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USMC BARB WIRE GLOVES


Greg Robinson
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Greg Robinson

One of our more experienced and knowledgeable members had these for sale on ebay last week. A unique item I've never seen before. Made in 1944 they are very heavy duty and beautifully made. You'd have a tough time today finding a pair of gloves made like this, and they'd cost more than twenty bucks. :)

 

Greg

 

pic of the markings............

 

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That is a nice pair of gloves, well marked too! I have a pair of gloves I have been trying to figure out for a while now. They are similar in construction to the USMC pair you have posted but as you can see they are different and they are not marked. Any ideas on this pair of gloves?

 

Thanks,

Rob

post-168-1255472566.jpg

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Greg Robinson
That is a nice pair of gloves, well marked too! I have a pair of gloves I have been trying to figure out for a while now. They are similar in construction to the USMC pair you have posted but as you can see they are different and they are not marked. Any ideas on this pair of gloves?

 

Thanks,

Rob

 

Rob

 

If I had to guess I'd say yours were made for the same purpose as mine and mine were sold as being for handling barb wire. Makes sense to me from the looks of them but to tell you the trust up until a week ago I'd never seen such a thing. I assume engineer units tasked with clearing wire were issued these. I doubt they were general issue.

 

Greg

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Greg,

 

I just took a look in the G.I. collector's guide reference book. I found the same gloves as the USMC pair you posted on page 54, they are listed as:

 

GAUNTLETS, BARBED-WIRE (STOCK NO 73-G-2050) WORK GLOVES WITH REINFORCED PALM. AVAILABLE IN A SINGLE SIZE, THESE WERE FOR HANDLING BARBED WIRE.

 

So it looks like the Army issued the same pattern gloves for handling barbed wire as the USMC.

 

On page 196 (in the Signal Corps section) of the same book is a pair of gloves that are again similar in construction to mine to but still different. They are simply listed as:

 

LC-10 GLOVES, STRONG LEATHER GLOVES WITH CUFFS

 

My gloves look to be a cross between these signal corps LC-10 gloves and your USMC barbed wire gloves.

 

Rob

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Top-notch score, Greg (again!)...

 

Rob: Are you certain that those are old military gloves? They are identical to what is most always used for welding/cutting now for many decades.

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Top-notch score, Greg (again!)...

 

Rob: Are you certain that those are old military gloves? They are identical to what is most always used for welding/cutting now for many decades.

 

'Flage

 

I believe they are military but I can't say I am 100% certain. I bought a WWII laundry bag containing unifroms that belonged to the same soldier, these gloves were in the bag. They sure look & feel like a piece of military issue gear but now you have me wondering :think: One thing is for sure, they are old.

 

Rob

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I think the barbed wire gloves will have palm and finger padding quite unlike anything used in welding gloves: puncture and heat resistance are probably quite different properties in gloves.

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'Flage

 

I believe they are military but I can't say I am 100% certain. I bought a WWII laundry bag containing unifroms that belonged to the same soldier, these gloves were in the bag. They sure look & feel like a piece of military issue gear but now you have me wondering :think: One thing is for sure, they are old.

 

Rob

 

Interesting! Now you got me wondering :think: They've been making the aforementioned welding gloves for a very long time, but that doesn't mean yours aren't old G.I. issue...

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Greg has asked me to post photos of my pair of current issue gloves for comparison. Notice the protective metal staples. I will also post photos of the current issue cutters.

 

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  • 10 years later...

the staple gloves we used in the plumbing trade when operating certain sewer rodding machines and also wire snakes, there was also a mitten style with staples that we used in the plumbing trade.

 

i never looked inside the gloves for any manufacture marks

i was in the corps, the barbwire detail i would stuck with, I never looked for any manufacture marks inside gloves, they were non wire staple glove type, this was the 80s

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