Civil War Reenacting and Pipe Smoking

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virginiacob

Can't Leave
Dec 30, 2013
450
7
Thought I'd share a couple pics with you all from my "other" hobby, Civil War reenacting. The top pic was taken of me today at our annual company muster (46th Virginia Infantry, Co. F) out in the snow in Accomack Co., VA. It was a frigid day and the Confederate hooded overcoat and scarf definitely came in handy.
The bottom pic is my tobacco smoking kit that I take with me at reenactments and living history educational programs and encampments. It includes one of my "Virginia Planter" Indian corn cob pipes, a reed stem clay pipe, a brass pipe tamper recovered from an original Confederate campsite, and my hand-sewn, leather-lined tobacco pouch.



 

deithial

Starting to Get Obsessed
Feb 9, 2012
183
0
Wow, very cool gear, that has to be great to be able to be a part of that.

 

mso489

Lifer
Feb 21, 2013
41,210
60,459
I'm coming to see you at the N.C. pipe show and then do a minor reenactment on my front porch. My

outfit may not be as historically correct, but I'll enjoy my cob every bit as much.

 
Jan 8, 2013
7,493
733
That is very cool, Virginiacob :) I love civil war reenactments and would love to see one in person or even be part of one someday. Do you do other American history reenactments or just the civil war?

 

virginiacob

Can't Leave
Dec 30, 2013
450
7
Thanks guys. anthonyrosenthal, I've been reenacting the Civil War for over 25 years. My brother and I started up the 46th Virginia Infantry, Co. F back in '96 as that's our ggg granddad's original company. We also had a ggg uncle who served as a 2nd Lt. in the same company. Our unit does a lot of living history programs, especially as volunteers with the National Park Service at the Petersburg and Gettysburg National Battlefield Parks, as well as participate in a few Civil War reenactments mostly in the VA, MD, PA, and NC area. I've always had an interest in Revolutionary War and World War II reenacting but due to time and cost, I've never actually tried either one.

 

anglesey

Can't Leave
Jan 15, 2014
383
2
Post more pictures if you can. Being an Englishman, I've never been to an (American) civil war re-enactment, but I've always wanted to. You can imagine the market for that kind of thing isn't very large in Britain.

 

virginiacob

Can't Leave
Dec 30, 2013
450
7
anglesey,
Here are some pics you might like. These were taken last year at the 150th Anniversary Reenactment of the Battle of Chancellorsville in Spotsylvania Co., VA. Interestingly, the reenactment was actually held on a portion of the original Spotsylvania Battlefield (fought the following year after Chancellorsville). The last two pics show the side of a home that existed at the time of the battle and you can see actual cannon shot in the side of the brick.










 

agnosticpipe

Lifer
Nov 3, 2013
3,345
3,484
In the sticks in Mississippi
Thanks for posting the photos! Great stuff! I really like your pipe kit as both my wife and I like rustic items and the history that goes with them. Is the hat by your pipe kit the same one in your avatar? If so, what is it, and what kind of history does it have? And oh yeah, where can I get one? (this last question my wife requested, cause she likes me in hats for some reason) Thanks

 

ravkesef

Lifer
Aug 10, 2010
2,928
9,572
82
Cheshire, CT
Wonderful stuff, Bob, and for sure the pipes add a great deal of authenticity to the scenario. In my collection I have a clay pipe that I got some 48 years ago at an archaeological dig at Appomattox.

 

virginiacob

Can't Leave
Dec 30, 2013
450
7
agnostic,
Actually the slouch hat that is pictured with the pipe kit is a "beehive" style fur felt slouch hat made by Dirty Billy's Hats (www.dirtybillyshats.com/) and was one of the more common broad-brimmed "slouch hat" styles of the Civil War period. While of the same color, the hat I'm wearing in my avatar is a bowler style and was made by Clearwater Hats (www.clearwaterhats.com/default.htm). Both style hats would have been considered in fashion mens' hats in the 1860s. While the French "kepi" or cap was the official military issued headgear, many Confederate soldiers preferred to wear their own civilian hats as the broad brims offered better protection from the elements and was much more comfortable than the military wool kepi. It was not uncommon, especially in the Western theater of the war, for Union soldiers to wear civilian hats as well.

 

escioe

Part of the Furniture Now
Oct 31, 2013
702
4
This is pretty cool. A couple of the rifles have some really, really nice walnut, too.

 

virginiacob

Can't Leave
Dec 30, 2013
450
7
Eric,
Your clay pipe probably came from the Pamplin Pipe Factory in Appomattox Co., VA. Here's a link to an interesting slide show on the history of the Pamplin Pipe Factory by the Virginia Department of Historical Resources: http://www.dhr.virginia.gov/SlideShows/Pamplin/PamplinlMapSlide.html

 

anglesey

Can't Leave
Jan 15, 2014
383
2
Great pictures, ta for posting. Hard to believe that chimney's still standing though! I love the hodge-podge of slightly different uniforms and weapons too.

 

virginiacob

Can't Leave
Dec 30, 2013
450
7
anglesey,
If I recall, I think the shot that struck the chimney was grapeshot fired at some distance so that's probably why it didn't do more damage than it did. Had it been a solid cannonball or explosive shell fired from say a Napoleon 12-pounder then it more than likely would have demolished it or at the very least blew gaping holes through it.
Confederate uniforms have always been of interest to me and I have actually done quite a bit of research on the Richmond Clothing Depot as well as sewn quite a few reproduction Richmond Depot shell jackets and trousers over the years. By the Fall of 1862 the Confederacy had established a pretty effective clothing depot system for getting uniforms out to the troops both in the Eastern and Western theaters of the war. While each depot had established a level of uniformity with jacket and trouser styles, they were purchasing cloth (typically a wool-cotton jeans cloth) from various domestic textile mills. The cloth was usually vegetable-dyed with dye recipes often unique to that specific textile mill so by the time it arrived at the depot you had bolts of various shades of "gray". So it was not unusual for a Confederate regiment to be outfitted in the same style shell jacket but in varying shades of color. Also, since the dye was vegetable-based, it would rapidly fade when exposed to the elements and turn from "gray" to various tan and dirty khaki colors (often times why they were referred to as wearing "butternut" uniforms). By 1864, the Richmond Depot had acquired large bolts of "English Army" cloth smuggled through the blockade from Great Britain. This bluish-gray wool kersey was used by the British for making overcoats and trousers for the British military and was of a much higher quality fabric than what was being produced domestically in the South at the time. In addition to the bolts of this cloth, the Irish firm of Peter Tait & Co. out of Limerick, Ireland contracted with the Confederacy to furnish ready-made uniforms made from this same material. By war's end, much of General Robert E. Lee's Army of Northern Virginia had been outfitted with Richmond Depot uniforms and Peter Tait uniforms made from this bluish-gray kersey and ironically presented a more uniform appearance than they had at any other period during the war.

 

oldmannk

Starting to Get Obsessed
Jan 11, 2014
222
0
Love history. This we should not forget. Thanks for sharing the pictures. You are a so awesome by not letting others forget. A true American.

 

tinpan

Starting to Get Obsessed
Oct 17, 2013
133
2
Very cool and i always like the little historical details. Here is the only shot of my brief experience in the War of Northern Aggression re-enactments
IMG_1464-vi.jpg


This dates from 1976 or 1977 and i am the third one from the left. Sadly, since it was my buddies girlfriend with the camera, this is the only photo I have of me, ahhh well.

 
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