Item: Maine "Burnside" Eagle Plate
Description: Raised eagle clutching arrows and an olive branch in its talons on a plain field.
Use: Eagle plates, also known as breast plates, shoulder belt plates, and cross belt plates, were displayed on the belt that held the soldier's cartridge box. Eagle plates with two belt attachment loops were purely ornamental and proudly worn by Union soldiers with the belt slung over the shoulder and across the chest. See the additional images in this listing for an image showing its use.
Construction: Stamped thin sheet brass with solder fill, and iron attachment loops.
Condition: Good, excavated. Its brass face has a pleasing dusty green patina over a well-defined eagle. There is mild bending and minor nicks in areas of the rim, otherwise the rim is in good shape. The rear has a complete complement of solder but is missing both iron attachment loops. There are no cracks or repairs.
Recovered: Charles City County, VA.
Approximate size: 59 mm.
Reference: Images of similar Maine "Burnside" eagle plates are found in the following Civil War relic reference books:
See above page in additional images.
Comments: Maine eagle plates are the smallest size of the eagle plates and are much rarer to recover than regular size eagle plates. The detail on this example is excellent and finding another one of this quality may prove to be quite difficult. It is believed that the name "Burnside" was given to plates of this size by the early relic hunters during the 1950s who found quantities in the Wilderness where General Ambrose Burnside led his 9th Corps into an ambush in May of 1864. This excavated Maine "Burnside" eagle plate was acquired directly from the digger and it will be an excellent addition to any excavated Civil War accoutrement plate or general relic collection.
More...
In an article titled "Renaming the "Burnside" Plate", published in 1999 in North South Trader's Civil War magazine, Vol. XXVI, No. 6 Christmas Issue on page 49 by the late Mike O'Donnell, author of "American Military Belt Plates", O'Donnell suggests "...it's time to start calling these distinctive little eagle insignia plates "Maine" plates rather than "Burnsides"." This article is also found in the additional images.
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