Civil War General

1341 CIVIL War General John Sedgwick Order Armo Oo Potomac 1864 Handwritten

1341 CIVIL War General John Sedgwick Order Armo Oo Potomac 1864 Handwritten
1341 CIVIL War General John Sedgwick Order Armo Oo Potomac 1864 Handwritten
1341 CIVIL War General John Sedgwick Order Armo Oo Potomac 1864 Handwritten
1341 CIVIL War General John Sedgwick Order Armo Oo Potomac 1864 Handwritten
1341 CIVIL War General John Sedgwick Order Armo Oo Potomac 1864 Handwritten
1341 CIVIL War General John Sedgwick Order Armo Oo Potomac 1864 Handwritten
1341 CIVIL War General John Sedgwick Order Armo Oo Potomac 1864 Handwritten
1341 CIVIL War General John Sedgwick Order Armo Oo Potomac 1864 Handwritten
1341 CIVIL War General John Sedgwick Order Armo Oo Potomac 1864 Handwritten
1341 CIVIL War General John Sedgwick Order Armo Oo Potomac 1864 Handwritten
1341 CIVIL War General John Sedgwick Order Armo Oo Potomac 1864 Handwritten

1341 CIVIL War General John Sedgwick Order Armo Oo Potomac 1864 Handwritten   1341 CIVIL War General John Sedgwick Order Armo Oo Potomac 1864 Handwritten
PVT to report to HQ. Also, once an item is brought I will no alter any information on any form. All items will have a confirmation number. Feedback will not be sent until I receive feedback. Please feel free to read my feedback. I'm very proud of my feedback. If you choose to wear or actually use items, it is at you own risk. General & Special Orders were issued to communicate commands and information to the Army. Each order, issued in writing by a command, was then printed for distribution to each unit, either at an army department headquarter or by commanders at local headquarters, sometimes in the field on portable printing presses. The orders were then issued to regiments, often to be read aloud to the troops. General Orders were printed as issued with date & location; at the end of a year the regimental adjutant might retain them loose or simply string bind them by punching holes or cut slits in the left margin and stringing on ¼? Red cloth string tape (the source of the old expression "government red tape"). Sometimes an officer or HQ clerk might take a group of orders to a local print shop or bookbinder and have an accumulation bound with leather or cloth covers. Usually, American Military Orders of the 19. Century including Civil War era were printed on an 8 x 5?

Sheet of quality rag paper.


1341 CIVIL War General John Sedgwick Order Armo Oo Potomac 1864 Handwritten   1341 CIVIL War General John Sedgwick Order Armo Oo Potomac 1864 Handwritten