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Drawing taken
from "Civil War Handbook" by William H Price
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It was during
the Civil War that soldiers first found the need for some
kind of identification on their bodies during combat.
According to the National Museum of Naval Aviation:
"In the days of the Civil War 0f 1861-1865, some soldiers going
into combat improvised their own identification, pinning
slips of paper with name and home address to the backs
of their coats,
stenciling identification on their knapsacks or scratching
it in the soft lead backing of the Army belt buckle."
Record
keeping was haphazard under wartime conditions and grave
locations were often lost.
After the conclusion of the Civil War the U.S. Army located
and exhumed the remains of 300,000 Union veterans buried
in the South, then reinterred these remains in a national
cemetery.
Nationwide, 54% of the number reinterred was classified as "Unknown".
At Vicksburg National Cemetery 75% of the Civil War dead
are listed as unidentified. At Salisbury National
Cemetery, North Carolina,
99% of the 12,126 Federal soldiers interred are listed as
unidentified.
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During WWII
the circular, engraved disk was replaced by the rectangular
shaped
dog tag with a Notch. The nickname “dog tags” was
adopted during WWII. The dog tags on the right, are shown
without silencers.
Silencers were
put in use around the end of 1944. Those who never received
silencers may have
looked
for their own solutions by sticking the tags together
with cotton ties, rubber rings from gasmask tubes, and/or
adhesive tape.
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The Tomb of
the Unknowns
Arlington National
Cemetery,
Virginia, USA
"HERE RESTS
IN HONORED
GLORY AN AMERICAN
SOLDIER KNOWN
BUT TO GOD."
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During the late
1950s the Notched dog tag was discontinued
and replaced with the tag that is used today—without
a notch.
Also, the second
tag was separated from the first tag by placing it on it's
own short chain, 5.5". Thus,
coming to be known as the "toe tag". |
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Go to Notched Dog Tags
Secured Web Server to Buy Dog Tags |
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