Date: Fri 12-Feb-1999
Date: Fri 12-Feb-1999
Publication: Ant
Author: JUDIR
Quick Words:
Troiani-Guthman
Full Text:
AA LEAD: New Book For Military, Fashion And History Buffs
(with cuts)
By Pam Guthman
What do Bush Run (1763), Cowpens (1781), Tippecanoe (1811), and Antietam
(1862) have in common? Several things: they are all located in America; they
were all battles; they are important landmarks in American history; and, they
are all cited in the newly released book Don Troiani's Soldiers in America
1754-1865 .
This book of almost 200 photographs of rare equipment and uniforms from
Troiani's personal collection, along with illustrations by this renowned
historical artist, is supported by new information unearthed and presented by
noted historical researchers Earl J. Coates (Jerry) and James L. Kochan.
Already, the book is receiving rave reviews. Says author and collector George
C. Neumann, "In his newest book, Soldiers in America, Don Troiani -- in
conjunction with Earl J. Coates and James L. Kochan -- has rendered a great
service by dramatizing the coverage and sacrifices by America's military to
win and preserve our freedom. Troiani has effectively combined his superb art
that includes his acknowledged accuracy of detail with surviving weapons and
accouterments from his personal collection. Today, with the world in a
complete state of change, this book is a significant reminder of the personal
commitments that are fundamental to our survival."
Neumann, who has written four books on Colonial military history and one on
country antiques, says Troiani's accurate renderings make history come alive.
"We see what these soldiers went through, and the believability comes when
viewing the photographs of the items from Don's collection."
Neumann also says it is a volume that offers easy reading and a quick
reference in addition to being a beautiful coffee table book. "This book will
get to the people who are advanced historians as well as those who have just a
smattering of history. This book illuminates in text and illustrations just
what's been done to make our country free, and keep it free."
According to co-author James Cochan, "the book is designed as a coffee table
book, but it isn't a rehashing of material that is already out there. There is
a lot of text and objects shown that are extremely rare and on the cutting
edge. A lot is new and hasn't been presented before."
Kochan knows what's out there. He is the former curator at Morristown National
Historical Park, "one of the largest Revolutionary historical sites in the US,
with one of the finest collections of Revolutionary objects." Later he served
as director of collections at Mount Vernon. Today Kochan is self-employed in
the area of museum consulting, research and publishing. Of Troiani he says,
"Don is an old friend, and we've worked together before."
It is from their long association that Troiani approached Kochan and Jerry
Coates about working together on Soldiers in America. According to Troiani,
"Stackpole, my publisher, asked me to do a companion book to my last one, Don
Troiani's Civil War . That sold more than 55,000 copies. I came up with this
idea. I've been wanting to work on a subject earlier than the Civil War."
Troiani decided to collaborate with Kochan and Coates because he had worked
with both of them before and had known them for years. "They are the top in
their field." Kochan is considered the preeminent authority on early American
dress and accouterments from 1754 to 1848. Coates is one of the foremost
scholars of uniforms and firearms of the American Civil War.
"I knew I'd get first-rate, primary research," Troiani continued. "They
brought up material that no one has seen before."
Coates, former curator at the National Security Agency and current president
of The Friends of Gettysburg National Park, said "I've worked with Don on
quite few paintings in the past. I enjoy working with him because the research
that I do comes to life in a figure he paints. I can have all my notes like
`red trousers trimmed in blue' and then see it come to light in detail. That
has always been exciting and a great deal of fun. Don brings the research into
reality."
Kochan added that the book is not a chronological history of wars, but a
series of independent essays that build upon each other. A lay person can pick
up this work and understand it, while at the same time a military enthusiast
could learn new things.
Troiani believes that anybody interested in early military history, uniforms,
accoutrements, those who used them, why they used them, and how they used them
will want to read this. So will collectors and anyone who likes history. "This
book is for the very advanced individual as well as the novice. It isn't just
about artifacts, but about the soldiers. There's quite a bit of human
interest. A lot of the material is portrayed for the first time." This book
gives the reader an idea of what it really looked like to be a soldier between
1754 and 1865. Coates hopes that it will also be of interest to military
miniaturists.
Few relevant documents survive. "Maybe some scattered drawings and watercolors
are around," Kochan said, "and a handful of uniforms -- I can count them --
and a few thousand manuscripts. These all help us reconstruct history
accurately. But Don has always had a sense of the soldier. He's combined
classic art with scholarship."
In addition to illustrations and text based on new findings, the book offers a
rare opportunity to see premier, museum quality items from Troiani's
collection, which Kochan and Coates believe is equal to or better than museum
holdings.
"What the soldiers wore and used," Kochan said, "may seem quaint and archaic,
but at that time period it was state of the art. As tactics changed, uniforms
and equipment changed." Troiani's collection provides great insight into this
area. Soldiers in America , based upon his collection, brings these insights
to light.
While the book is very scholarly, it is written and illustrated as much for
the newcomer as for the seasoned historian. Response from the Maryland Arms
Collectors and others has been positive. The initial print run of 15,000 is
nearly sold out; Soldiers In America is going into its second printing.
Loring Schultz, owner of Farnsworth House in Gettysburg, says, "We have
hundreds of books here, but this book is a bestseller by far. It is a good
perspective over the years of our military history. Until this book came out,
you didn't know what the uniforms looked like."
Kochan spoke of one of his favorite illustrations, "A `Black Irishman' of the
2nd Pennsylvania Regiment, Winter 1778-79 ." Kochan compiled information from
France, records of the Continental Congress, deserter descriptions and British
spy descriptions. Says Kochan, "As I was writing, I remembered a story of a
description of a horse thief who was wearing the uniform, a French Lottery
coat. We based the whole plate on that deserter's description. I later found a
pension application in the 1830s from this deserter. It was fun detective
work, and that uniform had never been illustrated before."
Uniforms and military relics that haven't been seen in other places are often
seen in Troiani's private collection. Coates says that collection is "one of
the best military collections in the world. People don't associate Don with
the French and Indian War or the Revolutionary War. They think of him for the
Civil War. One reason is that other Civil War collections can't come close to
his. You could build a very credible museum around his collection and need no
more. I'd love to work with it in a museum setting."
Troiani put together this collection from attending shows and flea markets,
auctions and working with dealers, trading with museums and placing ads. He
also goes digging for artifacts. That is how he found the USA belt buckle
pictured in the Revolutionary War section of the book. "It's only one of three
known. They're what Lafayette brought over from France for his men. I found it
myself, under some leaves. I was at a Revolutionary War camp on the Hudson
River in 1992. I went to a part of the camp where no one had searched before.
I turned on my metal detector and got a reading right away, but it turned out
to be only a tin can. About ten feet up from that spot I got another reading
and thought it was another tin can. But it was the buckle and it had been in
the same spot since 1781." Troiani says all three of the known belt buckles
came out of this camp. One buckle was found a few months earlier than
Troiani's, The other belt buckle was found two years later.
Troiani has completed two books and has two more in the works. One will focus
on Revolutionary War buttons; the other, in conjunction once again with
Coates, on Civil War regiments and uniforms.
While Coates and Kochan played a major role in Troiani's Soldiers in America,
additional contributors included Rene Chartrand, Charles Cureton, Fred Gaede
and Erik Goldstein. The forward was written by Brian Pohanka.
Don Troiani's Soldiers in America 1754-1865 sells for $55 and is available
from Farnsworth House in Gettysburg (717/334-8838) or from Don Troiani,
(203/262-6680). It is also for sale at bookstores and on the Internet.