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Questions About the United States Navy Peacoat

Peacoat

*
Bartender
Messages
6,306
Location
South of Nashville
Yes! If that coat is yours, you scored again. A WWI peacoat (or at least a pre WWII coat) from the 20s, 30s or perhaps even the teens. There is no research that goes that far back. My own research, which is definitive, hits a dead end in the WWII years of the 40s.

Congratulations.
 

Peacoat

*
Bartender
Messages
6,306
Location
South of Nashville
Those pictures are an excellent find. I had never seen the knee length "peacoat" before. Thanks. It may be an officers' coat, a forerunner of the bridge coat.
 

Spoonbelly

One of the Regulars
Messages
226
Location
Dutchess Co. New York
WWI Pea Coats

I'm sure a WWI pea coat is a real find. They are probably made like battleships but to tell you the truth I think my favorite is still a post war late '40s -'50s. I'm not too crazy about the two sets of pockets.
 

mihai

A-List Customer
Messages
331
Location
Europe
I'm sure a WWI pea coat is a real find. They are probably made like battleships but to tell you the truth I think my favorite is still a post war late '40s -'50s. I'm not too crazy about the two sets of pockets.

One that appears to be a WW1 pea coat was recently sold for 1200 usd on eBay: ref nr 121166960938. I would like something like this but for this price - no way. I value vintage items however I am interested also in their practical side. I am not interested just to keep them in storage. For serious collectors paying that kind of money is something usual perhaps.
 

Peacoat

*
Bartender
Messages
6,306
Location
South of Nashville
One that appears to be a WW1 pea coat was recently sold for 1200 usd on eBay: ref nr 121166960938. I would like something like this but for this price - no way. I value vintage items however I am interested also in their practical side. I am not interested just to keep them in storage. For serious collectors paying that kind of money is something usual perhaps.

I found a 1930s peacoat (same style as the WWI) on ebay several years ago. The coat had belonged to the seller's grandfather. It was offseason, and had attracted no interest. I could probably have picked it up for less than $100 bucks. I wrote the seller and told her what she had, and what she was likely to get for it that time of the year. My advice was to pull the auction and save it for her children. She did so.

Every time I think of that advice, I kick myself. What I should have done was to tell her what she had and that I was willing to pay $300 to $500 for the coat. We could have worked out a deal: she would have gotten some money, and I would have the elusive pre WWII coat in my collection. Plus it would have been a wearer, as it was my size!

All I could think of was that if I bid on that coat, I would steal it for less than $100, and how bad that would have been on my part. Never did I think of a way to buy it from her for what it was worth. That came a few months later. Oh well, live and learn.
 

arahat

New in Town
Messages
49
Location
Australia
Good man, Peacoat.

Rest assured though that you have propagated the appreciation for vintage USN peacoats to the seller and down the line.
No mean feat that.
 

antilleschris

New in Town
Messages
3
Location
United States
Hi, I recently purchased a pea coat after reading a lot of good information from this forum. Thank you! However, I'm hoping it is authentic, and if it is, if I could get some help in dating it. I have read the dating thread, but my coat seems to have some conflicting evidence. The coat is in mint condition, but the tag is very faded (does that seem odd?).

Here is a picture of the coat:
http://imgur.com/vC3Ly78

Here is a picture of the tag:
http://imgur.com/qzSQ1Pt

I know you can't see much, but this is what I think I can read:
COAT, MAN'S WOOL KERSEY
DSA 100-8889 (guessing on the numbers)
100% WOOL
SIZE: ??

Some other details: It has a single stitching with a double stitching above it on the cuff. The pockets seem to be a grey fabric (not a corduroy).

What do you think? If anyone is willing to help, let me know if you need any other info!

Thanks a lot!
 

Peacoat

*
Bartender
Messages
6,306
Location
South of Nashville
Have you looked at the Peacoat Dating thread, which is a sticky on the first page of the Outerwear Section? I think the answer to your question lies therein. If not, let me know, and I will dig into it a bit. You may have to do a bit of reading in that thread, but I believe you will be able to figure it out.

Congratulations on a nice find. PC.
 

antilleschris

New in Town
Messages
3
Location
United States
Have you looked at the Peacoat Dating thread, which is a sticky on the first page of the Outerwear Section? I think the answer to your question lies therein. If not, let me know, and I will dig into it a bit. You may have to do a bit of reading in that thread, but I believe you will be able to figure it out.

Congratulations on a nice find. PC.

Yeah, I've read that entire thread. However, I was confused because I seemed to have some conflicting evidence. For example:

My tag does not seem to match any of the examples (and why is it so faded? Would a lot of dry cleaning do this?)
My pockets are not corduroy which would imply later than 1968.
My coat has a line of double stitching above the cuff which would imply before 1966.
My coat can not be buttoned from both left and right which would imply later than 1965.
The coat has black plastic buttons and the tag says Kersey, which would both imply 70s or earlier.

From all this, I would gather, assuming it seems authentic that it's....from the 60s? Perhaps that is the best that can be said of it, and if so, fair enough. I take solace that the tag does not seem to match the "imitators" ones!

Thanks for the response.
 

Peacoat

*
Bartender
Messages
6,306
Location
South of Nashville
Aha, I was hoping you could figure it out. When I saw your description of the coat, I knew there would be problems getting an exact year. The cotton pockets and the double stitching above the cuff, just did not present a consistent picture. Just now when I compared your tag to the 1966 and 1967 tags, I don't see an exact match. When I saw the tag last night, my first impression was 1966, but after digging a bit deeper and doing some comparisons, although not exact, I think it is closer to a 1967 tag.

As to the features, some of the double stitching above the cuff were in the 1967 coats. Although the corduroy pockets were eliminated in the 1968 contract, some coats may have been built with cotton pockets in 1967. So while your coat has features that are not exactly consistent with any year, I think it is a 1967 coat.

Keep in mind also that some of the people who made these coats had a good sense of humor. They enjoyed putting older tags in newer coats that were actually made at a later time. I once saw a 1953 tag on a post 1968 peacoat. They seem to have outdone themselves on this coat as several features are mis matched, and the tag is a bit different. It is my theory that they somehow knew researchers would be coming along 40 to 50 years later, and they wanted to make it more difficult to put an exact date on some of the coats. As if this isn't difficult enough!

So, with all of the above in mind, I hereby pronounce this coat as a 1967 model. A good year. Wear it with pride.
 

antilleschris

New in Town
Messages
3
Location
United States
Aha, I was hoping you could figure it out. When I saw your description of the coat, I knew there would be problems getting an exact year. The cotton pockets and the double stitching above the cuff, just did not present a consistent picture. Just now when I compared your tag to the 1966 and 1967 tags, I don't see an exact match. When I saw the tag last night, my first impression was 1966, but after digging a bit deeper and doing some comparisons, although not exact, I think it is closer to a 1967 tag.

As to the features, some of the double stitching above the cuff were in the 1967 coats. Although the corduroy pockets were eliminated in the 1968 contract, some coats may have been built with cotton pockets in 1967. So while your coat has features that are not exactly consistent with any year, I think it is a 1967 coat.

Keep in mind also that some of the people who made these coats had a good sense of humor. They enjoyed putting older tags in newer coats that were actually made at a later time. I once saw a 1953 tag on a post 1968 peacoat. They seem to have outdone themselves on this coat as several features are mis matched, and the tag is a bit different. It is my theory that they somehow knew researchers would be coming along 40 to 50 years later, and they wanted to make it more difficult to put an exact date on some of the coats. As if this isn't difficult enough!

So, with all of the above in mind, I hereby pronounce this coat as a 1967 model. A good year. Wear it with pride.

I really appreciate it and I will (as soon as it gets cold enough, man it's a warm coat)! Thanks!
 

kodak125px

New in Town
Messages
1
Location
NY
I have a question about the armhole fit of US Navy pea coats... Got an issue size 42R Sterlingwear off of eBay and the armholes are rubbing on the inside of my arm. Body fit in the pea coat seems good; it fits like a good suit jacket.

Before purchasing I measured myself with a tape and came up with 42-42.25 inches. I did a pit to pit measurement on the size large J Crew Bayswater pea coat I had. The J Crew is a little bit large in the body. The 42R coat I got had a pit to pit of 22.5 inches, around an inch or so smaller than the J Crew. Should work in theory. I wear 42 size Hickey Freeman suit jackets and they are right on the money over a dress shirt too.

Wondering if sizing up to a 44 on the issue pea coat has a chance of solving the armhole fit problems? Or whether a USN pea coat is just not cut for some? I figure the body should not be too loose on a 44. Also does anybody know any stores in the NYC area carrying Sterlingwear so I could try on a bunch of different sizes and cuts?

Thanks!
 

Doctor Damage

I'll Lock Up
Messages
4,269
Location
Ontario
Sometimes some things just don't fit, even though by the measurements they should. I found a similar fit problem with the one I had, although not as pronounced as you. In any case, there should be tons of stores in the NYC area which will carry Sterlingwear's products - send the company an email (customerservice@sterlingwear.com) and they should be able to advise you. If not, an internet search should turn up a bunch of results.
 

Spoonbelly

One of the Regulars
Messages
226
Location
Dutchess Co. New York
A couple of years ago I bought a Sterlingwear issue coat. It was a size 46L(Long). I think it was from the early '90s. I noticed that the sleeves were tighter (smaller diameter) then other size 46 pea coats that I had. It felt a little weird when driving with sleightly tighter sleeves.
 

Peacoat

*
Bartender
Messages
6,306
Location
South of Nashville
Yes, the pocket material is most odd for that era coat. At first I thought is was corduroy, but that the lighting just made it look different. On closer inspection, I'm not sure what it is. Probably not corduroy, though.
 

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