E-Book, Englisch, 64 Seiten
Reihe: EM33 Europa Militaria Series
Brayley EM33 American Web Equipment 1910-1967
1. Auflage 2006
ISBN: 978-0-7198-4353-2
Verlag: The Crowood Press
Format: EPUB
Kopierschutz: 6 - ePub Watermark
Europa Militaria Series
E-Book, Englisch, 64 Seiten
Reihe: EM33 Europa Militaria Series
ISBN: 978-0-7198-4353-2
Verlag: The Crowood Press
Format: EPUB
Kopierschutz: 6 - ePub Watermark
Martin Brayley is a leading collector of military equipment and respected photographer and contributor to specialist journals in Britain and on the Continent.
Autoren/Hrsg.
Weitere Infos & Material
Introduction
From the earliest times, leather had been the material from which much of any soldier’s personal field equipment – his belts, scabbards, pouches, and other miscellaneous kit– had been produced; but in 1880 the United States Army became the first to adopt a webbing item for universal issue. Although trials had proved woven cotton webbing to be far superior to leather in many respects, its adoption was at first limited to a dark blue webbing waistbelt looped for cartridges. These loops were stitched around the outer face of the belt, which was closed with a brass ‘belt fastener’. The belt provided the soldier with a ready supply of 40 brass .45–70 cartridges for his single-shot, breechloading 1873 Springfield ‘trapdoor’ rifle.
Belts were originally made by the firm of Gilbert and later by Oberndorff. The Mills Woven Cartridge Belt Company of Worcester, Massachusetts, was eventually set up to manufacture Mills’ integrally woven web belts, the company being incorporated in 1902. The firm had been founded by US Army officer Anson Mills and Charles Gilbert, a weaver. Mills, born in Indiana in 1834, had an adventurous life as a soldier, retiring as a brigadier-general in 1897. In military circles Mills is best known for having invented a weaving loom that was capable of producing webbing belts with integrally woven cartridge loops. Patented in 1877, the principle was soon developed to provide first double and then triple loops. These one-piece belts were much stronger than the previous models with stitched loops. Anson Mills died at the age of 90 in November 1924, and was buried with full honours in Arlington Military Cemetery. He had been prominent and successful in a number of fields, and was an early supporter of women’s suffrage and racial equality; but it was the invention of his loom and the Mills Woven Cartridge Belt Co that had made his name and fortune.
In 1896 the US Army adopted a new khaki webbing belt that took the .30–40 ammunition used with the 1892 Krag Jorgensen rifle used in the Spanish-American War (1898–1902). No expense was spared in its development; the best quality spun cotton was woven, and then treated by new waterproofing techniques that made the webbing resistant to damp and rot – an essential requirement in the Cuban and Philippine campaigns.
The next Mills development was the introduction of belts with integrally woven and partitioned pockets and their top flaps, called the ‘pocket waistbelt’. At the start of the 20th century extensive trials were undertaken in the search for a new equipment set for the US Army; Mill’s pocket waistbelt was found to be the best design, and under the advice of the Board of Officers it was adopted for the US Army as the M1903. Large orders for the new belt, and a set of suspenders (braces) to support its loaded weight, were placed for the Army, Marines and National Guard. A modified version of the M1903 belt, with pocket dividers and cartridge retainer straps, was later issued as the M1914 cavalry belt.
This new pocketed belt was designed to carry the .30–06 ammunition used with the 1903 bolt-action Springfield rifle then replacing the Krag Jorgensen. These cartridges were issued in 5-round chargers; originally the belt was offered with nine or ten pockets carrying 90 or 100 rounds, but the nine-pocket design was later standardized. Mills cartridge belts were adjustable from 30 to 46 inches. The pockets were closed with ‘ball-and-socket’ fasteners (termed ‘glove fasteners’ in official publications, but referred to in this text as snap fasteners). The fasteners were distinctive in that they bore the device of the service for which they were destined, such as the Army’s eagle, USMC eagle-globe-andanchor, or state devices. It was a military requirement that the snap should withstand fastening and unfastening 5,000 times without losing its efficiency.
A studio portrait of a US soldier at the time of the Spanish-American War; his web waistbelt and bandoleer are both woven with double rows of loops. Note also the canvas leggings. It is remarkable to reflect that a century after the introduction of the Mills webbing belt some nations continued to issue their troops with leather equipment in even recent wars (for instance, Argentina in the 1980s, and Yugoslavia in the 1990s).
Initially the Mills company had the monopoly on web production, but the Russell Manufacturing Co of Middleton, Connecticut – the only other company with the necessary looms – were soon producing the integrally woven pocketed web belts. Britain was rather more conservative than the USA and retained leather equipment until 1908, when a Mills-produced web set was introduced into service (, EM 32). A licence to produce web equipment in England had been granted in 1898; the War Office purchased web belts and bandoleers from the Mills factory in England, and some saw limited service during the Boer War (1898–1902).
A fine study of a US infantryman wearing the M1903 belt with M1903 equipment suspenders. These items were worn by the first US troops to arrive in Britain in 1917, and period photographs also show that many were still armed with the Krag Jorgensen rifle.
The US Quartermaster General was soon to supply the ‘Doughboy’ with the most modern, complete and fully integrated equipment set available to any soldier. Mills worked closely with the Army, taking field conditions fully into consideration in developing this M1910 system to replace the M1903 belt and a variety of other equipment then in use. Despite some shortcomings this system, with its later modifications and additions, was to see the US soldier through two world wars.
The M1910 Equipment
The new M1910 equipment was made of webbing and canvas in Olive Drab shade No.9. The specification required it to carry a maximum load of 50lb, including ammunition and clothing. As issued, it came in at 48lb, broken down as follows: pack carrier (with blanket, shelter half, pegs, poncho), 9¼lb; cartridge belt (with 100 rounds of ammunition, full canteen, first aid packet), 11½lb; haversack (with bayonet, intrenching tool, rations, mess kit, wash kit), 10½lb. The complete haversack and equipment thus totalled 31¼lb; the rifle added 9lb and the clothing 7¾lb, bringing the soldier’s total load to 48lb. This weight compared favourably with the burden of the infantrymen of major foreign armies. Comparisons made by the QM Department found that the average British soldier carried 52lb, Japanese 55lb, French 56lb, German 60lb, Russian 60lb and Austrian 63lb.
The M1910 equipment system, designed to accommodate all of a field soldier’s needs, included a number of items in addition to the webbing equipment used for carriage of ammunition and necessaries, such as a newly designed canteen, mess kit and condiment can. Primary web equipment consisted of:
Cartridge belt, dismounted M1910
Cartridge belt, mounted M1910
Garrison belt M1910
Garrison belt, officer’s M1910
Garrison belt, non-commissioned staff and first sergeant M1910
Garrison belt, enlisted M1910
Pistol belt, with sabre ring M1910
Pistol belt, without sabre ring M1910
Cartridge belt, revolver M1910
Canteen cover, dismounted M1910
Canteen cover, mounted M1910
Haversack M1910
Pack carrier M1910
Meatcan M1910
Other M1910 components included:
Bayonet scabbard M1910
Bolo scabbard M1910
Bacon can M1910
Canteen M1910
Cleaning rod M1910
Cleaning rod case M1910
Condiment can M1910
Cup M1910
Spoon M1910
Fork M1910
Knife M1910
Dispatch case M1910
Axe, hand M1910
Carrier, axe M1910
Pick mattock M1910
Carrier, pick mattock M1910
Pouch, first aid M1910
Intrenching tool M1910
Carrier, intrenching tool M1910
Wire cutter M1910
Carrier, wire cutter M1910
The impact of the Mills company’s research and development was such that webbing would equip many of the world’s armies throughout the 20th century; but although Mills representatives were active world-wide, its immediate planned sale to many of them was aborted by the unexpected outbreak of the Great War in August 1914. Britain (Pattern 1908) and the USA (Model 1910) had already adopted web equipments; Portugal (P1912) and Belgium (P1915) used a Mills webbing set alongside leather equipment; but most nations entered World War I with leather equipment.
Photographed during the Mexican Punitive Expedition of 1916, these two soldiers wear M1903 belt equipment with M1909 suspenders, and blanket rolls. Although the appearance of the US soldier changed rapidly in the pre-war years with the introduction of M1910 equipment, both the M1903 belt and M1909 suspenders were later to be seen in use with the American Expeditionary Force in France.
The leather shoulder strap (1) used for carriage of both the M1903 haversack (right) and M1879 canteen (left). (2) late production M1887 cartridge belt, with 45 single loops, and (3) Mills belt with double loops for 90 rounds. Both taking .30–40 rounds for the Krag rifle, these belts were standard issue during the Spanish-American War and were still available from the Mills company during the 1920s. (4) intrenching tool cover, and (5) M1892 Krag bayonet.
Below these are two variants of the M1903 belt with integral charger pockets closed with ‘eagle snaps’, introduced for use with the .30–06 1903 Springfield rifle: (6) early variant belt with plain pockets, and fitted here with M1879 canteen on M1903 suspension strap; (7)...




