"One of One" Civil War Artifact
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- Опубліковано 27 чер 2024
- We're at the Mississippi Department of Archives & History checking out some rare Civil War Artifacts! Bullets, shells, a "one of one" period shirt and an enormous Confederate flag.
The next time you visit Mississippi on a history trip be sure to check out all of the sites that Jackson has to offer!
Mississippi Department of Archives and History: www.mdah.ms.gov/
Museum of Mississippi History: mmh.mdah.ms.gov/
0:00 Bullets & Shells
7:02 "One of One" Shirt
10:16 Captured Vicksburg Flag
The American Battlefield Trust preserves America’s hallowed battlegrounds and educates the public about what happened there and why it matters. We permanently protect these battlefields for future generations as a lasting and tangible memorial to the brave soldiers who fought in the American Revolution, the War of 1812, and the Civil War.
For more, be sure to re-visit our Vicksburg 160 Tour Series!: ua-cam.com/play/PLZrhqv_T1O1uHBAJ5iKIub87d63csoIJX.html
At first glance I thought you were going to tell me it was an early attempt at a camouflage uniform
That's what I thought.
Same here 😂
Me too. It would have worked as camo.
Same! Couldn't wait to hear how one guy decimated a whole regiment while camouflaged like a sofa.
@MrJeffcoley1 it is camouflage. Dude was disguised as a window
From Carol Burnett's Went with the Wind “Thank you! I saw it in the window and I just couldn’t resist it.”
First thing I thought of.
Same here
I saw Carol’s curtain outfit in the Smithsonian Museum of American History in DC, in its own special case. It’s that iconic!
HILARIOUS 😂
Yep. 'Starlet' O'Hara. Hilarious. First thing I thought of when I saw the shirt.
The shirt with it's green floral pattern makes it one of the first camouflage shirts used .
I was curious if that was his idea behind it
I made a similar comment and UA-cam removed in saying that it violated community standards!
LOL... I was thinking the same thing.
@@lewisward4359
That'd be right
@@hodaka1000 Why would my statement violate the standards? I said something like "original camouflage?"
I love how that guy came to visit just for the window pun. Great production. Thanks for sharing.
8:35 That civil war camouflage was next level! 😂
You’re very lucky to be able to get up close and personal with these artifacts.
I love civil war relics.
I'm lucky enough to live on property the South had a rail on. I keep wearing out metal detectors. Look up the Camden campaign. I'm in the middle where the south sent the north packing with their tails tucked.
The way American politics is going, you'll soon have the chance to get up close and personal with a load of new civil war artifacts.
@@user-gd2gffwea Yes, January 6th was just people being alarmist. The mob didn't want to overthrow the government.
@@user-gd2gffwearight?
@@johncraskea cowards expectations and an impotent man's wet dream... Don't worry little guy. People like me are ensuring that the country doesn't fall into civil war.
The shirt is amazing. 'One of one' indeed!
While I'm a Federal reenactor, I'm VERY glad that Mississippi was able to find and preserve this unique bit of soldier-craft.
And it fades out rather like ACU/OCP!
pershing pilled
*As Carol Burnett said in her spoof of Gone With The Wind "I saw it in the window and I couldn't resist it!"*
Great minds think alike 😂
“I just saw it in the window, and had to have it.”
From central PA; we lived close to Gettysburg and visited multiple times. It surprises me how many people, in 2023, are STILL pulling civil war ammunition out of the ground. It is VERY common to find balls still. If that doesn't speak to how very many were FIRED I don't know what does. Hey, let's NOT do that AGAIN. I LOVE that jacket!! I'd wear it! and yes, I called "curtains". But that's NICE!!! Look at the detail!! I understand why he grabbed the curtains!!!!! LOL Fabric is fabric! I have kirtles (medieval underdress) made with "found" fabric. (curtains, tablecloths, bed linens) Such a beautiful piece!
The drapes shirt is literally a hunting shirt. Imagine if his whole unit was wearing this fabric and leaf pattern, they would have been almost invisible to the Rebs.
No lol
Would have been a lot brighter in colour 160 years ago.
Thank you for working hard to protect those artifacts.
Berdan's US Sharpshooters wore all Kelly Green from head to toe, they were used as skrimishers and such. Many had purchased at their commander's expense and or personal expense a lever action repeating Henry rifle that fired fully self enclosed metallic cartridges.
Looks like something from San Francisco in the '60s might have been worn by Jefferson Airplane - "Volunteers of America" - a fashon item years ahead of it's time.
I used to work the Mississippi State Fair in the early 80s - 87. I loved Jackson. So many good people , once they realized how much I love history,I get to see some amazing private collections, and some undisturbed battlefields, being a
weight guesser, made some good friends. Miss it. !!
This is why alot of people don't actually like museums, they only show the public such a small percentage of what they have. I like personal collections much more
He saw it in the window and just had to have it!
My family owned Valley Forge during the revolutionary war and my great grandfather from back then was the high sheriff of the 13 colonies.. We used to have buckets and closets full of gear and munitions from back then. Wish we kept some to send to y’all. We ended up donating it all to different museums around the country!
Sure they did... Keep spreading the family legend. I'm almost positive all that notoriety is exactly why no one knows who any of your family is. Don't believe everything 23 and Me tells you to make you feel important. You simply aren't.
@@mattmarzulaexactly, my mother did a 23 and Me test and it's telling her "yeah you're a descendent of Pocahontas, as well as the first settlers aboard the Mayflower". It's a nice thought to have, but after all this time through many generations it really doesn't matter anymore. Just like how everyone is related to "some Indian princess". Like yeah, you might be, but so are 20k+ people after you take into account family trees.
My great great grandfather owned the Mississippi River and used to give meticulous directions to ship captains about how to navigate the dangerous parts of the river. On their honor, they had to leave 4 doubloons worth of gold or silver in New Orleans if they reached it safely using the directions. My great great grandad died before he could collect all the gold left for him, and the family forgot about it for a hundred years, until my dad hired Nicholas Cage to help find it. He found it in a secret underground vault in the French Quarter. They’re making a movie about it in 2025 called “The Great Mississippi Treasure”.
@@mattmarzula I used to promote 23andme but recently FOUND OUT that they are selling all their information to companies....who knows what those companies will do with that info... lol
@@mattmarzulaYou write like a redditor who just lost an argument
Thank you. Always something new to learn.
I really enjoyed this. I notice that you seemingly intentionally avoid the knuckle dusters in shelf 4 (2:02). Those instruments/weapons played a remarkable and violent role in close quarters battles, have been found in trenches and battlefields all throughout Civil War conflict locations, and could have been a good mention here.
Good eye …
They look like they could be wooden just based on the color. Very interesting.
I saw those too. They may have been ww1 era along with the cartridge cases and artillery cases hence why he may not have mentioned them.
ya cuz youtube woulda fucced him in da butt
For second I thought that was a camouflage uniform from the Civil War which made no sense. But reading the other comments I’m not alone. Pretty cool!
Commanding Officer - "Davis, that shirt certainly is unique!"
Davis - "This old thing, Sir?
It's just something I saw hanging in a window downtown"...
Some of the furniture you walked by deserves its own video.
Thanks Kris . The shirt was an amazing artifact as made from the drapes of the old Capital. The Flag was in awesome shape. Thanks for sharing.
💯👍👊
Draperies* drapes is a verb not a noun 🤷♂️
@@chuckdavinci9044 a English scholar no doubt.
🥲
@@terryeustice5399 an*
Nice video!
All I can think of is that skit from "The Carol Burnett Show".
Great video. Thanks for doing all that you do
I had a number of ancestors in Co. G, 56th GA INF at Champion Hill. I need to visit.
I have an ancestor who was killed at Champion Hill. Irish parents came over in 1840 and lost their only son during the Civil War.
So did he have a child?
Every video delivers. Thank you. 🖤
Great lecture. I did a staff ride as young officer that went from Bruinsburg to Jackson. I was a young officer in the Army National Guard and the Mississippi Military Depart Historian guided us through the campaign.
Thank you again for the great history lesson👍
Mississippi is my mother's homestate and where she is laid to rest. Besides my beloved Texas. My favorite state ❤️ beautiful state very rural still. Just beautiful.
I grew up around Richmond' Virginia very near to drewerys bluff. My house had earth works behind it from lees retreat to lynchburg/danville. I used to dig artifacts all over the place, there where hundreds of sights that where not parks where you could dig artifacts
My 3rd great grandfather Pvt Jefferson Sexton of the 61st Tennessee infantry regiment was wounded at Big Black River then taken into custody by the Union and treated. He died August 2nd 1863.
Is he your only confederate ancestor?
@@SLG-jt1rd That I know of.
Have you visited his gravesite?
@@provost5752 I have multiple myself
@garkmr6200 I haven't but want to. He's buried in Jefferson Barracks MO. I hope to go one day and also go to Vicksburg.
You guys have almost as many relics as Aquachigger! Impressive
My thought too. I think his sheer volume is amazing. Before I saw videos with his collection and the sheer quantity he still finds, I had no sense of the horror of that war. He showed me how ugly it was.
This was the model for the Army ACU that Soldiers started wearing in the early 2000s.
Joking of course. But actually looks remarkably similar
There isn’t enough pink in it to be ACU 😂
@@brockd1218 Oh, that's well played sir! Well played. Haha!!
So surreal and incredible; no more words!
My wife and I brought home a large piece of driftwood which we later stood up in a big iguana cage for decoration as well as a climbing tree. One day I noticed a shiny spec on it. We picked at it and removed a civil war era bullet. What a journey that bullet had.
Great tour!
OG Digital camo! No wonder he survived... A hit with the ladies in the bar too!!! 😂
Tremendous presentation, Kris!
Jackson, MISSISSIPPI! I lived there in Hinds County Jacskon MS.
I went to Murrah high school. Chastain Middle and Mcleod Elementary 💪🏽
Graduated Jackson State University 🎓
How fun that he chose to take the curtains fabric just as Scarlett O'Hara did, and create a beautiful piece of clothing from it.
I had a similar thought. I was like "omg he pulled a Scarlet!"
Very cool stuff Kris! Thank you!! 👏👏👏
The shirt is a remarkable find! Incredible!
Its incredible that the government buildings then and STILL have more expensive furnishings than your average person!
Very cool video! Thanks for the little tour.
Thank you, that was great history and I enjoyed watching
Gee, wonder if the drappery thief is an ancestor of Carol Burnett
Amazing!
i could watch this for HOURS
Anyone else thinking of the carol burnett gone with the wind parody where she has the curtain dress with the curtain rod still in it
A real life Gone With the Wind piece of clothing!
So interesting! Thanks!🇺🇸
Wow! Amazing piece!
The Union Soldier probably got the Idea from Scarlet O'Hara, from Gone With The Wind !
very cool!
Something tells me the soldier that wanted the shirt made out of drapes may have been a little…..fancy.
Àgree. I just can't imagine a tough macho type seeing curtains & thinking "I must have that pattern to wear!"
And there ya have it. A rug sewed up to look like a shirt. Historic I'm tellin ya. 😉👍
Great work sir
Thanks👍that was really neat🇺🇸
"Nice jacket, who shot the couch?"
Hang on a second I vaguely remember a "Gone with Wind" skit by Carol Burnett and she wears the drapes! LOLOL
11:36 good to see it’s come home!
Very interesting. Thanks.
So, the Scarlet O'Hara dress made from drapes was not that much of a movie fantasy! 🤣
That dude grinning in the background...😂
I live the dude on the back laughing 9:10
I find shirt very interesting although I did thought it was a BDU! Seriously I think it was a curtain of the window. The fellow must been really proud of this shirt to show off. I'm really impressed about this collection full of very interesting interesting artifacts, good job 👏 👍
one of one? just as rare as every corvette ever made
That’s incredible
Awesome video! For anyone thinking this is an early form of camouflage, I’ve seen a Confederate Texas soldier image wearing a head-to-toe cheetah or leopard skin outfit. Although it could serve as camouflage, this shirt is simply “flamboyant”. Looks like milk glass buttons.
It's reminiscent of when Maria made clothes for the von Trapp children from drape material in The Sound of Music.
So very 'Gone With The Wind' so very interesting.
One of one artifacts are real, legendary relics
So cool.
Dude just go to the civil war park in Vicksburg, love goin there. Very top overlooks the river
That shirt would have worked as decent camouflage.
* if Liberace were a Civil War soldier, he would've DEFINITELY worn a shirt like that one...
(I can just imagine that soldier thinking to himself, "you know, those drapes and curtains would look good on my head and back"....
Must be where the Army came up with the ACU pattern
Boreal Shirt - Love It
That shirt was the prototype for camouflage uniforms.
He saw it in the window and just couldn't resist. ~ The Carol Burnett Show
Very interesting indeed 👍 Kudos
I saw it in the window and I couldn't resist.
It's🤔oK, but I like Scarletts look better as it was a complete masterpiece of visionary artistic triumph~
The soldier had a real Scarlett O'Hara moment, making a shirt out of the drapes 😉
OMG my curtains match that perfectly. Same exact pattern….
Can the public have access to the "extra" stuff you are showing?
Excellent collection and video. 7:09 - 10:16 was this shirt used by a line soldier or a skirmisher who might have used it as a camouflage shirt?
line soldiers and skirmishers were the same thing. They wore the same uniform. Typically, one company was chosen to act as skirmishers when going into a battle. This shirt was most likely made as casual around camp shirt.
Flamboyant dude
One of my mom’s clients had an old cabinet that was passed down from generation to generation. It was handmade by his ancestors’ slaves! 😳
His wife was about to spray paint it one day because “it didn’t fit the vibe of the house” so he ended up giving it to us.
It’s beautiful, and the slight imperfections make it even more so. One day I hope to find a museum that will take care of it and honor those who built it.
most retarded made up youtube comment i have seen latelt. yeah because i am sure the guy did not tell his wife the history of it and just totally had to get rid of a family heirloom because of his wife and her idea of "house vibes" so it would not be spraypainted, which would still be better than getting rid of it.
Drapes amd window coverings? Reminds me of that old Carol Burnett show episode where they're doing a take off of Gone with the Wind. Carol comes down a staircase wearing what is obviously drapes including the curtain rod across the the back of her neck. she says, "I saw it hanging in the window and I just had to have it."
I see where Toxey got his inspiration from.
My old boss was joe dogrin and his ancestors invented invented that back in the day. He had the real documentation and everything! He was allowed to go on military ships Because his last name. Nice guy. He owned an auto body shop in santa barbara
I don't know if he is still alive, but if you get the chance. Look him up is a really nice guy And he will probably tell you the entire history that he was told
I was told from him that they invented the dogrin gun
That is absolutely fascinating!! Your old boss was the descendant of the man who invented the Dahlgren gun (John Dahlgren), and the descendant of Ulrich Dahlgren who led the (ill-fated) raid on Richmond! Very neat! I would’ve loved to hear those family stories!
@rosescott9299 I worked with him for a few years. And my dad worked with him for about 20 I think. He was really nice guy and had very good fascinating stories about his family!
I wonder if that shirt wasn't an early version of camo, I think he saw those drapes and thought "that might help me blend into the brush better and get shot at less,I'm gonna get the tailor to make me a shirt out of it"
Dude you're look is eerily similar to Dr. Grande on YT. It's actually a very striking resemblance!
I Think this wasn't just a fancy shirt but a early version of woodland camo or a civil war version of a real tree pattern of some sort. The center of the "shirt" looks at if it was a outline of a tree trunk. The leaves on the pattern only make sense.
This is awesome and huge bigger than a bowling ball buy a lot.