31 Model A
A-List Customer
- Messages
- 484
- Location
- Illinois (Metro-St Louis)
Was there such a thing??????
Well, Orvis seemed to think so:
http://www.orvis.com/p/lambskin-munitions-leather-vest/82y0
This is the vest - there is a long sleeved jacket too. But the general reviews I read were poor due to the thin lambskin.
Yes, the jerkins were fairly ubiquitous, but I just googled "WW2 RAF ground crew" and came upon this image - not a regular jerkin as it has a belt on the reverse … so possibly?
http://www.pinterest.com/pin/142567144426152762/
Very popular with coal men after the war.
Only in the catalogue …
http://www.orvis.com/p/lambskin-munitions-jacket/2c0y
I think that is his load bearing belt, what we called a pistol belt or part of the LBE issue.
Very popular with coal men after the war.
A modern day invention is what I was thinking.
Yes, it doesn't look like part of the jacket to me. Mind you, I'm more weirded out by his footwear, which appears to be large, wooden clogs???
I don't know if it's my old mind playing tricks on me, but I'm cure I remember one of our coalmen wearing one of these circa 1980, doing deliveries to the house (we had a coal-fired central heating boiler installed in 1980.... state of the art, at the time. Nobody had gas or oil in those days, though within a decade oil was the norm). That and them all in donkey jackets, of course.
Yeah, I suspect it has a similar provenance to the USN G8...
FWIW..... if I was looking at somethingl ike that munitions jacket, I'd probably be more inclined to look into the Aero Shackleton, or, perhaps, something akin to the Magnoli Quatermain Vest. I've toyed with the idea of something in that general ballpark for Summer (I envisage something like the Shackleton with a v'ed collar instead of the round neck, perhaps even a shawl collar type lapel to it), though I'm in two minds. The Lady, when asked, made a face and muttered something about Sting....
I can understand the use of wooden clogs when handling explosives, not chance of an electrical charge setting off the detonator with wooden shoes.
Yes, the jerkins were fairly ubiquitous, but I just googled "WW2 RAF ground crew" and came upon this image - not a regular jerkin as it has a belt on the reverse … so possibly?
http://www.pinterest.com/pin/142567144426152762/