As the US Army mechanised, it looked for garments that would be harder wearing and cheaper to launder. In a 1937 test of denim versus HBT, the hard wearing green twill fabric had triumphed, and the first production garment was a one-piece suit around 1938. However as 1940 loomed and the prospect of war grew, the army knew it would need a cheaply produced uniform, and the complicated one piece was replaced by a two piece suit.
This is an excellent example of the jacket from that two piece suit. Service life for this set however, was not to last long. The jacket, with its shirt style cuffs, pleated pockets and waist ties was encumbered with details unsuitable for rapid mass production. Quickly replaced, and remaining stocks used up as the classic P42 shirt was introduced. It's therefor extremely rare to find an unused and completely outstanding example of this early style pre-war jacket.
Condition
Deadstock, unworn and unwashed. Covered in cutter tags!
Size Shirt:
- Tagged a size 48
- Pit to pit 27"
- Shoulder to shoulder 20"
- Shoulder to cuff 25"
- Collar to hem 29"