I have transcribed an article about Tumblety today (Boston Daily Globe 27 Nov 1888) which makes reference to an article in the "National Police Gazette" about Tumblety which included a photograph of him wearing a "United States army fatigue cap."
The section refers to this being published during "the war" which I take to mean the American Civil War.
This passage reads:
Next he was heard of in St John, when for a while his name disappeared from print. It next reappeared in the National Police Gazette of New York, which published during the war his photograph, showing him to be a good looking man with a moustache, wearing on his head a United States army fatigue cap, with a story about him, headed: "How an Irishman Became an Indian Herb Doctor."
I am posting the section in context below.
Some questions:
1) What is a "fatigue cap"?
2) Have any copies of the National Police Gazette survived?
3) Has this photo ever been traced?
Any help gratefully received?
The section refers to this being published during "the war" which I take to mean the American Civil War.
This passage reads:
Next he was heard of in St John, when for a while his name disappeared from print. It next reappeared in the National Police Gazette of New York, which published during the war his photograph, showing him to be a good looking man with a moustache, wearing on his head a United States army fatigue cap, with a story about him, headed: "How an Irishman Became an Indian Herb Doctor."
I am posting the section in context below.
Some questions:
1) What is a "fatigue cap"?
2) Have any copies of the National Police Gazette survived?
3) Has this photo ever been traced?
Any help gratefully received?
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