Confederate generals such as Robert E. Lee and Stonewall Jackson were used to sell a wide range of consumer goods at the turn of the twentieth century throughout the South and beyond. Interestingly, this G.E. advertisement appeared in the New York Tribune. Let’s hear it for the cultural reach of the Confederate body servant.
Robert E. Lee and his Body Servant Sell Washing Machines
Civil War Memory has moved to Substack! Don’t miss a single post. Subscribe below.
Aside from the obvious–seriously???—I remember that Emory Thomas makes much of Lee’s fixation with getting socks from home. But I didn’t realize that it was a common enough trope in 1920 for an ad man to use it.
Oh, and here’s a photo of a pair of Lee’s socks: http://tinyurl.com/jbp39gk
He certainly had clean socks.
“But I didn’t realize that it was a common enough trope in 1920 for an ad man to use it.”
Recall that this is right after the Great War, when the term “trenchfoot” came into the lexicon. The importance of having clean socks in the field probably struck a chord in 1920 that it wouldn’t have in (say) 1910.
And don’t forget this Bill Mauldin classic from WWII.
Excellent point.
:O