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Old 06-30-2002, 02:51 PM
chilidog chilidog is offline
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Default Hunley

This month's issue of the National Geographic has some nice pics of the CSS Hunley. The crew was still at their post.

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Old 07-02-2002, 01:35 PM
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colmurph colmurph is offline
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Default CSS HUNLEY

They have their own web site that details the daily activities of the recovery and excavation of the inside of it.
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Old 07-02-2002, 07:46 PM
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go to www.hunley.org. It is the web site for the Friends of the Hunley. Very well done and informative. Those guys had some cahones.

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Old 07-16-2002, 06:04 PM
sfc_darrel sfc_darrel is offline
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Default Excuse me?

The Civil War provided the first recorded incident of American soldiers making an effort to ensure that their identities would be known should they die on the battlefield. Their methods were varied, and all were taken on a soldier's own initiative. In 1863, prior to the battle of Mine's Run in northern Virginia, General Meade's troops wrote their names and unit designations on paper tags and pinned them to their clothing. Many soldiers took great care to mark all their personal belongings. Some troops fashioned their own "ID" (identification) tags out of pieces of wood, boring a hole in one end so that they could be worn on a string around the neck.

The commercial sector saw the demand for an identification method and provided products. Harper's Weekly Magazine advertised "Soldier's Pins" which could be mail ordered. Made of silver or gold, these pins were inscribed with an individual's name and unit designation. Private vendors who followed troops also offered ornate identification disks for sale just prior to battles. Still, despite the fact that fear of being listed among the unknowns was a real concern among the rank and file, no reference to an official issue of identification tags by the Federal Government exists. (42% of the Civil War dead remain unidentified.)

The first official advocacy of issuing identification tags took place in 1899. Chaplain Charles C. Pierce, who was tasked to establish the Quartermaster Office of Identification in the Philippines, recommended inclusion of an "identity disc" in the combat field kit as the answer to the need for standard identification. The Army Regulations of 1913 made identification tags mandatory, and by 1917, all combat soldiers wore aluminum discs on chains around their necks. By World War II, the circular disc was replaced by the oblong shape familiar to us today, generally referred to as "dog tags."
http://www.qmfound.com/short_history...ation_tags.htm

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