I had a question asked by a visitor in the field-office the other day and I could not answer it, much less keep a straight face.
He had been to Fort Fisher and heard during a uniform talk that NC had tens of thousands of uniform jackets at the end of the war. In fact they held them in inventory as late as 1943 and actually sold them as a contract to the Army to issue to German and Italian prisoners in the Hampton Roads area.
This man and his family left town BELIEVING that the prisoners lounged around camp in re-dyed Confederate uniforms with POW stenciled on the back.
I know this is not true and tried to politely tell our visitor that it wasn’t. He thought I just had a chip on my shoulder.
I have to ask if anyone else has heard this?
If this is in fact true where is the documentation?
The state could offer only the name of an old reinactor who frequented Fort Macon (NC) back in the late 1970's and claimed to have found and lost images and documents. Sadly, that was enough for NC Cultual Resources then and NC State Historic Sites now. I cannot find the fellow with the alleged information. I doubt anyone here has heard of him.
Questions and concerns like this are a bitter cup on this forum. Since it holds no historical truth and is being spread as part of an approved agency script I think it is important to mention and question.
I have fought the local “stars on the Confederate battle flag / tribes of Israel” lies by myself long enough.
I’m going to call the state’s hand on the jackets.
Modorators close this thread if it gets stale. Though important, it is a borderline topic.
He had been to Fort Fisher and heard during a uniform talk that NC had tens of thousands of uniform jackets at the end of the war. In fact they held them in inventory as late as 1943 and actually sold them as a contract to the Army to issue to German and Italian prisoners in the Hampton Roads area.
This man and his family left town BELIEVING that the prisoners lounged around camp in re-dyed Confederate uniforms with POW stenciled on the back.
I know this is not true and tried to politely tell our visitor that it wasn’t. He thought I just had a chip on my shoulder.
I have to ask if anyone else has heard this?
If this is in fact true where is the documentation?
The state could offer only the name of an old reinactor who frequented Fort Macon (NC) back in the late 1970's and claimed to have found and lost images and documents. Sadly, that was enough for NC Cultual Resources then and NC State Historic Sites now. I cannot find the fellow with the alleged information. I doubt anyone here has heard of him.
Questions and concerns like this are a bitter cup on this forum. Since it holds no historical truth and is being spread as part of an approved agency script I think it is important to mention and question.
I have fought the local “stars on the Confederate battle flag / tribes of Israel” lies by myself long enough.
I’m going to call the state’s hand on the jackets.
Modorators close this thread if it gets stale. Though important, it is a borderline topic.
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