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$395.00
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Item Code: 2025-787
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This regulation belt plate for the infantry cartridge box sling was in the collection of Syd Kerksis, well-known and respected early collector and author and comes with his annotated envelope indicating he found it in March 1962 at Dalton, specifically “Crow Valley / Hill E of / Rocky Face.” There was some fighting in the area in February 1864 as Thomas probed Confederate lines and again in August, but the specific location indicates it was lost in the more serious fighting of May 1864 at the Battle of Rocky Face Ridge in the Atlanta campaign.
This plate has good detail to the eagle and raised rim with a dusting of thin red crustiness on the surface. The reverse has an even lead-solder fill with the iron wire showing mostly as rust stains. The stamped “H.A. DINGEE” mark is partly visible near it. See O’Donnell and Campbell Plate 461 for a parallel example. The Dingee family were major accoutrement suppliers with Henry A. Dingee taking over the firm in 1851. During the Civil War the company acquired many of its plates from subcontractors, applying their one-line stamp through 1865.
These plates were adopted in 1826 with hooks on the reverse for the bayonet shoulder belt and made of brass for artillery and white metal for infantry. This was changed to brass for both services in 1831 and when the bayonet was moved to the waist belt around 1842, the plates were redesigned with two loops on the back for wear as fixed ornaments on the cartridge box sling and plates with hooks were relegated to the NCO and musician’s sword shoulder belts. (Some militia versions used hooks at a different angle for wear on the waist belt.) Although in theory the plate was dropped with introduction of the 1864 cartridge box rigs with no plates, the plate remained in use in the field and was not discontinued until the new 1872 sets of accouterments were distributed.
This has a interesting find location connected with the Atlanta campaign and provenance to a respected early collector and author. [sr][ph:L]
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