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Need painting info- Union artillery crew

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Don Stauffer - 30 Aug 2009 16:59 GMT
Many of the crew provided are wearing kits, so I would say it is winter
months gear.  I can see basic colors- tops dark blue and pants medium
blue, but there are tassles and such on hats- what color are these
things. Also little cords on coats or shirts. Were artillery uniforms
different color trim from other branches of army or were Army uniforms
all the same (infantry, cavalry, artillery)?
kim - 30 Aug 2009 18:06 GMT
> Many of the crew provided are wearing kits, so I would say it is
> winter months gear.  I can see basic colors- tops dark blue and pants
> medium blue, but there are tassles and such on hats- what color are
> these things. Also little cords on coats or shirts. Were artillery
> uniforms different color trim from other branches of army or were
> Army uniforms all the same (infantry, cavalry, artillery)?

I had a book of civil war uniforms once. No two regiments had the same
uniform. All were a mixture of blue and grey. Some Union regiments wore
almost all grey and some Confederate regiments wore almost all blue! The
uniforms you see in TV shows and movies were an invention of Hollywood to
help viewers tell the two sides apart.

If the artillery was provided by a separate regiment it is likely they wore
a different uniform from either the infantry or cavalry or possibly even no
uniform at all.

HTH

(kim)
Alan Dicey - 30 Aug 2009 20:29 GMT
> Many of the crew provided are wearing kits, so I would say it is winter
> months gear.  I can see basic colors- tops dark blue and pants medium
> blue, but there are tassles and such on hats- what color are these
> things. Also little cords on coats or shirts. Were artillery uniforms
> different color trim from other branches of army or were Army uniforms
> all the same (infantry, cavalry, artillery)?

Osprey Men At Arms 177 has a colour plate of Light Artillery uniforms:
the Corporal has red piping, cords, tassles and the cord and cockade on
his shako is red too.
William Banaszak - 31 Aug 2009 04:15 GMT
> Many of the crew provided are wearing kits, so I would say it is winter
> months gear.  I can see basic colors- tops dark blue and pants medium
> blue, but there are tassles and such on hats- what color are these
> things. Also little cords on coats or shirts. Were artillery uniforms
> different color trim from other branches of army or were Army uniforms
> all the same (infantry, cavalry, artillery)?

Regular Army units were marked by different piping colours.  Cavalry was
yellow, Infantry was white and Artillery was red.
I was just reminded of that this weekend while watching John Ford's
"Sergeant Rutledge".  The prosecutor was an infantry officer and he was
correctly wearing white whilst all the cavalrymen were wearing yellow.
Someone got those details correct.

Bill Banaszak, MFE Sr.
willshak - 31 Aug 2009 13:12 GMT
on 8/30/2009 11:59 AM (ET) Don Stauffer wrote the following:
> Many of the crew provided are wearing kits, so I would say it is
> winter months gear.  I can see basic colors- tops dark blue and pants
> medium blue, but there are tassles and such on hats- what color are
> these things. Also little cords on coats or shirts. Were artillery
> uniforms different color trim from other branches of army or were Army
> uniforms all the same (infantry, cavalry, artillery)?

From http://howardlanham.tripod.com/unireg.htm

US Army Regulations 1861

1455. /All Enlisted Men of the Cavalry
<http://howardlanham.tripod.com/link35.htm> and Light Artillery
<http://howardlanham.tripod.com/link36.htm>/ shall wear a uniform jacket
of dark blue cloth, with one row of twelve small buttons on the breast
placed at equal distances; stand-up collar to rise no higher than to
permit the chin to turn freely over it, to hook in front at the bottom,
and to slope the same as the coat-collar; on the collar, on each side,
two blind button-holes of lace, three-eights of an inch wide, one small
button on the button-hole, lower button-hole extending back four inches,
upper button-hole three and a half inches; top button and front ends of
collar bound with lace three-eights of an inch wide, and a strip of the
same extending down the front and around the whole lower edge of the
jacket; the back seam laced with the same, and on the cuff a point of
the same shape as that on the coat, but formed of the lace; jacket to
extend to the waist, and to be lined with white flannel; two small
buttons at the under seam of the cuff, as on the coat cuff; one hook and
eye at the bottom of the collar; color of lace (worsted), yellow /for
Cavalry/, and scarlet /for Light Artillery
<http://howardlanham.tripod.com/linkgr4/link188.html>/.

Signature

Bill
In Hamptonburgh, NY
In the original Orange County. Est. 1683
To email, remove the double zeroes after @

Don Stauffer - 31 Aug 2009 14:46 GMT
> on 8/30/2009 11:59 AM (ET) Don Stauffer wrote the following:
>> Many of the crew provided are wearing kits, so I would say it is
[quoted text clipped - 27 lines]
> Cavalry/, and scarlet /for Light Artillery
> <http://howardlanham.tripod.com/linkgr4/link188.html>/.

Many thanks to all you guys.  There is enough common in the replies that
I can do the detail painting now.  This is my first figure painting
other than pilots :-)
 
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