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An Original Rough Wear 27752 Unearthed!

scotrace

Head Bartender
Staff member
Messages
14,393
Location
Small Town Ohio, USA
I've made one of those rare, heart-stopping discoveries, right under my nose!
I posted this for the good fellows at the Vintage Leathers forum, but I think it deserves a good sharing all 'round.
A co-worker saw me in my new Eastman/Roughwear 1401 last week and said "my dad's old jacket is at my house. Looks like that. He was in the war."
Of course I asked her to please bring it in sometime so I could have a look!
Im NO EXPERT by any stretch, but like most of us, there was a great deal of research and obsession that went along with learning what can be found out about these jackets prior to that first purchase. So while I really don't know squat, I figured I could maybe tell what it was, what time frame in the war it was made, and a few other details. Had no idea what to expect.
Amazingly, she brought it today and I followed her out to her car where she had the jacket in the trunk.
She kept saying that it was in really poor condition, but my first impression was "not that bad, really." The knits are all shot, but the leather, though it's got a hole here and there, looked OK, if FILTHY. It had been hanging in an open-window attic for decades so it's like a big potato chip - all dried out. "Nit that bad" may be generous... The dirt is heavy everywhere. But the hooks, snaps, talon zipper (exactly like the one Eastman used on my jacket), are all present and would likely function, if one were foolish enough to try. Only one insignia, of a knight in a leather patch on the left breast, that is natural leather (unpainted). Original owner's name is stenciled under the label, in very small letters, which are obliterated by the dirt. The label is all there. No rank. No Wing & Star decal. Size is 38.
Damn - no litte paper tag under the right pocket flap.
It's a Rough Wear 27752, and it doesn't look like it was ever anything but russet. Under the flaps, everywhere you can see color under the gunk, it's russet. And the hide was once smooth but has taken on character at wear spots and from being tugged by it's own weight on the (thin metal!) hangar.
I promised the owner I would try and get some info on the insignia, and more on the jacket. And of course, said that I fully respect that it's a cherished family piece, but that if ever that should change, I'd like a crack at buying it. In this state, it's not very valuable except for the patch.
I took dozens of pictures in her office. Here they are.
Amazing! AND SO COOL to see the same collar shape as my Eastman: pocket flaps, zipper, snaps - all dead on in my new jacket. Exactly and precisely the same.
My hands and white shirt were black by the time I finished with it.
Enjoy the pictures!
IMG_0879.jpg
 

Marc Chevalier

Gone Home
Messages
18,192
Location
Los Feliz, Los Angeles, California
There's something moving about seeing it as it is. Not as a museum or costume piece, but as a functional article that was used in wartime and laid aside in peacetime. I suspect that many veterans were like your colleague's dad. They did their duty and moved on. Somehow, that really moves me. There's an element of humility (and sadness) behind it.

.
 

scotrace

Head Bartender
Staff member
Messages
14,393
Location
Small Town Ohio, USA
Marc Chevalier said:
There's something moving about seeing it as it is. Not as a museum or costume piece, but as a functional article that was used in wartime and laid aside in peacetime. I suspect that many veterans were like your colleague's dad. They did their duty and moved on. Somehow, that really moves me. There's an element of humility (and sadness) behind it.

.


It's funny you should say so. There was an almost... how to explain? A feeling of peering into an opened tomb.
A fascinating discovery. You're right, Matt, it IS amazing.
 

ideaguy

One Too Many
Messages
1,042
Location
Western Massachusetts
what a great find! if only you could find a hat of his, or some boots-clean them
up just a bit, and one very special corner could hold some very special memories. Priceless.
 

scotrace

Head Bartender
Staff member
Messages
14,393
Location
Small Town Ohio, USA
It's from a member of 15 AAF, 487 Squadron, 340th Bomb Group, B25 MTO, ETO.

Constituted the 487th Bombardment Squadron (Medium) on 10 August 1942, it was activated on 20 August 1942, and assigned to the 340th Bombardment Group stationed at Columbia AAB, South Carolina.

Overseas staging started at El Kabrit, Egypt on 29 March 1943, then progressed through Tunisia in April of that same year, then winding its way up through Sicily and ending up in Italy from 29 October 1943 to 16 July 1945. In August 1945, the squadron was rotated stateside.

The patch should look like this:

patch_487bs.jpg
 

SamReu

One of the Regulars
Messages
192
Location
Red Clay USA
Spokes Man

Fascinating, and thanks for sharing. I suspect there are comparable "hanging in the attic" stories out there.
 

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