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Sash

Sash
Silk
18th century
Sash
Sash
Silk
18th century
Sash Silk 18th century
Status
Not on view
Label Text

The silk sash is one of several officer’s sashes that George Washington owned and wore prior to the American Revolution as a symbol of rank. Made using a technique called “sprang weaving,” silk sashes had enormous strength and, in extremity, could be used as stretchers to carry wounded officers off the battlefield. When Washington took command of the Continental Army, he stopped wearing this type of sash, creating instead a new system of rank designation for the nation’s army.

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Datec. 1750-1775
Geography Probably made - England
Medium/TechniqueSilk
DimensionsOverall (H x W): 118 in. × 18 1/4 in. (299.72 cm × 46.36 cm)
Credit LineGift of John Pierpont Morgan, Jr., 1924
Object numberW-87
DescriptionSprang-woven military sash terminating in long tassels.
Published ReferencesGeneral Washington's Military Equipment (Mount Vernon, Virginia: Mount Vernon Ladies' Association, 1963), 17-18.

General Washington's Swords and Campaign Equipment (Mount Vernon, Virginia: Mount Vernon Ladies' Association, 1944), 26-27.



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