The small (c. 3cm tall) clear glass Tabasco Brand Pepper Sauce bottles
found in contemporary military bivouac areas are from MRE (Meals Ready
to Eat) packages, and are placed there under a contract existing between
the Tabasco Pepper Sauce Company and the Department of Defense. I
believe they have been in MREs since soon after MREs replaced C-rations,
perhaps around 1980. I'm not sure if they are still part of MRE
packages today, or if they are in all MREs, or only some MREs.
Information on Tabasco Brand Pepper Sauce bottles is contained in:
Orser, Charles E., Jr. and David W. Babson
1990 Tabasco Brand Pepper Sauce Bottles from Avery Island,
Louisiana. Historical Archaeology 24(3):107-114.
My apologies, but without a copy of this article to hand, I can't
remember whether or not we discussed the small MRE bottles, which rather
post-date the 19th-century origin of both Tabasco Brand Pepper Sauce and
its patented bottles.
D. Babson.
-----Original Message-----
From: HISTORICAL ARCHAEOLOGY [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of
George Myers
Sent: Friday, October 21, 2005 9:30 PM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: Frozen Dead Soldier at Sequoia National Park
And for an extra $50 a month! They apparently also help with
non-military explosive situations. The officers I spoke with at Fort
Drum, back before the relocation of the US Army 10th Mountain Division
from Camp Hale, Colorado to its new permanent base outside Watertown,
NY (where a new highway will stretch from there to Calais, Maine it
was announced the other day) related of a case where a man swore he
had buried a case of dynamite in an excavation next to his former
wife's house, and they were called to assist, turned out to be a
story.
The Tank Museum, in Southold, NY ("Tanks for the Memories" bumper
sticker) out on the North Fork of Long Island, on the way to Orient
Point and the ferries to New London, Connecticut, I was told, will
take any "illegal" or dangerous weapons or ordnance, "no questions
asked" as they are licensed by the Department of Defense. I remember
some celebrity in trouble for having a cannon, I think Clint Eastwood
might have used it in a bank robbery flick. A local State hospital had
a decommissioned tank they buried when they shut down, used as a
bulldozer, dug its own "grave". A local machine shop I once worked for
got it in return for removing it I think and was restoring some of it
to working order, having the means. It was one of the Sherman's I
think, that are rare, one at Fort Drum, NY I recall. I am glad we have
a EOD, they say they started with training with the UXO (?) in
Britain.
George Myers
(last thing I found was a smoke bomb (again?) at West Point a couple
of years ago in Hurricane Floyd's wake of destruction there for a
survey with Panamerican Consultants, flagged of course and duly
notified the authorities). How about those tiny Tabasco bottles? TPQ
on them?
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