Arthur Rankin is an interesting side subject of the Civil War. His lancer regiment is widely reported about in period Michigan newspapers.
"We have seen the undress uniform of the Lancers. It consists of dark blue pants with an inch and a half gold stripe on either side; a green, tight fitting jacket with three rows of ornamental buttons running from either shoulder and the chin to a point at the waist; the cap is blue, and is surrounded with an inch and a half gold band. The full dress has not been decided upon. The uniform above described will be far the most showy of any yet."
An article on the Detroit Daily Advertiser on January 13 1962 indicates the lancers are now receiving uniforms, but does not give the color or style. It is possible that the green uniforms described above were the uniforms Coronal Rankin was planning to order from New York, but he subsequently changed his mind, and instead ordered the regiment's uniforms from Samuel Sykes an Company of Detroit. Sykes was to provide two hundred and fifty suits to the 1st Lancers by mid December of 1861. 100 of these uniforms were delivered on December 24.
The Detroit Free Press of March 22 1862 printed a letter from a recently discharged lancer, which details what he had been issued. He had received an overcoat, 1 jacket, 1 pair of shoddy pants, 1 cloth cap, one blanket, 1 pair of boots, 2 cotton shirts, 2 pairs of cotton drawers, and 2 pairs of socks.
The Detroit Daily Advertiser indicates they were to be armed like the 16th Regiment of British Lancers however; originally, they were issued 7 state owned smooth-bore muskets and 12 state owned musketoons. They eventually were armed with lances, carbines, dragoon revolvers and sabers.
Samuel Shaw of Detroit made both the lances and swords. In other source, Samuel Shaw is referred to as W. H Shaw. The lances provided by Shaw were nine feet, seven inches long with eleven inches of that being a double bladed lance head, which was one and a half inches wide at the widest point. The pennons were red and white. When the First United States Lancers were disbanded, the state collected the lances and stored then for further use.
"The Lancers", Detroit Daily Advertiser October 3 1861, p. 1, col. 2.