the varied between blue gray and tan. sometimes it was just whatever you had to wear when they couldn't get supplies fast enough
Union uniforms were blue; Confederate uniforms were gray.
The Southern (Confederate) Army wore grey uniforms.
Confederate uniforms, gray wool uniforms
Many Confederate units wore blue uniforms. In many cases they were excess from Federal caches and stations in the South.
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.
Union uniforms were blue; Confederate uniforms were gray.
The Southern (Confederate) Army wore grey uniforms.
the uniorm was gray, blue, and it had some yellow in it.
Confederate uniforms, gray wool uniforms
The confederate army wore grey uniforms.
Many Confederate units wore blue uniforms. In many cases they were excess from Federal caches and stations in the South.
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.
Confederate soilders wore gray or yellowish-brown uniforms.
It didn't necessary have meaning - it just gave them a color which distinguished them from Union forces.
Gray. Confederate uniforms were gray with red piping.
The Confederates, unlike the Union, didn't really have a specific color to their uniforms. The colors ranged from tan, to gray, to a lighter blue. This was due to the fact that the South did not have manufacturing corporations where they could have their uniforms made. The North's uniforms where very specifically colored dark blue.
Confederate uniforms were grey. The Union Army wore dark blue.