Howdy,
Looking through some more period papers, particularly in South Carolina, I see many references to such an animal as a "Beauregard Cap" for Confederate army wear. I have attached two advertisements relative to the type. The one shows a drawing of the common cap often referred to by the modern term "wheel" cap etc. Also attached is a detail from the view of CS POWs taken at Five Forks, wearing a cap of this style. I assume the "beauregard cap" references this sort of cap, particularly as it is distinguished in the ads from the kepi, or fatigue cap of the army regulations...
I found a couple other references online. Johnson Hagood referred to the “jaunty and war-like Beauregard Cap” among the folks at Charleston in 1861. [Memoirs of the War of Secession, 78.]
A slave serving as an officer’s boy noted wearing the uniform of “gray jacket, blue pants, and a Beauregard cap…” [Suzannah Ashton, I Belong to South Carolina…262]
cheers,
J. Marshall
Tampa Bay.
Looking through some more period papers, particularly in South Carolina, I see many references to such an animal as a "Beauregard Cap" for Confederate army wear. I have attached two advertisements relative to the type. The one shows a drawing of the common cap often referred to by the modern term "wheel" cap etc. Also attached is a detail from the view of CS POWs taken at Five Forks, wearing a cap of this style. I assume the "beauregard cap" references this sort of cap, particularly as it is distinguished in the ads from the kepi, or fatigue cap of the army regulations...
I found a couple other references online. Johnson Hagood referred to the “jaunty and war-like Beauregard Cap” among the folks at Charleston in 1861. [Memoirs of the War of Secession, 78.]
A slave serving as an officer’s boy noted wearing the uniform of “gray jacket, blue pants, and a Beauregard cap…” [Suzannah Ashton, I Belong to South Carolina…262]
cheers,
J. Marshall
Tampa Bay.
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