While organizing some of my files and going through some old photos today I found this old post card from the Confederate Memorial Hall in New Orleans. I don't think I have posted this before (maybe before the great crash) but what makes it significant to "us" is the grouping of cavalry artifacts from their collection. For those of you unfamiliar, this museum has one of the oldest and premier collections of CS artifacts in the country. The artifacts and their provenance is incredible.
Anyway, the grouping in the photo is very interesting. I note the CS saddle which BTW, is a Confederate pattern, and its interesting skirts, The Richmond Sharps, the saddle bags and other items. Most interesting to me is the saddle blanket (yes, that is a saddle blanket!) Take a look at. It has provenance as having belonged to a member of the 7th Tennessee Cavalry. I know, to me it looks like some "knit" thing my hippie Aunt had on her couch in the early 70's but, its wool and its the real deal. (Mark, can you imagine one of your guys showing up at an event with "that"!). I tried hard to get a photograph of it and other things while preparing for my first book but in spite of being only 100 miles from them I could not get the curator there to act. Worked on it for years. They were (are still) severely cash strapped, short of personel, etc. When Katrina hit things only got worse. Still a great museum with the folks there "true believers" and doing the hard trench warfare work.
For your viewing pleasure.
Ken R Knopp
Anyway, the grouping in the photo is very interesting. I note the CS saddle which BTW, is a Confederate pattern, and its interesting skirts, The Richmond Sharps, the saddle bags and other items. Most interesting to me is the saddle blanket (yes, that is a saddle blanket!) Take a look at. It has provenance as having belonged to a member of the 7th Tennessee Cavalry. I know, to me it looks like some "knit" thing my hippie Aunt had on her couch in the early 70's but, its wool and its the real deal. (Mark, can you imagine one of your guys showing up at an event with "that"!). I tried hard to get a photograph of it and other things while preparing for my first book but in spite of being only 100 miles from them I could not get the curator there to act. Worked on it for years. They were (are still) severely cash strapped, short of personel, etc. When Katrina hit things only got worse. Still a great museum with the folks there "true believers" and doing the hard trench warfare work.
For your viewing pleasure.
Ken R Knopp
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