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#1 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: California
Posts: 1,036
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"Bashie's" academic training and the bulk of his published writings were in the natural sciences , fishes in particular. But enough of an expert on armor to have received the rank of major from the US Army during the First World War, assigned to the task of designing a more practical trench helmet for American forces than the types used by the British and French armies. The result was regarded as admirable, but was never officially adopted due to bureaucratic catfights, technical and fiscal objections in the area of production feasibility and costs, and the uncomfortable resemblance of the helmet to the Stahlhelm adopted by the Germans. (which, of course, was and still is an excellent design traceable back to the sallet of the Gothic period).
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#2 | |
Member
Join Date: Jan 2021
Posts: 21
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Hashime illustrated a couple of the charts, mainly the one with the armours throughout time, possibly because he must have been better at drawing people. This is speculation ofcourse. "Hashime Murayama was a Japanese American painter and scientific illustrator. He was best known for his exquisite paintings of birds, insects, fish, mammals, and other wildlife. " The other illustrator, Stanley J Rowland seems to be a more technical illustrator, and he drew most of the illustrations in the compiled charts. He joined The Met in 1914 as a young man. |
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