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W. Britain

Louisiana Tigers, Advancing, No.2, 1861-62

Louisiana Tigers, Advancing, No.2, 1861-62

Regular price $73.00 CAD
Regular price Sale price $73.00 CAD
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The Louisiana Tigers built their reputation on a paradox: they were among the most ill-disciplined infantry in the Confederate Army in camp, and among the most ferocious in the attack. Major Chatham Roberdeau Wheat — Mexican War veteran, soldier of fortune, lawyer — recruited his 1st Special Battalion Louisiana Infantry in New Orleans in 1861 from dock workers, gamblers, river roughs, and Irish and German immigrants who had little patience for drill but a great deal for a fight. Their Zouave-pattern uniform — red fez, short blue jacket, red flannel shirt, blue-and-white striped trousers tucked into white gaiters — was modeled on French regiments fighting in North Africa, and made them instantly recognizable at First Manassas and the major engagements of 1861-62. Wheat was killed at Gaines's Mill in June 1862, and the Tigers nickname was extended afterward to all of Louisiana's troops in the Army of Northern Virginia.

This figure shows a Tiger in the moment of the charge: musket at low ready, bayonet fixed, mid-stride. Where the firing pose in the same release set shows him taking the shot, this one shows him closing the distance — the second beat in the same advance. He pairs naturally with the other Tigers figures in this release for an early-war attack vignette, or works on his own as a single Tiger pressing forward in the iconic 1861-62 Zouave dress.

1/30 scale (60mm), matte-painted, single figure boxed. Catalog number 31506. As with the rest of the W. Britain modern range, the painting is photographic-quality detail intended to read well in dioramas and display cases.

Materials

Metal

Dimensions

54mm

Care information

These are not play toys. They are collectables. Recommended for 14 yrs old and older.

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