Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Staying warm while on the run

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • #16
    Re: Staying warm while on the run

    A discussion of the Maple Leaf blankets occurs in Vol. 47, No. 2 (Summer, 1995) of Military Collector and Historian, in an article by Lawrence E. Babits entitled "Rubber Poncho and Blankets from the Union Transport Maple Leaf". You can get back copies here: http://www.military-historians.org/c...al/journal.htm

    In this article Babits examines thirteen rubber blankets, eleven from the transport and two from other sources. No two are identical, none match the quartermaster specifications, they seem to come from several manufacturers, they appear to represent three broad types, they have three different sizes of brass grommets, several different kinds of reinforcement unrelated to grommet size, and one with sewn grommets.

    With this amount of variation in rubber blankets, it seems a stretch to identify any one type as specifically military.

    A further idea of the variety of rubber goods one might see in the countryside comes from The farmer's every-day book: or, sketches of social life in the country ... By John Lauris Blake (Auburn, NY, 1850):

    India rubber, as now manufactured, is the only known article that enables the wearer of it to be completely exempt from the evils of which we are speaking. Let a person on a farm be enclosed with a coat and pants—boots, and n tarpaulin, with a cape, made of this wonderful material—the cost of which is a comparative trifle—and he may labor all day in the open air, during a constant descent of rain, and remain as free from moisture upon his skin and under-clothes as though he had been laboring in his cellar or barn....India rubber is now manufactured into so many articles of utility, it would be impossible for us to enumerate them all. We will name a few in addition to those already named, of such as are particularly adapted to rural life, to wit: gloves and mittens, team-whips, gate and door springs, saddle-bags, carriage-tops, cloaks for riding horseback, traveling-bags, guncases, capes, bottles, tubs, water-tanks, beds, pillows, canteens, and matress-covers.



    The U. S. government procured about 1.9 million "Blankets: Rubber and painted" and 1.6 million "Ponchos rubber and painted" during the war (ORs, Series III, Vol. 5, p. 285). Given what Babits found with just eleven samples of the first from one transport, and what Blake says about the variety of rubber goods in use on farms a decade before the war, I just don't see a real soldier of the civil war picking out a rubber blanket -- or a poncho, or an oilcloth version of either -- as "military issue". It's not a cartridge box or a uniform coat. The degree of uniformity we might expect today when we think of a "government issue" blanket, poncho, or talma of rubber, gutta percha, or oil cloth doesn't really seem to have existed then.

    And don't get me started on blankets :) Unless it has a big "U.S." stitched in the center, you can't necessarily draw any conclusions there, either. G.O. 121 of August 28, 1862 reads in part:

    As the sudden call for volunteers and militia has exhausted the supply of blankets, fit for military purposes, in the market, and it will take some time to procure by manufacture or importation a sufficient supply, all citizens who may volunteer or be drafted are advised to take with them to the rendezvous, if possible, a good stout woolen blanket. The regulation military blanket is 84x66 inches, and weighs five pounds.

    As all clothing, blankets, and shoes issued by the United States to its troops are charged at average cost, and no soldier who furnishes his own blanket is required to draw one, it is to his interest to supply himself, and thereby avoid much discomiort, as it is impossible tor the United States to supply all the troops immediately.


    That is, at a certain point in the war, a civilian blanket and a military blanket can very well be the same. On the whole, it seems to me that for many items in general use the distinctions we might want to make today, as reenactors, between "military" and "civilian" items would probably make no sense to the original cast.
    Michael A. Schaffner

    Comment


    • #17
      Re: Staying warm while on the run

      Whatever Mike. You are totally missing my point. And I'm sure that when this lady is standing on the side of the road and some Federal soldiers find her rubber blanket, some one of them is going to ask how she came to possess an issue item. Hopefully you will be there to intervene on the lady's behalf to give that poor soul a lecture on the study of the contents of the Maple Leaf and how no rubber blanket in existence could possibly be considered "military" by its simple existence, thereby destroying totally the "moment" for any and all involved, excepting yourself, until someone turns off the faucet of knowledge with a quick reminder "Dude, you are wiping a booger on my window to authenticity".

      My point is that the average reenactor in the field is going to leap to the assumption that a rubber blankie is Federal issue and will go flailing into their "firper" rendition of "Spies, Thieves or Sympathizers" and the lady might avoid such high school drama by finding an alternative piece of equipment to suit the purpose, thus saving herself the exposure to such stupidity.

      But, by all means, continue to bore me with your diatribe. I don't disagree with your points, but I recognize the limitations of the hobby, particularly the mental ones.
      Joe Smotherman

      Comment


      • #18
        Re: Staying warm while on the run

        Thank you all for the helpful information. I think more than anytihng it is trial and error. Ive battled the cold before but never before with the "dark side" as some may call it. ;) Thanks!
        [FONT="Palatino Linotype"][COLOR="DarkRed"][SIZE="4"]Marissa Glade[/SIZE][/COLOR][/FONT]

        [COLOR="DarkRed"][QUOTE]Abraham Lincoln once said that if you are a racist, I will attack you with the North. And those are the principles that I carry with me in the workplace. -Michael Scott[/QUOTE][/COLOR]

        Comment


        • #19
          Re: Staying warm while on the run

          Originally posted by PogueMahone View Post
          Whatever Mike. You are totally missing my point. And I'm sure that when this lady is standing on the side of the road and some Federal soldiers find her rubber blanket, some one of them is going to ask how she came to possess an issue item. Hopefully you will be there to intervene on the lady's behalf to give that poor soul a lecture on the study of the contents of the Maple Leaf and how no rubber blanket in existence could possibly be considered "military" by its simple existence, thereby destroying totally the "moment" for any and all involved, excepting yourself, until someone turns off the faucet of knowledge with a quick reminder "Dude, you are wiping a booger on my window to authenticity".

          My point is that the average reenactor in the field is going to leap to the assumption that a rubber blankie is Federal issue and will go flailing into their "firper" rendition of "Spies, Thieves or Sympathizers" and the lady might avoid such high school drama by finding an alternative piece of equipment to suit the purpose, thus saving herself the exposure to such stupidity.

          But, by all means, continue to bore me with your diatribe. I don't disagree with your points, but I recognize the limitations of the hobby, particularly the mental ones.

          I understand your point. I accept your point -- for the moment. Most reenactors will automatically assume that a rubber blanket is an "issue item" and act in what they think is a period manner. But they will be wrong, and they will be perpetuating a reenactorism -- the worst kind, the kind that may affect someone else's ability to get through the event.

          The question that remains, though, is where else does anyone begin to deal with such ignorance in the hobby but here? A lot of people in this hobby read this forum. Your advice is sound only if we assume that people remain ignorant.

          There are several weeks till "Bummers" and I think that leaves plenty of time for a critical mass of participants to realize that civilians could easily have had raingear without looting the dead or stealing the items from military stores.

          I won't be around to ruin anyone's moment with lectures about the Maple Leaf -- not that stupid "firper" has any intrinsic right to go unboogered anyway. I just hope that I've provided enough background information for the civilians to come up with their own stories about how they obtained their clothing, and for enough military participants to decide not to allow themselves or their comrades to be boneheaded.

          But lord knows, I could be wrong about that.
          Michael A. Schaffner

          Comment


          • #20
            Re: Staying warm while on the run

            Well lets hope it doesnt rain so we do not have to find ourselves debating this issue in the field.
            [FONT="Palatino Linotype"][COLOR="DarkRed"][SIZE="4"]Marissa Glade[/SIZE][/COLOR][/FONT]

            [COLOR="DarkRed"][QUOTE]Abraham Lincoln once said that if you are a racist, I will attack you with the North. And those are the principles that I carry with me in the workplace. -Michael Scott[/QUOTE][/COLOR]

            Comment

            Working...
            X