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The
waist belt shown here carries one of the rarer of the CS two piece type
buckles. There are no weak places
anywhere; all of the stitching remains as tight as the day it was made.
These are by tradition associated with the
CS Engineer Corp, but so far, I have found that when these belts have an
identification associated with them, they belonged to a Surgeon, though these
were private purchase items so any officer who wanted to, could have purchased
this style. Swords, whether
purchased by individual officers or by Confederate government contract, were
usually accompanied by a sword belt. By
carefully gleaning existing information it can be stated with certainty that
this buckle was made in Richmond, Virginia. When found with their original swords, they are invariably Boyle and
Gamble products.
These script buckles are usually found on
russet sword belts, so this may be a period replacement, or perhaps a small
number were originally made with black belts. This has a protective ranger behind the buckle that the russet belts do
not have to protect the uniform, so this may have been an upgraded version. There is no sign of it ever having sewn in
sword hangers, however original slide on hangers have been added, which are
strong enough to use.
There
is an extraordinary amount of verdigris on all the brass/leather contact points
from its many decades of contact. Personally, I like verdigris, but I understand that not everyone does. I would be happy to properly remove a
significant amount of it if the buyer wishes.
This belt has been in at least three
prominent collections over the last three or four decades. It can be traced
back to Dr. Edgar Howell, Dr. Bill Blackman and sold by Wallace Markert, to Mr.
Ted Campbell.
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