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littlewilly
Posted

Close up of the standing collar and one of the pointed cuffs ... Photos courtesy of the Aurel Gobet collection

Could the collar be a repaired and reissued piece? I have one in my collection that had a new collar added that does not come close to matching the color of the rest of the uniform. MHJ

Posted

Here are some documents from the Archive that may help understand the conversion of some coats to standing collars.

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Posted

Last of the pages from the Archives.

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  • 3 months later...
Guest McJagger
Posted

I would imagine that few, if any, 1918 pattern service coats could have reached the front before the Armistice, but they are rarely to be seen in photographs throughout the occupation, and today finding one can be a challenge for collectors. While I realize that many of the changes between the 1917 and 1918 patterns were instituted for economic reasons whose necessity might have been lessened with the ending of the war, the results were also aesthetically very pleasing. So, I’m curious as to why we don’t see more of them... Was production really so low? Were the 1917 and 1918 pattern coats produced concurrently? When and why was production of the 1918 pattern discontinued? Thereafter, did production revert back to the 1917 pattern or was it replaced with something else? I’m interested to hear your thoughts. Thanks!

Posted

For posterity and since I have a moment, here is an example of a cutter's tag and contract tag for a 1918 coat. No longer in my collection.

 

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  • 2 weeks later...
world war I nerd
Posted

Jon, many thanks for adding the documents explaining the standing collars on the pointed cuff service coats. Somehow, I missed that post until now. You've single-handedly solved another WW I era mystery.

 

ATB, great images of the tags and label from a 1918 service coat.

  • 5 years later...
Posted
On 3/5/2016 at 9:06 PM, US Victory Museum said:

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I have noticed that on labels like mine and others from the same manufacturer Wanamaker, numbers appear painted in ink on top. Does anyone know what explanation they have?

Thanks for your posting

 

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Posted

Here's my 1909/1911 conversion coat. Pointed cuffs, reworked collar and pockets. Note the short lived circular cloth marksmanship badge on the sleeve, and first pattern Mexican Border Medal ribbon bar. The disks are a "US" and a Field Artillery, and the buttons are rimless. Service chevrons are the silver-colored Zone of the Interior ones.

 

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  • 11 months later...
Posted

Here’s a 1917 pattern that is made of a heavy coarse wool like the “rough cut”. However it has the standard serge wool lining and no seem at the cuff.

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Posted

Here is what looks to be a standard 1917 pattern but with a black serge lining. I believe the tag says “July 1918”

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