Nice photo of that confederate. Yes I still like the style of the jackets with the early war black shoulder bars on them. Specially what the 4th NC Infantry had.
I understand that. Take a look at this photo from 1864 of I think the 4th Texas:
White frock coats, every one of them. And General Slaughter and his staff in Galveston, 1864. The servants are wearing what looks to be possible Houston Depot jackets
While folks in Virginia, Tennessee, and Georgia were waiting on depot issue uniforms, with some brigades supposedly in rags, and others fully kitted out, Texas was having a surplus in goodies for its troops. Enough to help out Louisiana and Arkansas, (when they could pay up, State's Rights a bummer like that, North Carolina has a similar more well known story as I recall). Only problem Texas had was number of wagons to transport it to the troops. I don't recall exactly where, but I have read an account where in 1865 they burned something like 10,000 bales of unissued uniforms near Hempstead, Texas when the war was done.
Then there's the memoir of a Washington Artillery officer sent back to the Trans-Mississippi before the Red River Campaign by the name of Charles W. Squires. He made mention that when he was detailed to take I think is was an entire brigade's artillery, from SW Arkansas to the Texas Coast, he and his men were in brand new blue-gray uniforms with red trim. Every man in identical uniforms, and plenty of food given to them from every town they passed through. Full picnics for them I'll add
That is until they got to a small town and while waiting on further orders by telegraph, they found out the war was over!
The tale of North Carolina being the only Confederate State to adequately provide uniforms to its soldiers is an old story, that the more I read, the more I'm convinced its one of the many stories without proper context or an outright myth. After all every Lost Cause story out here in Texas has the soldiers in ragged citizen's cloths, or almost naked with everyone starved half to death, when the records and a lot of first hand accounts say otherwise. Not just in Texas, but through most of the Confederacy.
Confederate uniforms are a never ending study...