North and South
In the 1985 Miniseries, North and South, soldiers fighting for the north wore union suits. Proof of their wearing one-piece long underwear was presented in the second installment of the triology, Love and War, released in 1986.
The War Between the States drama first premiered on the ABC television network beginning in November, 1985 as Book I. Book II was then televised in May of 1986. It wasn't until February, 1994 that the final installement, Book III, Heaven and Hell, was shown.
In Book II, Yankees, captured near Richmond, Virginia in a raid by southern rebels, were led to the notorious and overcrowded Libby Prison. It was a cold and bleak site of confinement, formerly a three-story, brick tobacco warehouse.
There they met Captain Turner, commandant of the Virginian prison, a severely psychotic director. His personal style was to treat the prisoners especially bad and not according to the articles of war. Rather, his modus operandi was to gleefully humiliate and beat the men under his charge. He detested the "invading" northerners.
How did the term "Union Suits" come about?
One account is that "Union Suit" is a designation for long underwear which was, and is, massed produced by workers belonging to a garment union. Thus, union workers made long, one-piece, combined underwear or combinations which became known as union suits, first for women and soon for men and boys.
Some are convinced that union suits got its name simply because it was the underwear worn by men of the union army in the "War Between the States," the U.S. civil war. Besides North and South, other movies and tv shows depicting underwear in this time period show men and boys wearing union suits rather than two piece long johns. It has been accepted that southern boys wore two piece flannel underwear, red in color.
And finally, many have come to believe "union suit" was the name of the eventual and practical joining of long legged "drawers" with long sleeved undershirts into a single garment. Two pieces of underwear combined into one. Before the invention of union suits and before boxers and briefs, men and boys wore "long johns," two piece underwear.
So which is it. Why is our long underwear (or shudder, "onesies") today called "Union Suits?"
The union suit I believe was invented in 1868 in upstate New York, 3 years after the Civil War. Most likely they would have had 2 piece drawers on. I saw an episode of “The Grey Ghost” and sure enough they stripped a Yankee Lt. down his union suit so maybe some soldiers did wear unions… Artie up in Maine
ReplyDeleteI have to say that after exploring a number of sites devoted to Civil War reenactors, it appears that union suits were never issued to soldiers, on either side. The official war records show only two piece underwear, separate Henley type shirts and matching drawers. The number of sets per year was very limited so many soldiers received care packs from home that often included underwear. As records do not indicate that union suits were being manufactured commercially before 1868, I suppose it's possible that some soldiers could have received home made union suits from mother's and wives back home. ----- Retro Jeff in Illinois
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