Accession Number | REL27392.003 |
---|---|
Collection type | Heraldry |
Object type | Personal Equipment |
Physical description | Brass, Buff leather, Tin-plated copper |
Maker |
Unknown |
Date made | c 1899 |
Conflict |
Australian Colonial Forces, 1854-1900 |
1888 Pattern (Mark II) Valise Equipment ammunition pouch : British and colonial forces
Buff leather ammunition pouch,1888 Pattern (Mark II) Valise Equipment (described in List of Changes 6105 23 June 1890), designed to carry 50 rounds of .303-inch rifle ammunition. The pouch is made from four pieces of leather: front flap and back, front, internal divider, and gusset, stitched together with four reinforcing tin-plated copper rivets at the top corners. The measurements of the pouch are as per the sealed pattern being 7 inches wide, 3 3/4 inches high and 9 1/4 inches from the edge of the flap when open to the bottom of the pouch. The front flap has no darts for shaping and is secured with a leather strap which has been attached with a single rivet. The strap has two tear-shaped holes which fit over a brass stud sewn into the front seam of the gusset. A deep strip of leather lies between the inside front of the pouch and the internal divider. It has been formed and sewn into tubes which carried ten separate cartridges. A leather strip sewn across the pouch behind the divider, separated two unbroken packets of ammunition when carried. Two brown hogskin drawstraps for facilitating ammunition removal are secured by rivets to the internal divider. The free ends of the drawstraps were designed to pass underneath the ammunition packets and are both threaded through a single horizontal leather guide loop rivetted to the inside back of the pouch. Two lines of stitching separate the guide into two. A single leather cartridge tube is sewn over the rear seam of the gusset on each side. Two vertical leather loops are secured with two rivets each on the back of the pouch to enable it to be carried on a waist belt. A small horizontal stitched loop lies along the lower back. The top of the pouch has two brass 'D' rings secured under stitched leather tabs to thread the braces through when worn. The surface of the leather has the remains of its original pipeclay coating. On the outside back 'RMA 5 99' (possibly indicating an acceptance date of May 1899) has been stamped. 'PO20187', C WICKENDEN' (the person who the pouch was issued to), 'NMA 12373', 'RMA 5.99'and 'W - D' (indicating that the item was the property of the War Department) have been stamped with ink on the inside flap. Other markings are illegible.
The 1888 Pattern Valise Equipment was also known as the Slade-Wallace equipment, after its two designers, Colonel Slade and Major (later Lieutenant-Colonel) Wallace. The complete equipment consisted of one waist belt, two ammunition pouches, a pair of braces with movable buckles and a keeper, two greatcoat straps, one mess-tin strap, and one valise to carry clothing, cutlery and other personal equipment. This pattern was issued to British and colonial forces but was replaced with 1903 Bandolier equipment after its performance was criticised in the Boer War. The 1888 Pattern equipment was in service at most for 15 years though some parts such as waist belts, were retained for ceremonial purposes.The Mark II pouch differed from previous version in that a cartridge tube was sewn over the outside edge of the gusset; ears at the top of the gusset were dispensed with; and the loops for the waist belt were longer and riveted on flat.