Re: Bayonets for picket pins?
I read a first person account from a member of (I believe) the 4th Kentucky Mounted Infantry (CS) and he makes mention of full Infantry accoutrements including knapsacks being issued. There were some sketches of the unit in action in the book and they show men fully accoutred as regular infantry riding horses, complete with bayonets and knapsacks. I believe the drawings were post-war to accompany the manuscript, but I don't believe they were modern artists' renditions.
I learned many years ago that when it comes to research, especially in the western Confederate cavalry, the only absolute is that there are no absolutes.
What separates us from the farbs is that we've done the research and we should know what was period everyday correct and what was the anomoly. But what we, as authentics that's been around awhile, have to remember is that it's our duty to make sure that we stress to the newbies that its the PEC that we should be trying to portray. So many times, people come on here, read a thread about some new piece of research or historical theory that's been posted (like bayonets for meat hooks and picket pins), and then think they can just run out and start using it in the hobby. I'm pretty sure that Green's cavalry used bayonets for picket pins at least once. We know a member of the 3rd Texas cavalry had matching holsters and Mexican trousers of jaguar skin. We also know that a Lieutenant in Grierson's command was riding a "spotted horse" at the battle on the Comite River against Powers' Confederates at the Battle of Clinton, LA. But none of those things were common or everyday correct and we shouldn't be seeing any of it in our ranks.
I read a first person account from a member of (I believe) the 4th Kentucky Mounted Infantry (CS) and he makes mention of full Infantry accoutrements including knapsacks being issued. There were some sketches of the unit in action in the book and they show men fully accoutred as regular infantry riding horses, complete with bayonets and knapsacks. I believe the drawings were post-war to accompany the manuscript, but I don't believe they were modern artists' renditions.
I learned many years ago that when it comes to research, especially in the western Confederate cavalry, the only absolute is that there are no absolutes.
What separates us from the farbs is that we've done the research and we should know what was period everyday correct and what was the anomoly. But what we, as authentics that's been around awhile, have to remember is that it's our duty to make sure that we stress to the newbies that its the PEC that we should be trying to portray. So many times, people come on here, read a thread about some new piece of research or historical theory that's been posted (like bayonets for meat hooks and picket pins), and then think they can just run out and start using it in the hobby. I'm pretty sure that Green's cavalry used bayonets for picket pins at least once. We know a member of the 3rd Texas cavalry had matching holsters and Mexican trousers of jaguar skin. We also know that a Lieutenant in Grierson's command was riding a "spotted horse" at the battle on the Comite River against Powers' Confederates at the Battle of Clinton, LA. But none of those things were common or everyday correct and we shouldn't be seeing any of it in our ranks.
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