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Canteen covered in Jean Cloth with Leather Sling (MSC013)

$125.00
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MSC013

Canteen bodies are tin with pewter spout, and have 3 tin sling lugs. Available in smooth side or bullseye (special order). Outside cover is made of brown jean cloth hand sewn with a double length of heavy cotton thread. The sling is made of 5-6-oz. leather, 6' long and 3/4" wide, dyed black, russet, or natural oiled. Available with waxed linen twist (shown). USA made no-lead solder seams.  We also have Leather Covered Canteens.

 

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The Civil War Issue Canteen; patterns of 1858 and 1862

 

"Between 1861 and 1865 virtually every Union soldier received and carried a tin canteen, making it one of the most readily identifiable artifacts of the American Civil War.  This universal issue also accounts for the numerous examples (available on today's collector market).  At first glance the canteens may all appear to be exactly the same. Certainly size and shape vary so little from a standard that the casual observer may notice no difference. But, important differences do exist, and it is the purpose of this article to detail, date and where possible, explain the variations which may be encountered. FIG 1. Leather straps 5/8 to 1 inch wide had been used by the U. S. Army since at least the War of 1812. However, they would be discontinued by the winter of 1862/63. At the outbreak of the Civil War in 1861, the U. S. Army Quartermaster Department (QMD) had decades of experience in the manufacture and procurement of uniforms and equipage. This was a thoroughly professional organization that knew what it wanted, and usually got it. They were no strangers to innovation, and often experimented with new products from the civilian market. They set high standards for items to be issued by them to the Regular Army. They also knew that, in an emergency, substitution and deviation from the standard was often necessary. As long as the end product met the needs of the soldier, set standards would at times have to take a back seat to necessity. The tin canteens procured and issued by the QMD's Office of Clothing & Equipage between 1861 and 1865 would be the embodiment of all of the above. The tin-plated, oblate spheroid canteen was the result of a long series of tests and experiments with various designs and materials. The most extensive material tested was tin-plated sheet iron. Tin had replaced cedar as the material of choice for canteens in the 1840's." 

 

  1. Military Collector & Historian JOURNAL OF THE COMPANY OF MILITARY HISTORIANS,  Vol. XLVII, No. 3, 1995