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did they eat tea and hardtrack?

2007-05-09 12:58:02 · 4 answers · asked by Anonymous in Arts & Humanities History

4 answers

"The first thing to know is that “ship’s biscuit” was not called “hard tack” until long after the War of 1812. In Britain and America during the Revolution and the War of 1812, it was officially and unofficially known as “Sea Biscuit,” “Ship’s Biscuit,” “Biscuit,” “Ship’s Bread,” “Hard Bread,” and “Bread”--and no doubt on occasion other less printable names now lost to history--but not “hardtack.”"

"In the early 19th century “tack” was a common word for “a cattle pasture for hire,” perhaps so-called from the vessel-like wandering of the cattle as they grazed. Naturally, “tack” soon became vulgar slang for any coarse cheap food. However, the term “hard tack” only came into common sailor use around 1835, moving into mainstream American English during the Whaling boom of the 1840s. Ship’s bread was also sometimes known as “pantiles” by mid 19th century British sailors."

"Not only did the name change, but so did biscuit: Civil War hardtack actually was very different from War of 1812 hard bread. Just as military science morphed 1918’s “Trench Ration” into 1944’s “C-Rations,” so was 1812’s “ship’s bread” transformed 1861’s “hardtack”: By the Civil War, US issue “hardtack” (though officially still called “hard bread”) was smaller, square, and often of white flour—altogether different from the “hard bread” issued to British and American soldiers and Sailors in the War of 1812."

"Biscuits, Bugs, & Broadsides -- or -- Everything You Ever Wanted to Know About Hard Tack", Mark Hilliard, 1812 US Marines & Navy : http://www.1812usmarines.org/Biscuits,%20Bugs,%20&%20Broadside.doc

2007-05-09 13:09:49 · answer #1 · answered by Erik Van Thienen 7 · 0 0

Tea, hardtack, plumduff, pease, oatmeal, soup, fruits & vegetables, molassess, flour, jerky (dried meat called "horse junk").

"Portable soup" was to boil soup until all the water evaporated leaving behind a thick 'jello' type material, that way it could be transported about during rough weather without spilling it.

There was no refrigeration back in those days so everything was put into wooden barrels. After a year a barrel of butter was broken out and one sailor said it could pass for mild cheese.

2007-05-09 13:12:12 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

No, I just feel like a guy eating spinach. If it makes YOU feel like Popeye the Sailor Man, however, chances are, someone is slippin' a little something extra in your spinach. X-)

2016-05-19 03:02:39 · answer #3 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

fish?

2007-05-09 13:05:23 · answer #4 · answered by drea D 4 · 0 0

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