- Joined
- Aug 25, 2012
OK I have over 20 books that cover Georgia uniforms. Let me glance them over.
Thank you Bill! That's a lot of books. I will apologize and say that I am really needing more info on Georgia units. I realize the post name and question made it seem like I was geared toward NC uniforms. That is my mistake. I have a copy of a photo that is *supposedly* a Georgian that looks a lot like the top photo. In trying to track him down to a particular unit, I knew that many times the NC had black trim as well. The intent was to see if anyone had a NC photo similar to the above (basically to see if I could say for sure he was from GA). From what I see here, the uniforms were not all that similar between the two states. Do you know of any other state (Union or Confederate) that had that black thing near the cuffs (with the three buttons)? That seems to set it off, but I do not believe that GA was the only one that had an early war uniform with these. Thanks!
1st Sergeant chevrons' variant? only in left sleeve and with only one stripe under diamond.http://17thgeorgia.blogspot.com/p/unit-history.html
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First Sergeant (later Captain) Marmaduke H. Marshall, Co. K, 17th Georgia Infantry Regiment
Thanks for all the info and especially the hand drawing! Glad to learn the proper term (plastron). Bill - what picture were you referring to when you mentioned the "pointed false turn back cuff"?
The very first photo seems to have a pointed cuff on the sleeve. At one time the sleeves were made with pointed ends, with the point towards the front of the sleeve. The purpose was to allow it to be pulled down and cover the top of the hand during cold weather so as to provide warmth. The ends of the sleeves was protected with cord to keep it from wearing through, over time the cords became a different color. Over time the pointed sleeve end was no longer needed and the folded pointed sleeve ends became false and no longer were functional. but the trim was still kept. An example of this is the Federal frock coats. On the Federal frock coats one could not unfold the sleeve ends to cover the hand and in fact the false cuff were no longer even double thickness. The term used for these non-functional cuffs was "false cuffs". Note modern US Army officers service coats still have a false cuff, but it is not pointed. The modern officer coats have trim where the false turn back is, senior officers have wider trim which comes from back when wealthier officers could afford wider trim.