Does anyone know what crutches and a peg leg would look like (or have any?) to reproduce?
We have a leg missing now (anyone seen it on the field? ) and need to look the part for South.
Does anyone know what crutches and a peg leg would look like (or have any?) to reproduce?
We have a leg missing now (anyone seen it on the field? ) and need to look the part for South.
Google Civil War peg leg and there will be several pictures. Look to be pretty straight forward to make. Good Luck!
Pvt. Marty Richards
111th OVI
A distant relative of Genl. Stonewall Jackson but a Strong Union Man!
During the 125th reenactment of the battle of Gettysburg I saw a lot of reactors using their muskets as crutches. Looked like a good idea with a thousand dollar plus Whitworth Rifle Musket.
Ron S.
Formerly 6587V
NRA Benefactor-Life
Of all the things that I have lost it's my mind I miss the most.
Great Grandson of William Gibson ( Canal boat builder ) ( 1862 Militia South Mountain )
( Co. C 116 Infantry, 106th Pennsylvania Regiment, Gettysburg
Rev.22:20 - 1 Thessalonians 4: 16-17 The Best Is yet To Come
What ever floats your boat.
Ron S.
Formerly 6587V
NRA Benefactor-Life
Of all the things that I have lost it's my mind I miss the most.
Great Grandson of William Gibson ( Canal boat builder ) ( 1862 Militia South Mountain )
( Co. C 116 Infantry, 106th Pennsylvania Regiment, Gettysburg
Rev.22:20 - 1 Thessalonians 4: 16-17 The Best Is yet To Come
Had you not been trying to kill Donald Duck maybe the ducks would have towed you to shore.
Anyway You should have a Maynard in your boat for a spare paddle.
Ron S.
Formerly 6587V
NRA Benefactor-Life
Of all the things that I have lost it's my mind I miss the most.
Great Grandson of William Gibson ( Canal boat builder ) ( 1862 Militia South Mountain )
( Co. C 116 Infantry, 106th Pennsylvania Regiment, Gettysburg
Rev.22:20 - 1 Thessalonians 4: 16-17 The Best Is yet To Come
I have a 19th century crutch but they were not designed to do much more than allow a person to stand supported, and maybe take a few steps. I'll see if I can post a photo here for you to examine. As for peg legs, one of my great-uncles was born with one leg that stopped just below the knee and he made his own peg legs. As a teenager, he could run as fast on that peg leg as many boys his age could run with two good legs, and played baseball and football. His name was Chester Holt (1894-1984) and taught school for 30+ years. His main claim to fame was despite being born with no fingers or thumbs but with webbed skin between the bones like two pads, Chester learned to write by holding a pen, pencil or chalk between each of his palms and had a beautiful calligraphy. He is listed in Ripley's Believe or Not for assembling miniature ladder back chairs (about 6 inches high) with woven seats inside of Jack Daniels whiskey bottles, and devised a wooden stopper with a tee bar that fits snugly inside the bottle flush against the shoulder of the bottle neck. Only one person was ever able to solve how Chester achieved that marvel, and Chester taught that man how to build the chair and how to make the other tools necessary to weave the chair seat. But Chester always regarded himself not as handicapped but physically challenged and did all sorts of wood carving from wooden ropes to chains, and even made a working wooden pocket knife with three blades. He liked to hunt and fish, and built a socket that he could use to hold a fishing rod or the forearm of a rifle or shotgun, and removed the trigger guard so he could operate the trigger. For many years, Chester lived next door to his brother, Lee Holt (1891-1982) who was my grandfather's brother-in-law. Both very fine gentlemen, school teachers, and like my grandfather, real sons of a Confederate soldier.
http://www.uniqware.com/magazine3/le...oltChester.htm
https://www.folkartinbottles.com/art...8-chester-holt
Last edited by R. McAuley 3014V; 06-11-2017 at 06:44 PM.
First Cousin (7 times removed) to Brigadier General Stand Watie (1806-1871), CSA
1st Cherokee Mounted Rifles | Principal Chief of the Cherokee Nation 1862-66
Remarkable man.
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