Académique Documents
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Hastings to Helmand
From the crude weaponry and armour of the Battle of Hastings, to the
high-tech kit of modern conflict, a new photographic survey explores
the personal equipment carried by the common British soldier
through the past 1,000 years
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5 Gas mask container
6 Gas mask
7 Non Commissioned ranks hat
8 Notebook and service warrant card
9 Battledress tunic note stripes on sleeve denote rank
10 Mess tins
11 Tin opener and can of food, appears to be tinned stewed apple
12 Oxo cubes
13 Bar of chocolate
14 Bar of soap
15 Water flask
16 Belt
17 Leather belt with leather pouches for kit
18 Haversack
19 Longjohn under garments, battledress trousers and braces
20 Boot polish and two brushes
21 Blankets
22 Dog tags imprinted with name, rank and service number
23 Trench club for breaking heavy ground for trenching into and for fighting the enemy at close quarters
24 Entrenching tool handle; often the handle was customised with lumps of metal and made into a trench club
25 Leather pouch for entrenching tool
26 Field dressing
27 Cigarettes and matches
28 Mess kit containing knife, fork spoon, shaving brush, soap and brass button polisher (slid underneath
battledress button to protect BD from polish)
29 Polish
30 Razor
31 Gun oil
32 Cloth for pull-through for cleaning barrels internally
33 Bullet
34 Ammunition belt, containing clips of bullets
35 Penknife and pull through cord
36 Entrenching tool spade; sometimes soldiers sharpened the edges of the spade and used these to fight
37 Lee Enfield 303 bolt action rifle. It was developed at the beginning of the twentieth century as an attempt to
create a standard rifle for both the infantry and soldiers on horseback. As it turned out it was ideally suited to
conditions in the trenches it wasnt good at firing over long distances, but was really robust and could stand up
to the mud. It was still used right up into the 1950s.
38 Bayonet to be attached to fore end of rifle
39 Helmet with cover
40 Fob watch, personal effects. Officers tended to have pocket watches more so than infantry soldiers
41 Coins possibly local francs or similar, personal effects
42 Scabbard for bayonet, worn on leather belt around waist over hip
43 5 round ammunition clips ready to load magazine of 303 rifle 1944 lance corporal, Parachute Brigade,
Battle of Arnhem
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16 Money pouch
17 Sabatons to go over long boots and protect the foot; first piece of armour to go on
18 Tassets hang from the breast plate to protect upper part of leg
19 Back plate, covered in Duke of Norfolks colours
20 Breast plate
21 Cuisse covers the upper part of the leg and greave on the lower. Big wing shaped section covered the back of
the joint to stop soldiers being cut behind the knees
22 Right arm made of three pieces - the upper cannon, lower cannon and coulter for the elbow; right hourglass
gauntlet
23 Belt for sword scabbard
24 Hand and heart sword with a fishtail pummel can use it with one or two hands; the sword would have a
makers mark on the blade
25 Dagger
26 Scabbard for dagger
27 Arming jack with maille sleeves
28 Belt
29 Wooden comb
30 White linen shirt
31 Doublet with folds, indicated a high status; civilian wear. The black garment is hose with a codpiece
32 Pewter spoon, silver handled knife, pewter goblet, wooden bowl and plate
33 Case for knife
34 Scabbard for sword
35 Poleax someone on foot would use that smash peoples heads, bend arm so they cant fight back. Big
point at front hammer part for banging heads
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13 Drinking tankard and earthenware pot; the stated rations for army facing Armada was two pounds of beef,
two pounds of bread, a pound cheese and eight pints of beer
14 Knife and pricker forks werent in wide use, although Elizabeth I was using one
15 Bowl and spoon
16 Grey woollen bag with playing cards, dice and pouch
17 Rapier
18 Side sword
19 Sword belt and pouch; hanging below is a chain with a pricker and brush for cleaning the gun
20 Powder flask for priming powder to set the gun off with
21 Powder flask for coarser powder that would go down the barrel of the gun
22 Brown pouch with a pocket gold sundial; the mirror was attached to a cord and encased in a walnut-wood
ball, stuffed with sweet-smelling herbs. Usually worn around the neck
23 Fire lighting kit including flint and striker and tinder
24 Yard of match the cord that burns to give fire to the gun
26 Worm for clearing blockages
27 Ramrod
28 Bag of 20 caliver lead balls
29 Caliver - before Elizabeth I came to the throne in 1559 gunsmiths around the country would make the
muskets used in battle to their own specifications. The new queen insisted on standardisation, and so the 20bore caliver was introduced
30 Money bag with gold coins
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10 Pewter mug
11 Hard tack biscuits and cheese, carried in the linen haversack
12 Knife, fork and spoon kept in a linen bag and a days ration of bread
13 Linen haversack worn on the left hip
14 Soldier's games, draughts and a board made from a piece of tent canvas, a pack of cards and a wooden yo-yo
15 Grey woollen gaiters, with leather foot straps and pewter buttons
16 Woollen socks
17 Brass sundial compass
18 Straight lasted shoes. The leather was rough side out and as they were straight lasted there was no right or
left shoe; soldiers were expected to swop them around to prevent excessive wear on one side
19 Leather pouch, containing coins, dice made from flattened musket balls
20 Pocket watch on a length of woven binding
21 Wooden water canteen on a leather strap worn on the left hip
22 Washing and shaving kit
23 Small mirror in a stout wooden frame
24 Bone hair comb and bone handled toothbrush with horsehair bristles
25 Clothes pegs
26 & 27 Greased paper containing black ball, a mixture of tallow, beeswax and soot, used to polish and help
waterproof shoes and cartridge box.
28 Horse hair boot brushes and bristle cloths brush
29 Wooden button stick, used to polish buttons and prevent clothing being stained in the process
30 Tin containing finely ground brick dust, which was mixed with olive oil and used as a metal polish
31 Small bristle scrubbing brush
32 Sewing kit, containing linen and sinew thread, spare buttons, wooden thimble, wooden needle case and
scissors
33 Fife, a small, high-pitched instrument, similar to the piccolo
34 Wooden cartridge block used to store ammunition
35 Tin container stored below the wooden block, used to store additional packs of ammunition and spare musket
flints
36, 37 & 38. Flint, steel and tinder contained in a brass case and used to light fires
39 Tin container for gun oil
40 Gun tool and worm used to strip and reassemble the Brown Bess musket for cleaning and repair, it was a
simple device made up of two screwdriver heads and pointed needle used to push out the metal pins holding the
barrel to the stock, screwed onto the pin is a worm which could be screwed on to the ramrod and was used to
help remove cleaning cloth or unfired charges from the barrel
41 Feather spring clamp, used to remove the frizzen from the lock
42 Ramrod puller, used to remove a ramrod stuck in the barrel or stock
43 Musket flint with a scrap of notched leather and a piece of notched lead either of which would be placed
around the flint and then helped secure the flint in the hammer
44 Canvas case containing spare flints, stored in the cartridge box tin
45 Leather lock stall, used to place over the frizzen to protect it and prevent accidental sparking that could fire
the weapon
46 17" triangular socket bayonet which fitted onto the musket, the same fitting method was subsequently used
for the modern electric light
47 Soldiers pen knife
48 Reading glasses
49 1807 British Army drill regulations and leather covered notebook
50 Brown Bess musket was in service from 1722 to 1838 - some were even shipped to the Crimea in 1854. It
weighed 4.8kg and was made up of three component parts the lock, stock and barrel. It had an effective range of
100 meters but was capable of firing to 250 meters. It fired a .75 musket ball made of lead, which was contained
as part of a paper tube made from Cartridge Grade paper which contained gunpowder. The soldier would
remove the cartridge from the cartridge box, bite off the end to release the powder, pour a small amount into the
pan and the rest down the barrel. The now empty cartridge still attached to the musket ball would then be placed
into the barrel as wadding and the ramrod used to ram it down. The musket would be cocked and was then
ready to fire. When the trigger was pulled the hammer containing the flint would strike the frizzen, causing
sparks to ignite the gunpowder in the pan and pass through the touch hole to ignite the main charge and fire the
musket ball. A well drilled soldier was capable of firing 4 shots a minute
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14 Aluminium mess tin, mug, water bottle and ration kit including tin of corn beef, boiled sweets and a large
block of chocolate
15 Drop bag with rope attached
16 Shovel kept in the drop bag
17 Cutlery, basic washing and shaving kit, and spare boot laces on a wash towel
18 Entrenching tool for digging shell scrapings
19 Handle for the entrenching tool
20 Ammunition pouches
21 Belt and cross straps
22 Rifle the Sten Mark V submachine gun was first issued in 1944 and given first to airborne troops. It was
first used for D-Day, and then again for Arnhem. Underneath is the cleaning kit
23 Bayonet
24 pocket loading tool for magazine
25 Magazine
26 Bandolier with seven magazines
27 Cigarettes, matches and playing cards
28 Gas mask bag
29 Two grenades the no 36 Mills grenade was used in the First World War and the No 69 Bakelite, which was
in service from 1942 and caused less collateral damage
30 Fairbairn and Sykes fighting knife used as a general tool and its sheaf
31 Large roll gas cape
32 Gas mask the light pack gas mask was issued from 1943-1960
33 Anti gas ointment
34 Anti gas hood
35 Eye shield for gas attack
36 Groundsheet (underneath) with a sewing kit and thimble on top
37 Maroon airborne forces beret with a parachute regiment cap badge
38 Torch
39 First aid dressing
40 Helmet Mark II parachuting helmet issued in 1942 with a leather chin strap
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10 Camouflage windproof trousers, green thermal trousers and housewife, a canvas pouch with spare buttons
and needle and thread to repair clothes in the field
11 White lightweight nylon over suit to wear when the weather is snowing
12 Camouflage windproof jacket, green woollen jumper and shirt
13 Royal Marines beret
14 Royal Marine steel helmet with camouflage net
15 British army cold weather cap
16 Water bottle
17 Scarf
18 British army notebook and pens, compass and protractor, which were used for marking maps, for example
plotting minefields. Below a clasp knife, can opener and blade
19 35m film camera, personal effects
20 Torch
21 Wash kit, including soap, razor, comb and toothbrush
22 Jacket and trousers for NBC suit
23 F6 respirator and spare filter
24 Field dressing
25 Decontamination kit
26 Fullers earth, similar talcum powder, preserves gas mask rubber
27 Detector paper Nuclear biological detector kit used to detect poisonous chemicals
28 Knife, fork, spoon and can opener
29 Aluminium mess tins
30 Hexamine cooker
31 Arctic 24 hour ration pack, including tin of bacon roll, spam, tinned beans, chicken curry, suet pudding,
boiled sweets, tea bags and toilet paper. Mars bars were available to buy on the ship on the way over and were
prized possessions
32 Plastic mug
33 Pair of waterproof gators
34 Sandbag every soldier carried at least one; used to fortify positions by digging dirt to fill the hessian bag
35 Marine issued Bergen rucksack, with a carry mat. Below it an arctic sleeping bag in waterproof case
36 Shovel
37 66m anti tank weapon disposable one shot rocket launcher
38 Suit sight with 4x magnifaction, which goes on rifle; during the Falklands conflict the night vision scope was
widely issued of the first time
39 Individual weapon sight
40 Rifle cleaning kit
41 Long green ammunition band 762 linked ammunition for the squad general purpose machine guns
42 Six spare magazines
43 Black insulation tape and No 83 smoke grenade
44 2 x L2A2 fragmentation grenades
45 Clansman 349 radio with an earpiece and throat microphone that picks up on the vibration of the voice
46 Bayonet
47 Cotton bandolier containing 50 rounds
48 (left) loading tool for magazines (r) protector for the foresight
49 L1a1 rifle self loading rifle; a very light, accurate and powerful rifle that fired 7.62mm rounds
50 Dog tags
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14 Boots
15 Multi tool
16 Washkit
17 GSR - general service respirator
18 A housewife a basic sewing kit; a soldier has to repair his own rips and tears on the ground
19 Socks, scarf, wristwatch
20 Camel pack - drinking water pack
21 Cooker and mug and tea making kit
22 Rations - quantity will depend on the task but soldiers normally carry about 24 hours worth
23 First aid kit including the (black) tourniquet and (grey) first field dressing
24 Ballistic protection - used to protect the groin from IED blast
25 Knee pads - offer protection to a soldier whilst "taking a knee" from the heat of the ground or rocky areas
26 Sleeping bag with an inflatable roll mat
27 Camera, cigarettes
28 Radio - BOWMAN Radio system (HF, VHF or even SAT Comms), daysack could also be fitted with ECM
(Electronic counter measures)
29 Personal role radio - used for line of sight communications within a small patrol
30 Magazine
31 Envelopes
32 Mine extraction kit fitted with a mine prodder, instruction and mine marking kit
33 Weapon cleaning kit
34 Holster
35 Pistol - used as a second weapon system and in confined spaces or where a "long" weapon is unsuitable. Sig
and Glock have mostly replaced the Browning 9mm calibre
36 Bar mine - anti-tank landmine
37 Head torch - can be fitted with coloured lenses for more tactical situations
38 Bayonet and bayonet scabbard
39 SA80 A2 fitted with a desert hand guard, upgraded flash eliminator and bipod, all issued for Afghanistan and
a SUSAT sight system. It is 5.56 calibre and is here issued with 6 magazines which can hold 30 rounds each
40 Ballistic eye protection - normally goggles or sunglasses
41 Mk 6 Helmet fitted with Helmet mounted night vision systems
42 iPad - personal effect for down time
43 Poncho