Going back now to pre-WW1 times. This is a display featuring the short-lived 1903 Pattern bandolier equipment, used for only a short time by the British army until replaced by the 1908 webbing set. Only one item survived for a longer - a much longer - time and that was the 1903 Pattern leather belt. This was in use until well after WW2.
This setup is typical of a British infantryman in the years preceding the Great War. The service dress jacket is the early type with brass shoulder titles of the Lincolnshire Regiment. The 1903 set is based around the 50-round leather bandolier, here the earlier Mk I with complex brass buckle, dated 1903, the year of issue.
Various leather cartridge pouches were worn on the belt, over a General Service haversack and leather bayonet frog. The water bottle in its leather cradle was worn separately. This whole layout was apparently uncomfortable, difficult to adjust and generally inadequate for modern warfare.
It's interesting to think that many other nations continued to persevere with leather equipment, long after the US and British armies had switched to webbing gear.
Matthew
This setup is typical of a British infantryman in the years preceding the Great War. The service dress jacket is the early type with brass shoulder titles of the Lincolnshire Regiment. The 1903 set is based around the 50-round leather bandolier, here the earlier Mk I with complex brass buckle, dated 1903, the year of issue.
Various leather cartridge pouches were worn on the belt, over a General Service haversack and leather bayonet frog. The water bottle in its leather cradle was worn separately. This whole layout was apparently uncomfortable, difficult to adjust and generally inadequate for modern warfare.
It's interesting to think that many other nations continued to persevere with leather equipment, long after the US and British armies had switched to webbing gear.
Matthew
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