$1,250.00
Quantity Available: 1
Item Code: 1202-196
Shipping: Determined by Method & Location of buyer
To Order:
Call 717-334-0347,
Fax 717-334-5016, or E-mail
This sword belt plate, a very good example of an early pick-up, is mounted on a great old card typical of early relic displays labeled in brown ink, “Officers Belt Plate / battlefield of Harpers Ferry / West Virginia.” The plate has an untouched, aged patina to the brass, but with only slight darkening along the raised edges and a little bit at the inner corners and around the eagle’s shoulders. The detail is strong. The German silver wreath is in place. The plate is wired to the card and we have not tried to remove it, but the belt hook is likely there- the wire is at the upper corners of the belt loop and in the middle of the opposite end.
No specific point at Harpers Ferry is given and, of course, it was a strategic point with large military camps, and many troops passing through, as well as fighting taking place in nearby areas, and was itself besieged and taken by Confederate forces just before the Battle of Antietam. Since the card specifies “battlefield” it is possible the plate was found on the heights above the town where Union forces vainly tried to prevent Confederates from seizing critical positions overlooking the town in that campaign. The belt plate itself, though, is the later war plate with one-piece wreath and sun rays extending all around the central motif. It is also the standard issue plate for enlisted men armed with swords- cavalry, light artillery, and NCOs- though the nickel (“German silver”) wreath, which usually preserves its color, still leads to misidentification as an officer’s plate.
This is nice, untouched, Civil War regulation belt plate picked up at a significant location and likely put on the display card around 1890. [sr] [PH:L]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
THIS ITEM, AS WITH ALL OTHER ITEMS AVAILABLE ON OUR WEB SITE,
MAY BE PURCHASED THROUGH OUR LAYAWAY PROGRAM.
CLICK HERE FOR OUR POLICIES AND TERMS.
THANK YOU!
For inquiries, please email us at [email protected]
Historical Firearms Stolen From The National Civil War Museum In Harrisburg, Pa »
Theft From Gravesite Of Gen. John Reynolds »
Selection Of Unframed Prints By Don Troiani »
Fine Condition Brass Infantry Bugle Insignia »
Wonderful Condition Original Confederate-Manufactured Kepi For A Drummer Boy Or Child »
This Confederate First National flag has a tight provenance going back to 1935, and before that an oral history as a war souvenir brought back from Island Number Ten by James William McLaughlin, a prominent Cincinnati architect who in 1861 had served… (1179-004). Learn More »