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Give Me Liberty
Q&A with Todd Post on Re-enacting
Todd Post, founder and president of the 2d Virginia Regiment was kind
enough to answer questions about re-enacting. For more information about
the 2d Virginia Regiment, click on www.secondvirginia.org.
How did you become interested in re-enacting?
I had always been interested in colonial history, mostly because I grew
up in New Jersey, where there are a lot of historic sites. When I was
in first grade, I bought Meet George Washington by Joan Heilbroner at
a book fair at my school and I used to read it over and over again. A
lot of our field trips in elementary school were to Revolutionary War
sites as well. My parents used to take me to re-enactments and when I
was fourteen I asked a group how I could get involved and they let me
join as a drummer as long as my father joined with me. I was not a very
good drummer though, so as soon as I could save enough money with working
after school and over the summer, I bought a musket.
Why the 2d Virginia Regiment?
When I moved to Virginia, I wanted to keep re-enacting, but there was not
a group for me to join. About the same time, I met two others who were interested
in a new group, so we decided to start one. We knew we wanted to do a Continental
Army regiment from Virginia and after reading all of the available information,
it was clear the 2d Virginia Regiment had many interesting individuals who
served in it, fought well in the battles it was a part of, and had the most
surviving information about what their uniforms looked like of any of the
Virginia regiments.
What intrigued you about its history?
When the war started, Virginia raised only two regiments, and the 2d Virginia
Regiment was picked to do most of the fighting because its colonel, William
Woodford, had experience fighting in the French and Indian War. Colonel
Woodford was promoted to general and was followed by Alexander Spotswood,
the grandson of Governor Spotswood, who was one of Virginia’s early colonel
governors. He trained the regiment to be one of the best in the army.
After the Battle of Germantown in 1777, a newspaper article in the Virginia
Gazette stated: “The heroism and gallantry of the second Virginia regiment
I cannot help particularly mentioning; they would do honour to any country
in the world. It is universally believed they behaved the best of any
troops in the field.” Colonel Spotswood resigned after that battle because
he mistakenly thought his brother had been killed and he went home to
Virginia to take care of their families. His brother had really only been
wounded and captured by the British, but another officer had already been
promoted to replace him named Christian Febiger. Colonel Febiger was born
in Denmark and continued the regiment’s excellent reputation as one of
the best regiments in the Continental Army until they were captured in
Charleston SC in May 1780.
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| Courtesy the 2d Virginia Regiment |
How did you go about founding the group?
We started with three members, including myself, and we spent several
months researching surviving letters, orders, and other accounts about
what the uniforms of the 2d Virginia Regiment looked like. Taking place
over eight years, the Revolutionary War was a long war compared to most
other wars (the War of 1812 was two years long, the Civil War four years,
American involvement in World War I was less than two years, and Americans
fought in World War II for just over three and a half years) and because
they were starting from nothing, it took the Continental Army a couple
of years to determine the best way to do things. For that reason, between
1775 and 1780, the 2d Virginia Regiment’s uniforms changed at least three
times, and because there were no photographs at the time, the way we know
what they wore and what weapons they used comes from what was written
by people in the 2d Virginia Regiment or those who saw them and wrote
about it. After we learned all we could about what the uniforms should
look like, we started recreating the uniforms as best we could, using
the same kinds of fabrics they used. You can’t go to the store and buy
Revolutionary War uniforms, so we had to make them ourselves and we sewed
anything that could be sewn by hand because sewing machine did not exist
back then. With our uniforms complete, we started to attend events and
people started to join after seeing us at re-enactments. Now we have over
thirty members from all over Virginia as well as other states.
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| Courtesy the 2d Virginia Regiment |
What do you enjoy most about it?
What I enjoy most about re-enacting is rediscovering information about
what the soldiers wore, what weapons they fought with, and how they lived
so people can see what it was really like. It is easier with a time period
like the Civil War because there are photographs of soldiers and their
clothing looks somewhat similar to what we wear today. The only paintings
we have from the American Revolution are of fancy officers in clothing
that looks funny to us today, like breeches and powdered wigs, or paintings
which were done many years later by people who drew a “best guess” of
what they thought things looked like, so it is hard to imagine what it
was like for the common soldier. By re-enacting, not only do I get a better
idea of what it was like, but I can show others. I also have made a lot
of friends through re-enacting who love history as much as I do, who come
from all over the country, as well as Canada and England!
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| Courtesy the 2d Virginia Regiment |
What was most surprising?
I am always surprised by how much we don’t know about the American Revolution
and how much new information we are finding out all the time. Even though
the war happened over two hundred and twenty-five years ago, there are
a lot of artifacts and writings that have either been lost or very few
people knew about that are “rediscovered” from time to time. They can
be found some place hidden, like inside the wall or under the floor of
an old house, or they can just have been part of a family’s collection
that no one ever took the time to look through until now. We are constantly
learning new things and our understanding of the American Revolution is
constantly being updated.
What do you like least?
The hardest part of re-enacting is that it is not easy to live like an
18th century soldier for a weekend because their everyday life was so
much different from how most modern people live today. Most people back
then had jobs that required a lot of physical labor and as soldiers they
marched everywhere they had to go, some times hundreds of miles in just
a few weeks. Most people today drive where they need to go and often have
jobs that keep them in an office working at a computer, so living like
an 18th century person for just a couple of days is a big change! Also
because the clothing and equipment we use is not common any more, some
things can be kind of expensive because they are hard to find.
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| Courtesy the 2d Virginia Regiment |
Are the clothes difficult to make? How are they to wear?
People don’t sew today as much as they did years ago, but it is a skill
that is still common enough that it is not hard to learn. The hardest
part of making the clothes if finding the right materials and patterns
and then making them fit right. What is harder than clothing to reproduce
are the things that they made out of leather and metal, since these are
skills that people often need to be trained in. However if you really
want to learn, there are enough books out there that you could teach yourself.
The clothes are actually very comfortable to wear they just look different
than what we’re used to but the shoes aren’t as comfortable as modern
shoes. However because they’re made of leather, the more you wear 18th
century shoes, the more they “fit” to your feet.
How did you educate yourself about the times?
I educated myself through lots of reading and asking questions from people
who knew more than I did. Most history books are too general or based
on very basic information about the American Revolution that is often
wrong. For instance, for years people thought that the British were “stupid”
to wear red coats and march in straight lines, while the Americans shot
at them from behind rocks and trees with rifles. The Continental Army
wore blue uniforms, our French allies wore white, and the best way to
fight using an inaccurate musket was by firing in groups, so actually
Americans did not start winning battles until they learned how to fight
like the British! If you really want to learn about the American Revolution,
it is best to read a lot of different books by authors who based their
information on the writings of those who actually fought in the war.
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| Courtesy the 2d Virginia Regiment |
What kind of food do you eat at events?
We try to cook and eat food like the Continental Army soldiers did. The
army promised them a pound of bread and a pound of meat every day, along
with other things, but they did not always get what they were promised.
Also, some times the soldiers were able to find food of their own, often
buying or trading with people they met. Most of the time they either cooked
over an open fire or boiled their food in an iron pot or tin kettle.
Other websites of interest for re-enacting are the 1st
Virginia Regiment and The
Brigade of the American Revolution (an umbrella group for American
Revolution re-enactment groups)
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