use it to warm back up after a dip in a creek one dark and frosty night. It didn't work.Tom Ezell
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Re: Wisconsin Veterans Museum confederate Pea ridge blanket?
Originally posted by Tom Ezell View PostLast time I saw it was at the Mansfield living history in 2000, when he was trying to use it to warm back up after a dip in a creek one dark and frosty night.[B]Charles Heath[/B]
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Re: Wisconsin Veterans Museum confederate Pea ridge blanket?
Originally posted by Charles Heath View PostThat swim didn't happen to involve any boiled bacon?
Needless to say, none of our other little messmates were interested in acquiring a Pea Ridge blanket after seeing John's, and especially afterward.
By way of comparison, though, I had invested in one of the County Cloth English/"North Carolina" blankets the winter before, and despite having taken my blanket into the creek with me during my unscheduled bath, was able to roll up in it, spoon up to the fire on the side farthest away from the bluff, and get comparatively warm again.
The Pea Ridge blanket is a wonderfully authentic item, but part of that is an experience in being authentically cold and miserable any time the temperature dips toward the dew point!Tom Ezell
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Re: Wisconsin Veterans Museum confederate Pea ridge blanket?
Hallo!
Indeed..
I have one.
It arrived in a 4 X 6 inch box.
IMHO, it is an excellent copy indeed, but I pity the Confederate who used it other than to ward off mosquitoes and biting flies.
Basically it is "homespun" type expedient along the lines of shirt-weight linsey-woolsey woven on a hand-loom with the two strips sewn together side-by-side to double the narrow loom width.
I was going to take it apart and make an 18th century linsey-woolsey shirt out of it...
;) :)
CurtCurt 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)
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-Often incorrect, technically, historically, factually.
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Re: Wisconsin Veterans Museum confederate Pea ridge blanket?
Originally posted by Curt-Heinrich Schmidt View PostIMHO, it is an excellent copy indeed, but I pity the Confederate who used it other than to ward off mosquitoes and biting flies.
I think that chiggers just use blankets as markers to locate their next dinner.
:cry_smile
...not one fly bite, though! :sarcasticJohn Wickett
Former Carpetbagger
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Re: Wisconsin Veterans Museum confederate Pea ridge blanket?
John, I actually think that you got half of the skeeters since the other half came over to where Tripp, Kiev, and I were staying. I slept with my socks pulled up, shirt on, button up to the top, sleeves rolled down. I placed my hankerchef over my face to try to keep the pests away from my face. My hands suffered. I slept on top of my blanket and used my coat as a cover. Those were two hot HOT nights in Mississippi.
It also remind me of the Port Gibson 'o3 event where I slept in a corn field on TOP of my blanket with my head covered by my sack coat and my knapsack and cartridge box as my pillow. The skeeters were vicious there as well.Herb Coats
Armory Guards &
WIG
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Re: Wisconsin Veterans Museum confederate Pea ridge blanket?
Hallo!
It is "off white-ish," or to use the Homeland Terrorist Alert color code, Bisque or Almond.
And attracts insects...
:-)
CurtCurt 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.
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