Thanks for all those wonderful details Seigfried. Although I have family members who served in the RAMC during both world wars, I have very little medical knowledge myself. I have also never seen another overall/gown like this anywhere else; I assume it only survived for so long because it was unissued.
Here's an update with a private of the King's Royal Rifle Corps from about 1917. It's built up around the recent acquisition of a Service Dress jacket named to a Rifleman Wood. The jacket has many mid-war features, including two buttons sewn to the inside - all that is left from the gas-helmet pocket that was once there (see Bodsworth, p.49). The black rifle buttons seem to be original (with rusted split rings inside) and, interestingly, all but one of the large front buttons have Queen Victoria's crowns on them, probably left over in the stores before being issued. On the sleeves are two faded overseas service stripes, a good conduct chevron and a wound stripe.
Rifleman Wood is wearing battle order as he might have done marching up to the front line for an attack, with the small pack on his shoulder straps and a pick axe (dated 1916). He's wearing his 1917 Pattern soft trench cap (with added KRRC black badge); his shrapnel helmet is slung over the handle of his hooked-quillon bayonet. It's unlikely such an early type of bayonet would have been in use at this point but it's marked to the KRR so I couldn't resist!
I took these photos at dusk but the light disappeared fast and I had to resort to flash to capture most details clearly.
Matthew
Here's an update with a private of the King's Royal Rifle Corps from about 1917. It's built up around the recent acquisition of a Service Dress jacket named to a Rifleman Wood. The jacket has many mid-war features, including two buttons sewn to the inside - all that is left from the gas-helmet pocket that was once there (see Bodsworth, p.49). The black rifle buttons seem to be original (with rusted split rings inside) and, interestingly, all but one of the large front buttons have Queen Victoria's crowns on them, probably left over in the stores before being issued. On the sleeves are two faded overseas service stripes, a good conduct chevron and a wound stripe.
Rifleman Wood is wearing battle order as he might have done marching up to the front line for an attack, with the small pack on his shoulder straps and a pick axe (dated 1916). He's wearing his 1917 Pattern soft trench cap (with added KRRC black badge); his shrapnel helmet is slung over the handle of his hooked-quillon bayonet. It's unlikely such an early type of bayonet would have been in use at this point but it's marked to the KRR so I couldn't resist!
I took these photos at dusk but the light disappeared fast and I had to resort to flash to capture most details clearly.
Matthew
Comment