Anyone else here reenact (or want to get into it)? I'm with the 8th NJ Volunteers with members from New York down to Delaware
If theres anyone interested in getting into the hobby, or to even try it out for a few events feel free to contact me
soccercw wrote:Anyone else here reenact (or want to get into it)? I'm with the 8th NJ Volunteers with members from New York down to Delaware
If theres anyone interested in getting into the hobby, or to even try it out for a few events feel free to contact me
Charleson wrote:I've been thinking of getting involved ever since I read Confederates in the Attic a few years back.
I've a got a large reenactment event coming up next month near me at The Henry Ford/Greenfield Village in Dearborn, Mi. Is there anything I should keep mind as I review the different groups there with an eye towards joining one?
BTW, I think I was told the initial investment as a buck private for uniform, gun & ammo, and gear will probably be around a thousand dollars. Is that in the ballpark?
Thanks!
christof139 wrote:I reenacted in the 3rd Arkansas Inf. for a short while in about 1968-70 period in Detroit and surroundings. haven't reenacted since then, except for a brief stint in SCA. The actual Infantry from 1970-73 made me greatly dislike mud and bad weather etc.
There are some knowledgeable reenactors, and then not some. At least most reeactors learn that troops moving across a field plowed or unplowed, fallow or with corn stubble, with gopher holes and briars and logs amd cowpods makes it realistic in the sense that lines are not straight and it is also a task to try and march and advance in step.
It can be fun and a learning experience.
Chris in Detroit
Charleson wrote:Hi Chris,
Interesting, I did not know we had people reenacting from the Southern perspective way up here in Yankee Michigan. I thought all those grey backs were imported from down yonder.![]()
Did you ever attend the Memorial Day weekend event at Greenfield village? I went a few years in a row then stopped. The itch is back though and I'll be attending this year.
Best, -Chuck in Royal Oak
...and it is a personal thing. Memorial Day etc. is serious to me and I am generally quiet and reflective on days like that. I just quietly remember people I have known.
Charleson wrote:Chris wrote:
Understood.
I have tried to teach my kids it means more than just a day off from school. The last time I went to Greenfield Village on Memorial Day they held a service that concluded with asking all the vets in the audience to come forward and be acknowledge for their service. I hope they still do that.
Charleson wrote:In a lot of my readings on the soldiers' daily routine it seemed like they made coffee at the drop of a hat--just about whenever they had a spare moment.
I was wondering if there was a particular way to make coffee in the way the troops might have while on the march with very limited time and equipment. Was the coffee they used pretty similar to what we would normally have today? Ground or whole beans smashed on the march?
Thanks
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