Read Dec. 1881
"...
The days at Caseyville were well spent in drill of officers and men, and practice in the usages of camp life. The traffic to and from St. Louis was inspected with vigilance, and now and then seizures of contraband goods were made. There was but little sickness; usually about thirty cases, in charge of Doctor Wardner and his assistant, and many of these off duty for a few days only. The constant guard, though at times quite severe, was in the end of great benefit to all. Officers and men gradually became acquainted with each other, and the foundations of the regiment were well laid. Here, also, the men received the first uniforms issued after their muster in; they were furnished by the State, and were of a color not at all welcome, -- gray. The recipients of these ambiguous garments put them on as ordered, but no one enjoyed the spectacle of a Union battalion clad in that tint. It was in vain to assert that the New York Seventh wore gray, as it provoked the retort: “ So do the Rebels.” Up to this time the Galena Company had been the only one uniformed, wearing a sort of jäger costume of green. ..."
Paddock, George L. “The Beginnings of an Illinois Volunteer Regiment in 1861.” In Military Essays and Recollections: Papers Read Before the Commandery of the State of Illinois, Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States, Vol. 2, pp. 253—67. Chicago: A. C. McClurg and Co., 1894.
"...
The days at Caseyville were well spent in drill of officers and men, and practice in the usages of camp life. The traffic to and from St. Louis was inspected with vigilance, and now and then seizures of contraband goods were made. There was but little sickness; usually about thirty cases, in charge of Doctor Wardner and his assistant, and many of these off duty for a few days only. The constant guard, though at times quite severe, was in the end of great benefit to all. Officers and men gradually became acquainted with each other, and the foundations of the regiment were well laid. Here, also, the men received the first uniforms issued after their muster in; they were furnished by the State, and were of a color not at all welcome, -- gray. The recipients of these ambiguous garments put them on as ordered, but no one enjoyed the spectacle of a Union battalion clad in that tint. It was in vain to assert that the New York Seventh wore gray, as it provoked the retort: “ So do the Rebels.” Up to this time the Galena Company had been the only one uniformed, wearing a sort of jäger costume of green. ..."
Paddock, George L. “The Beginnings of an Illinois Volunteer Regiment in 1861.” In Military Essays and Recollections: Papers Read Before the Commandery of the State of Illinois, Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States, Vol. 2, pp. 253—67. Chicago: A. C. McClurg and Co., 1894.
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