1.0 UNIFORMS
GENERAL NOTES: Uniforms should be appropriately sewn, made
of the proper materials, and constructed in the correct "cut".
Proper stitching is encouraged, as are hand-sewn buttonholes.
This applies for uniform jackets, pants, vests, shirts, and drawers.
Civil War uniforms were provided in a limited number of sizes,
so STICK TO THESE REGULATION SIZES. Avoid the "cookie-cutter
soldier" appearance provided by a tailored uniform. Instead,
we want to preserve the "unaltered, just-as-issued"
look that was typical of soldiers in the field. Do not be afraid
to cuff your trousers or blouse, or to wear "high-water"
trousers. If the issue-size clothing does not fit you perfectly,
then it is probably correct. This is important.
1.1 Headgear
- A. Forage Cap: The only
acceptable headgear for formal occasions such as parade, inspection,
and guard duty, is the forage cap. Forage caps shall be of a
finely-woven, dark blue (not navy blue) plain-weave wool with
no visible weave. Visors and chinstraps shall be painted leather.
Buttons shall be small "eagle" type. The cap liner
shall be brown or black polished cotton and the cap shall have
a leather or painted cloth sweatband. Of the two basic forage
cap styles, preference should be given to the "Type 1"
forage cap, because the "Type 2" style is over-represented
in the hobby. The Type 1 style has a crescent-shaped, slightly
slanting visor and smaller-diameter crown. Type 2 caps have a
rectangular visor that usually lays flat and a larger-diameter
crown. The Type 1 cap is currently available as the "M&G"
contract cap, and the Type 2 cap is represented by the "LJ&I
Philips" contract cap. The sides of the brim shall not be
curled downward in the style of modern baseball caps. Trim and
Insignia: Members are discouraged from adding brass ornamentation
to their headgear. Brass harps, Masonic badges, and other insignia
(for example, "Excelsior" badges) are forbidden on
any type of clothing, especially hats. Wearing of brass bugles
is strongly discouraged, as there is little evidence that soldiers
in the field wore them. Wearing of brass regimental numbers and
company letters is allowed but is discouraged. If worn, corps
badges shall be appropriate for the scenario portrayed. [EOG/US
pages 176, 182-183] It is preferred that headgear be plain with
no ornamentation of any kind.
-
- B. Other Headgear: Havelocks
are not allowed unless documentation supports their use in a
given scenario. Although documentation supporting the wear of
straw hats by Federal soldiers on campaign does exist, it is
the 122nd's policy that the presence of straw hats (even in small
quantities) is detrimental to the overall "look" that
we are attempting to portray. Therefore, straw hats are not allowed.
- C. Civilian Hats: Appropriate,
period-style civilian slouch hats are permitted on campaign and
as otherwise appropriate for the scenario portrayed; evidence
strongly suggests that soldiers in some units of the Army of
the Potomac wore slouch hats on the march and in battle with
regularity. Forage caps were (and still are) required for formal
occasions, such as parade, inspection, and guard duty. Civilian
hats shall be devoid of hat cords. Brass ornamentation and insignia
worn on civilian hats shall conform to the requirements for forage
caps. Civilian hats shall have a sewn edge binding, a silk hat
ribbon, and a sweatband of leather or cotton duck. Civilian hats
shall be made of fine wool felt and shall not include metal-trimmed
vents or exhibit a "fuzzy" appearance. "Steamed
fedoras", derbies, and shapeless hat blanks are forbidden.
Acceptable hat colors are medium to dark gray, medium to dark
brown, and black, with black as the preferred color.
D. U.S. Army Hats/"Kossuth
Hats": Use of the U.S. Army regulation hat (a.k.a. "Hardee
hat"; note that this is a non-period term) is permitted
when appropriate for the scenario (i.e., when portraying a unit
that actually wore them). U.S. Army hats will normally be devoid
of brass ornamentation and hat cords. U.S. Army hats shall be
black in color and made of medium-weight felt, with a crown 5¾
inches high and a brim 3 to 3¼ inches wide. U.S. Army
hats shall have two lines of stitching as an edge binding and
a 3/8-inch to 5/16-inch wide ribbon hatband knotted on the left
side. The liner shall include a black or maroon leather sweatband
and glazed paper crown backing.
- E. Soft "smoking
caps" are acceptable when soldiers are off-duty if the particular
cap and material is correct for the period.
- F. Headgear for Commissioned
Officers: Headgear for officers is at the discretion of the officer
and shall be suitable for the scenario and portrayal. Acceptable
headgear includes: U.S. Army dress hat, civilian hat, forage
cap, and kepi. Hats may be worn with or without embroidered branch
insignia. Dress hats and civilian hats may be worn with or without
hat cord. [EOG/US pages 178-179 (kepis), pages 180-181 (forage
caps), page 184 (U.S.. Army hat), pages 185-186 (civilian hats)]
1.2 Shirts
- A. Federal Issue Shirts:
It is preferred that all members have at least one gray or domet
flannel Federal-issue shirt, as this was the shirt worn by the
majority of Federal soldiers. Federal-issue shirts may be either
depot-made or contractor-made. Domet flannel shirts will have
three ½" diameter tin-plated buttons; one at the
neck and one at each cuff; the fabric shall be a cotton warp
and wool weft in an off-white color. Please note that these shirts
were originally supplied in only one size (no kidding). Resist
the temptation to wear an unauthentic 'custom-size' issue shirt!
The typical gray wool shirt will have 4 or 5 buttons, with two
or three on a placket front and one on each cuff.
- B. Civilian Shirts: Fabrics
must be woven of 100-percent natural fiber. Only period-correct
prints (such as checked prints; note that paisley, no matter
how historically correct, is strongly discouraged) may be worn.
[EOG/US page 126] Fabric may be 100 percent cotton muslin or
flannel. Shirts must have wood, bone, mother-of-pearl, glass,
porcelain, or paper-backed tin buttons. Bone, glass, and porcelain
were more common than wood buttons. Buttons are a conspicuous
problem with inaccurate clothing. Antique or properly made reproduction
buttons can be purchased from suppliers on the Vendor List.
C. Members are encouraged to avoid using white muslin or linen
shirts.
1.3 Uniform Coats and Jackets
- A. Fatigue Blouse ("Sack
Coat") for Enlisted Men and Non-commissioned Officers: Required
field-wear is the standard, New York or Schuylkill Depot-issue
Federal four-button fatigue blouse. All jackets should be of
indigo (dark blue) wool flannel material. Wool flannel shall
exhibit a visible "wale" in the fabric and shall be
a shade between a medium and dark blue color; the color shall
not be a blackish, "navy" blue that fades to an even
more-unacceptable purple color. Lined blouses are preferred because
approximately about 75 percent of the blouses issued were of
this type. Lining can be lightweight brown flannel, linen, or
jean in the body, and cotton muslin or linen shirting in the
sleeves.. Fatigue blouses shall have standard, medium-sized U.S.
infantry buttons. [Similar to EOG/US page 125]
- B. U.S. Uniform Coat
("Frock Coat") for Enlisted Men and Non-commissioned
Officers: The federal infantry coat is acceptable for field wear
as dictated by the scenario. Frock coats shall be of dark blue
wool broadcloth material; refer to "Fatigue Blouses"
above for requirements on fabric color. Frock coats should be
lined with a mixture of alpaca, tow or some similar material
as chest padding, polished cotton, and muslin or osnaburg in
the sleeves. Frock coat trim shall be light blue piping; "tape-trim"
is not allowed. Frock coats shall have standard U.S. infantry
buttons. Original frock coats were made with pocket in the skirts
only; there should not be a factory-made pocket in the breast.
[similar to EOG/US page 122-123]
-
- C. New York State "Excelsior"
Shell Jacket for Enlisted Men and Non-commissioned Officers:
These are acceptable only when appropriate for the scenario.
Shell jackets shall be of 18-ounce dark blue wool broadcloth
material (refer to "Fatigue Blouses" above for requirements
on fabric color), lined with cotton or other period-correct material.
Jacket shall have a stand-up collar, functional epaulettes, and
a belt loop on the left side. Jacket shall include 1/8-inch sky
blue piping around the collar, epaulettes, and belt loop. Jackets
should have seven ¾-inch diameter New York State buttons.
[EOG/US page 125].
- D. Fatigue Blouse ("Sack
Coat") for Commissioned Officers: The officer's sack coat
is a loose-fitting blouse that should generally be longer than
the enlisted fatigue blouse and are acceptable when appropriate
for the scenario. Officers' sack coats were privately purchased
and exhibited variation from one officer to the next. Sack coats
shall be of dark blue wool flannel or broadcloth material (refer
to "Fatigue Blouses for Enlisted Men and Non-commissioned
Officers" above for requirements on fabric color). Linings
shall be appropriate to the original used as a pattern. Sack
coat may have a four or five-button front; additional buttons
are permissible. Sack coats generally had at least two outside
pockets. Black velvet collars and cuffs were common and are acceptable
on officers' sack coats. [EOG/US page 119] While there is documented
evidence of officers on campaign preferring to wear the unadorned
sack coats of private soldiers, the 122nd's desire that an officer's
impression include a jacket or coat that is of a pattern specific
to commissioned rank. Exceptions would be made on a case-by-case
basis if documentation exists for officers within the specific
unit being portrayed.
- E. Frock Coat for Commissioned
Officers: Perhaps the most common coat worn by commissioned officers
was the private-purchase frock coat. Captains and lieutenants'
frock coats shall be single-breasted; field-grade officers may
wear double-breasted coats. Frock coats shall be of dark blue
wool broadcloth material; refer to "Fatigue Blouses for
Enlisted Men and Non-commissioned Officers" above for fabric
color requirements. Frock coats should be lined with a mixture
of alpaca, tow, or similar material as chest padding, and polished
cotton; sleeves shall be lined with muslin or osnaburg. Officers
are discouraged from wearing rank insignia on the sleeve unless
correct for the portrayal. Frock coats shall have nine ¾-inch
eagle buttons on the front, three 5/8-inch eagle buttons on each
cuff, and a four- or six-button tail. Black velvet collars and
cuffs were common and are acceptable on officers' frock coats.
[EOG/US pages 116-117] Officers shall not wear enlisted frock
coats.
- F. Shell Jacket for Commissioned
Officers: Many commissioned officers wore shell jackets. If worn
by Members, commissioned officer shell jackets shall be of dark
blue wool broadcloth material; refer to "Fatigue Blouses
for Enlisted Men and Non-commissioned Officers" above for
fabric color requirements. Shell jacket lining shall be appropriate
to the original used as a pattern. [EOG/US page 115]
1.4 Pants
- U.S. Army Infantry issue: Light blue kersey wool with a visible
"wale" to the fabric. Pants shall not be pleated and
shall have a watch pocket. For the veteran-soldier "as issued"
look, wear one of the four issue sizes, unaltered. The cut is
very important: many reproduction trousers ride like modern pants,
with the waistband on top of the hipbones. The proper Civil War
cut is much higher: the waistband should be just under the lower
ribs. Federal trousers also were characterized by a straight
outseam (actually an outdated cut by the fashion standards of
1860), which gives the trouser legs a period-correct "loose"
appearance. Buttons shall be paper-backed tin. Pants should have
a yoke or insert at the back to raise the waistband approximately
2 to 3 inches above the front of the pants. Fly shall be of kersey
(not of white cotton). Preferred pants are Schuylkill Arsenal
or J.T. Martin (period contractor from New York City) manufacture.
[EOG/US page 127] NCOs are encouraged to wear the appropriate
dark-blue leg-stripe commensurate with their rank.
1.5 Suspenders/Braces
- A. Civilian: Any type
of period civilian model: all-cloth "poor boys", or
adjustable with tin, brass, or japanned steel buckles. No buckles
of nickel-plated metal.
B. Canvas, drill, tapestry,
embroidered, crocheted, woven, or ticking suspenders are acceptable.
C. Leather ends on suspenders
must be 100 percent natural leather; synthetic substitutes are
not allowed.
D. Period-correct elastic
suspenders are allowed if they are purchased from an approved
sutler on the Vendor List.
E. Members are advised that
most large, general sutlers' suspenders are incorrect.
F. Most issue trousers were
furnished with only four suspender buttons; two in the front
and two in the back. If you want to preserve the "unaltered-just-as-issued"
look that was typical of soldiers in the field, use braces with
only four suspension points.
1.6 Drawers
- A. Summer-issue drawers
should be canton flannel material (plain cotton is also acceptable,
although canton flannel was most common). Issue drawers can be
of the Schuylkill Arsenal or New York Depot pattern. Issue drawers
should have two or three-piece tin-plated buttons. Ties would
be visible at the cuffs, unless they have been removed. Soldiers
also cut the legs off their issue drawers in warm weather. Drawer
cuffs make great gun rags!
B. Civilian drawers may have
bone, wood, mother-of-pearl, or paper backed tin buttons. [EOG/US
page 127]
1.7 Stockings
- A. Civilian socks: Particularly
hand-knitted cotton or wool. No athletic socks. Elastic is not
allowed.
B. It is noted that the vast
majority of large, general sutlers do not sell proper socks.
Solid colors of socks can be worn, but should be correct for
the period.
C. Issue socks were very
commonly machine knit and, to a lesser extent (which decreased
as the war progressed) hand-knit in one of the following solid
colors: off-white, gray, grayish blue, brown, or blue.
1.8 Shoes
- A. U.S. Military-Issue
Bootee: Leather bootee per period specifications. Do not use
modern, golden-colored, oil-tanned "rawhide" bootlaces;
black leather laces are the best bet. Bootees should have a slightly
squared toe and have either pegged or stitched soles. Preference
should be given to stitched-sole bootees, as it appears that
the majority of shoes issued through the Schuylkill depot were
of stitched-sole construction. The smooth side of the leather
shall be towards the inside of the shoe. The rough side should
be sheered and polished, giving the bootee a smooth appearance.
Avoid shoes with a heavy, suede-like nap. While metal heel plates
were not an issue item, they are recommended in order to prolong
the life of reproduction shoes. Toe plates and hobnails are acceptable
as long as they are of a period pattern. Note that evidence suggests
that "brogans" was not a period term. [EOG/US page
191]
B. Gaiters: Canvas leggings
are expressly not allowed unless documented as correct for the
scenario. Leggings are correct for certain events and therefore
their use is condoned for specific scenarios; Members will be
advised in advance of events where leggings are appropriate.
When worn, the only acceptable patterns are the two documented
common "general-issue" versions: either white canvas
with eyelets and leather reinforcements and laces, or all-leather
construction with straps and buckles. Both versions of leggings
should have a leather or canvas heel-strap. There is insufficient
evidence to support the use of leggings with button closures.
C. Be advised that tucking
the trousers (called 'blousing') into the socks was (and is)
not allowed in formal formations, such as parade, guard duty,
inspections, etc.
D. Boots are not encouraged
for enlisted men. While many period soldiers craved boots over
their "gunboats", many of them discovered that a poorly
made pair of boots was an agonizing choice for marching footwear.
In fact, as the war progressed, officers were less tolerant of
men straggling due to injured feet caused by bad boots, and orders
were issued periodically to give up boots and draw bootees instead.
1.9 Waistcoat/Vest
- A. Vests were not an
army-issue item. Military-cut vests of dark blue or light blue
kersey wool with brass buttons and cotton or linen back are acceptable,
as are any period-correct style of civilian vest.
B. Vests are not required.
1.10 Overcoat
- A. U.S. "Foot"
pattern: Light blue kersey wool, with white cotton or osnaburg
lining in the sleeves and flannel or wool lining in the body
(removal of the lining is acceptable), brass buttons (5-button
front, 9-button cape), and preferably with hand-sewn buttonholes.
Overcoats shall have standard U.S. infantry buttons. [EOG/US
page 129]
B. Overcoats shall be utilized
only when appropriate for the scenario; especially in the second
half of the war, overcoats were generally placed in storage from
late April through mid-September and, as such, are generally
not correct for scenarios during these months.
C. Cavalry greatcoats are
not acceptable.
D. NCO chevrons shall NOT
be displayed on overcoats. While there are original overcoats
with chevrons, this practice is extremely detrimental to the
plain, "nondescript" look that the Potomac Legion member
groups and 122nd is trying to achieve.
1.11 Miscellaneous Items
- A. Eyewear: If corrective
lenses are required, contact lenses are preferred. If glasses
are worn, they shall be period correct. In no event shall eyeglass
lenses be larger than one inch in diameter. Temple-pieces ("bows")
should not loop around the ears (this was a post-war style).
Nose-rest pads on eyewear are not allowed. Sunglasses are not
allowed. No modern eyewear will is allowed at any time.
B. Chevrons: NCOs are encouraged
to wear chevrons commensurate with their rank. No member of the
company shall wear a rank insignia above his official rank unless
brevetted by the company commander. Company NCO chevrons shall
be worsted wool; other chevrons as authorized by the battalion
shall conform with the U.S. Army Regulations relative to material
and configuration. While evidence suggests that non-commissioned
officers of the Army of the Potomac wore both straight and elliptical
chevrons throughout the war, it is preferred that non-commissioned
officers of the 122nd wear elliptical chevrons. This is both
because it is desired that chevrons should appear as if they
were issued from one source, and because straight chevrons are
over-represented in the hobby. NCOs on campaign were known to
wear private's blouses until ordered to add their badge of rank:
these improvised chevrons were often crude affairs of "tape"
or light-blue wool from pants. "Factory made" chevrons
are preferred but, if approved by the company commander beforehand,
such improvised chevrons are acceptable for campaign scenarios.
C. Insignia for Commissioned
Officers: Insignia of rank should be worn by commissioned officers
unless documentation suggests otherwise for a given scenario
and portrayal. Generally, insignia should be shoulder straps.
Straps can be embroidered or the Smith Patent laminated metal
styles. Backing shall be fine wool or velvet, medium or dark-blue
in color. At the discretion of the officer, either double-border
or single-border straps may be used. Miniature insignia may be
worn on officer sack coats. [EOG/US page 175]
D. Sashes: When required
for the scenario and portrayal, orderly sergeants, principal
musicians, and commissioned officers will wear sashes. Sashes
for non-commissioned officers shall be red knitted wool, knotted
at both ends, and approximately nine feet in length. Sashes for
commissioned officers may be silk netting or knitted wool, shall
be scarlet (maroon) in color, knotted at each end, and approximately
nine feet in length. [EOG/US page 115 (commissioned officer's
sash)] Other ranks shall not wear sashes.
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