No. The Confederates wore grey, the Union blue.
Union uniforms were blue; Confederate uniforms were gray.
In the US Civil War, the uniform of the Confederacy was gray, and the uniform of the Union was blue.
Gray was Confederates Navy blue was Union Soldiers
the confederate were a tanish gray color.. the union were a dark blue.. confederate believed in slavery.. union did not approve.. ANSWER. They wore gray uniforms but often also the "butternut" of homespun dyes.
The Union uniform was blue, the Confederacy uniform was gray. Other than the color, the clothing was quite simple and ordinary. Uniforms were not elaborate.
The Confederates (south) wore gray and a color called Butternut, and the Union (north) wore a blue-gray more blue then gray type of uniform.
they ware gray they ware gray
depends on the union
Union troops usually wore blue, Confederates wore gray or butternut, even civilian garb in the last days.
The Union Army always wore blue uniforms, while the Confederate Army always wore gray uniforms. The Confederate Army, however, were not as wealthy as the Union Army, and therefore couldn't always afford uniforms for all their soldiers. Many Confederates wore their own clothes during combat.
Ken Gray - rugby union - died in 1992.
whitish gray