This month, instead of going for a particular kind of razor I thought it would be interesting to explore the shaving sets made either directly under military contracts or marketed to soldiers and sailors usually heading off to war. Some of the most well known, of course, are the Gillette sets from World War I, and it was undoubtedly World War I and the need for a properly sealed gas mask in the trenches that made the clean-shaven man a more common sight. But there were military sets -- double- and single-edged -- from plenty of other makers and from other eras, too.
One of the things I'm most interested in personally, at least as far as the U.S. military goes, is the apparent change in shaving kits being considered personal gear and the responsibility of the individual soldier or sailor himself to provide, to being issued, at least by the Army. I've seen these "Property U.S. Army" sets from at least Gillette and AutoStrop, and possibly others. If anyone has any reference material to point to there regarding the timing for this shift and some of the more specific reasoning behind it I'd love to see it. It seems a little odd that the government wouldn't have standardized on a particular type of razor to make standard issue so that they could then just focus on one type of blade. But maybe the issue was that no one company could have geared up to provide the needs of the entire wartime force... It'd be nice to know some more there.
So let's see what you all have got. Maybe you're lucky enough to have a set that was used by a family member. Or maybe you've just picked one up along the way. Maybe you've come across an interesting factoid related to military shaving. Anything's fair game!
I'll start with this little nugget from the December, 1918 issue of the Gillette Blade: During wartime production, Gillette was producing 35 miles of shaving edge every day! And that was even before they had the huge Building E plant finished, which would be eight floors devoted solely to blade production.
One of the things I'm most interested in personally, at least as far as the U.S. military goes, is the apparent change in shaving kits being considered personal gear and the responsibility of the individual soldier or sailor himself to provide, to being issued, at least by the Army. I've seen these "Property U.S. Army" sets from at least Gillette and AutoStrop, and possibly others. If anyone has any reference material to point to there regarding the timing for this shift and some of the more specific reasoning behind it I'd love to see it. It seems a little odd that the government wouldn't have standardized on a particular type of razor to make standard issue so that they could then just focus on one type of blade. But maybe the issue was that no one company could have geared up to provide the needs of the entire wartime force... It'd be nice to know some more there.
So let's see what you all have got. Maybe you're lucky enough to have a set that was used by a family member. Or maybe you've just picked one up along the way. Maybe you've come across an interesting factoid related to military shaving. Anything's fair game!
I'll start with this little nugget from the December, 1918 issue of the Gillette Blade: During wartime production, Gillette was producing 35 miles of shaving edge every day! And that was even before they had the huge Building E plant finished, which would be eight floors devoted solely to blade production.