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Period Cleaning Kits
October 1998
Let's all try to revamp our kits a
bit over this winter for next year. The first step is to let
go some of the 20th Century we've been lugging around. We
won't miss it for a few weekends a year, and it will make
our experience that much more enjoyable
It involves something very simple: Put together a "cleaning
kit" and a "toiletries kit" to replace our 20th Century stuff.
Each contains just 7 items, but they include everything you
need for keeping your weapon, leathers, clothing, and body
clean and in good repair for a weekend. Both together can
be contained in a common bag (although they should be kept
separate for health reasons.
- You don't need a huge orange modern
gun cleaning kit. Your rammer, musket tool, and a worm,
(all things that would have been issued with your musket
for its care and maintenance), plus a cotton rag that can
be cut into patches and a little period bottle with a cork
for oil is all you need. The rammer is stored in your musket,
the musket tool and worm go in the front pocket of your
cartridge box (in a small bag to keep them from falling
out and getting lost), and the bottle can be wrapped in
the cotton cloth to put in your cleaning kit
A small patch of emery cloth can also be put in your cartridge
box for the immediate care of the occasional rust spot that
appears out of nowhere.
- A tin of shoe polish can be slowly
melted (be careful not to let it boil) and poured into a
candy or cap tin (about the same size) and a reproduction
period label can be glued to it. One of the most difficult
things to find today is a real-bristle brush with a wooden
handle. If any of you discovers a cache of them anywhere,
scarf them up - almost everyone in Sykes needs one
You will recover your investment (and maybe a little profit)
at the very next event. The tin and one or two shoe brushes
go in your cleaning kit. This is all you need to care for
all your leathers.
- You don't need a can of Brasso
or a tube of some sort of WonderShine. Another candy or
cap tin will contain a considerable lump of NeverDull. It
is not a liquid that is heavy and can be spilled, not a
paste that can melt in heat and leach out of whatever it
is in, and is not in a tube that may explode if crushed
It can't ruin anything else you have no matter how much
you abuse it. A piece of soft cloth (either heavy cotton
or flannel) for a cleaning rag, and you have everything
you need for taking care of all your brass and even the
metal of your musket. A button stick is handy to prevent
the polish from getting on the clothing or leather on which
the brass is mounted. These two items go in your cleaning
kit.
- A clothing brush (an extra shoe
brush) will clean your wool. Dip the tips of the bristles
in water and it will remove dust and even dried, caked-on
mud from your uniform. Again, this is a difficult item to
find, but it is the way wool was cleaned before dry-cleaning
was invented
- A housewife can be included in
this cleaning kit also to take care of minor tears, unraveled
stitches, and popped buttons. It should include just a bit
more than those ready-made ones at the sutlers. At the very
least, you need one extra button for your 4-button, one
for your vest (and kepi), and one for your suspenders (or
your shelter half)
An extra pair of shoelaces will come in handy one day. Beyond
that, a patch of dark blue wool and a patch of light blue
kersey will let you repair holes that suddenly appear in
your uniform at odd moments.
- These seven items (bottle of oil,
tin of bootblack, shoe brush, tin of metal polish, button
stick, clothing brush, and housewife), plus an oil rag and
a polish rag, replace all sorts of modern things you've
been lugging around for years. And they all fit in a drawstring
bag half the size of a common sandwich bag that will fit
in one corner of your knapsack.
- A "toiletries kit" composed of
a toothbrush, a tiny bottle of tooth powder, a comb, and
a cake of soap wrapped in a huckaback cloth about the size
of a washcloth or a small hand towel will take care of your
body for a weekend. Those of you who are clean-shaven or
sport any sort of trim to the natural growth of facial hair
also need at least a straight razor and possibly a shaving
brush for the tourists to see. Those who give free reign
to facial hair don't really need these items but should
have them in the event of lice
All this fits into a bag half the size of your cleaning
kit. For those who need contact lens implements, disguise
them by putting the modern containers inside period containers.
They won't get contaminated, they won't be left out to be
seen, and you don't have to "go to your car" just as a formation
or some work detail looms its ugly head over the company.
That's it. Now you don't have to hide
in your tent or get caught with something modern laying about
while doing common things that soldiers would be doing all
the time. Everything you have can be cleaned and maintained
with these few items
They are not just extraneous "period" decorations to display
in your tent; they can be used to replace the 20th Century
and lighten the load of stuff you need to lug around for every
event. Between events, they are stored in your knapsack, are
out of the way, and won't be forgotten for the next event.
The only maintenance required is to be sure you refill anything
you use.
First Sgt. Stephen Hanson
2nd US Infantry
Sykes’ Regular
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