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Item Code: 1052-613
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This strip of cloth with four closely spaced button holes is likely the remnant of an army dress coat discarded after its useful days were done at Fort Pembina, a small frontier garrison in North Dakota, where wet, anaerobic soil conditions have preserved discarded leather and cloth in remarkable condition. It is tough to tell which pattern of uniform this came from, but the number and spacing of the buttonholes rules out the Civil War or the 1874 and later Indian War fatigue blouses. The short-lived 1872 pattern might be a possibility, but a dress coat is a safer bet. The color shifted to an olive green, shows gray and white stains, holes, etc., but the fabric is still pliable. Soldiers were issued a certain number of coats, etc., with those carelessly destroyed or lost liable to be replaced by docking the soldier’s pay. Chances are the coat or parts of it were salvaged for use as rags or fatigue wear long before it was finally discarded.
The fort was garrisoned from 1870 to 1895 and recoveries show the garrison was supplied with the Civil War uniforms and gear left over in government warehouses, and then later with newer patterns as they were adopted and issued, along with a good amount of privately purchased material. The excavations were conducted on private property with the owner’s permission. Situated in the Red River Valley in North Dakota near the Canadian border, the fort was established in 1870 and in operation until 1895. Trading posts existed earlier in the area as part of the fur trade, and the first U.S. military post there was temporary- manned by a detachment of Minnesota troops in 1863-1864 following the 1862 Sioux uprising. In March 1870 a new fort was established south of the Pembina River and about 200 yards west of the Red River, completed by July and named in honor of Gen. George H. Thomas. The name was changed to Fort Pembina in September and the initial garrison consisted of two companies of the 20th US Infantry. Their main duty was to provide security for settlers worried about Sioux returning south from Canada, but the troops were more occupied with escorting boundary surveys along the Canadian border and preventing Fenian raids heading north into Canada.
The fort included enlistedmen’s barracks, officers’ quarters, guard house, ordnance storehouse, company kitchen, root house, laundress’s quarters, quarters for civilian employees, hospital and hospital servant’s house, a barn for the “hospital cow,” quartermaster and commissary offices and storehouse, stables, wagon shed, etc. The garrison reached peak strength in 1878 af 200, but the average was about 125 enlisted men and 8 officers. An October 1885 return listed 97 men, 2 field pieces, 1 mountain howitzer, 100 rifles, 19 pistols, 23 mules, and 9 wagons. By 1890 the post had just 23 men, and after an 1895 fire destroyed some 19 buildings it was decided to abandon the fort rather than rebuild, the last detachment left in September. The property was turned over to the Interior Department and later sold in 1902.
This is in remarkably good condition for an excavated piece, is very displayable, and has a tight provenance to an Indian War post garrisoned by the U.S. army for a well-defined period that encompasses the 1870s and 1880s Indian Wars. [sr] [ph:m]
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