IN RE: Officer's Cartouche Box
Dear Joe,
Those photos of the officer's cartridge box being worn in the center of the back are really interesting, thank you for contributing. After considering them however; I don't think that they are reflective of the "correct" manner of wear. I think it rather reflects a unit level affectation.
The cartridge box was worn to continue the tradition dating back some hundred years. Originally it actually carried carbine cartridges. It was worn with a cross belt and sat between the right hip and buttocks. This position was most advantages for a right handed troop to retrieve a cartridge with his right hand to charge a carbine being held in the left hand. Wearing the box in the small of the back renders it un-reachable by the right hand. The cross belt naturally sits with its load over the opposite hip, not the center of the back.
After taking apart my display I am now of the opinion that my description above regarding how the box was to be worn was WRONG.
As these photos show the cross belt was attached in the same manner as the NCO box. The ends were passed through the leather loops and affixed to the knobs on the opposite side.
Because the central leather loop seemed to naturally fall to the central "knob" on the bottom of the box I assumed that it simply looped around the belt as shown in the third photo of this series.
Dear Joe,
Those photos of the officer's cartridge box being worn in the center of the back are really interesting, thank you for contributing. After considering them however; I don't think that they are reflective of the "correct" manner of wear. I think it rather reflects a unit level affectation.
The cartridge box was worn to continue the tradition dating back some hundred years. Originally it actually carried carbine cartridges. It was worn with a cross belt and sat between the right hip and buttocks. This position was most advantages for a right handed troop to retrieve a cartridge with his right hand to charge a carbine being held in the left hand. Wearing the box in the small of the back renders it un-reachable by the right hand. The cross belt naturally sits with its load over the opposite hip, not the center of the back.
After taking apart my display I am now of the opinion that my description above regarding how the box was to be worn was WRONG.
As these photos show the cross belt was attached in the same manner as the NCO box. The ends were passed through the leather loops and affixed to the knobs on the opposite side.
Because the central leather loop seemed to naturally fall to the central "knob" on the bottom of the box I assumed that it simply looped around the belt as shown in the third photo of this series.
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