The Southern (Confederate) Army wore grey uniforms.
The Union uniform was blue, the Confederacy uniform was gray. Other than the color, the clothing was quite simple and ordinary. Uniforms were not elaborate.
Soldiers wore uniforms during the civil war so that they would know who was the union and confederate.
dark blue, pants and a sports coat sort of.
no, that would be the south, they didn't war homespun and they had the factories. south didnt have these. yea. as u can see, the north at that time was all about industry and factories and the south was all about plantations and slaves labor.
The Southern (Confederate) Army wore grey uniforms.
The North wore blue uniforms, the South wore grey uniforms.
they wore little gray and the shirts had buttons on.
The Confederates (south) wore gray and a color called Butternut, and the Union (north) wore a blue-gray more blue then gray type of uniform.
The Union uniform was blue, the Confederacy uniform was gray. Other than the color, the clothing was quite simple and ordinary. Uniforms were not elaborate.
In the US Civil War, the Union (North) Army usually wore blue. The South wore Grey but often they didn't have official uniforms.
Soldiers wore uniforms during the civil war so that they would know who was the union and confederate.
they wear forms to school They wear uniforms but they wear them as the color as there flag...
They wore Gray.
white coats
so they know who is on their team
The proper wear and design of buttons, braids, knots, spurs, gloves, sashes, swords, cravats, and neck stocks are detailed in the Confederate Regulations. Confederate naval and marine uniforms differed little from those of their Union opponents. Cadet gray was the predominant color, and, in the navy, white was accepted for summer or tropical wear.