The September/October 2020 issue of
Muzzleloader came a couple of days ago, and in it I found another brilliant article by Ted Belue, this time about the portraits made of Daniel Boone. This full-length print, by James O. Lewis, was discussed in depth. Note the color of Boone's hunting shirt:
Artistic license? I don't think so. This little snippet is from a book entitled
An Excursion Through the United States and Canada During the Years 1822-1823, by William Newnham Blane, first published in 1824:
Note the line, "...
the hunting shirt is made of coarse blue linen, or (as they call it) linsey-woolsey..." Blane's description is a near-perfect match for the hunting shirt Boone is wearing in the Lewis portrait. I poked around a little yesterday and didn't find anything else as explicit as Blane's description, but I did find enough to suggest blue hunting shirts were apparently all the rage for a time, especially in the early years of the 19th century. As an example, James Lewis also made this print of a "Celebrated Ottawa Chief," painted at the Treaty of Fort Wayne in 1827:
Looking through my old book of McKenney-Hall portraits of native people, I see a number of them wearing blue shirts and coats, especially the southern Indians. It is true, they may have put on their best to sit for their portraits, but both Daniel Boone and the Ottawa man appear armed and ready for the hunt.
I enjoyed reading this thread again. Many of the responses are very well-informed, and there are plenty of anecdotal stories about successful hunts conducted while wearing blue. It would seem that controlling scent, noise, and movement might be more important in outwitting those wily old bucks and toms. You can bet the hunters in Boone's day knew this, too.
Best regards,
Notchy Bob