Re: Too Many Enfields?
Hallo!
I hate to use a worn out cliche, but will anyways... ;) :)
Apples and oranges.
I think "Apples and Oranges" because there is a difference between the concept and living-history practice of impressions and portrayals of actual units as to their arms being fixed by time and place, AND looking at totals of weapons between "1861 and 1865" and trying to come up with a statistical concept of what might have been the most "common" type of gun in use based upon weapon numbers that end in April 1865.
AND, being unable or unwilling, or not needing by Mental Picture, to have the arms of actual units/times/places due to financial issues and availability issues- coming up with what might could be presented as something of a "universally representative" Civil War longarm. And just ONE that can be inserted, Federal or Confederate, anywhere between April of 1861 and April of 1865 events without too much error.
Meaning that the '53 "Enfield" or '61 "Springfield" is the perceived choice as a "universally representative" concept CW longarm that traditionally "works" for the majority of the CW reenacting Community.
Especially for lads whose Mental Pictures, interests, desires, needs, and disposable incomes and finances allow but ONE weapon.
Or, perhaps more simply, is the choice of longarms driven by actual historical unit/time/place specifics, or representative or generic universals where specifics do not apply or matter?
(For example.... in some circles, it can be hard to portray a Manassas 1861 or Shiloh 1862 unit and be armed with say an M1863 "Type II" Springfield in a unit that was actually there armed with M1822 flintlocks. In other circles, not.
Curt
Hallo!
I hate to use a worn out cliche, but will anyways... ;) :)
Apples and oranges.
I think "Apples and Oranges" because there is a difference between the concept and living-history practice of impressions and portrayals of actual units as to their arms being fixed by time and place, AND looking at totals of weapons between "1861 and 1865" and trying to come up with a statistical concept of what might have been the most "common" type of gun in use based upon weapon numbers that end in April 1865.
AND, being unable or unwilling, or not needing by Mental Picture, to have the arms of actual units/times/places due to financial issues and availability issues- coming up with what might could be presented as something of a "universally representative" Civil War longarm. And just ONE that can be inserted, Federal or Confederate, anywhere between April of 1861 and April of 1865 events without too much error.
Meaning that the '53 "Enfield" or '61 "Springfield" is the perceived choice as a "universally representative" concept CW longarm that traditionally "works" for the majority of the CW reenacting Community.
Especially for lads whose Mental Pictures, interests, desires, needs, and disposable incomes and finances allow but ONE weapon.
Or, perhaps more simply, is the choice of longarms driven by actual historical unit/time/place specifics, or representative or generic universals where specifics do not apply or matter?
(For example.... in some circles, it can be hard to portray a Manassas 1861 or Shiloh 1862 unit and be armed with say an M1863 "Type II" Springfield in a unit that was actually there armed with M1822 flintlocks. In other circles, not.
Curt
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