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Cover Page
MENU
Foreword
Introduction
BADGES
Metal
Cloth
NPS Associated
ORNAMENTATION
Arrowhead Patch
Belt
Buttons
Cap Insignia
Collar Ornaments
Hat
Hatband & Straps
Law Enforcement Insignia
Length-of-Service Insignia
Nametags
Sleeve Brassards
Tie Ornaments & Pins
Miscellaneous
Conclusion
Photofile
Appendix
Bibliography
Notes
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BADGES and
UNIFORM ORNAMENTATION
of the NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
ORNAMENTATION: Buttons
U.S. Army buttons were doubtless used occasionally by
rangers prior to the introduction of civilian uniforms. The first button
known to have been used by a ranger on a uniform in the Interior
Department's "park service" is the 1907 Forest Service button. This
button shows up in a photograph of Karl Keller, a ranger in Sequoia
National Park, taken in 1910. It has a pine tree in the center, with the
words Forest on top and Service underneath.
In 1911 the first uniforms were officially
authorized, sanctioned would be a better word, for use by rangers in the
park service. These uniforms were purchased from Parker, Bridget &
Company of Washington, D.C. [36] The matter
of special park service buttons was broached, but the department
concluded that: "inasmuch as we would have to have a die made for the
special buttons for the park service which would cost about $28, we had
best drop the matter of the special buttons until the future of the
national park service is definitely determined. If the Bureau of
National Parks is created, another design of button might be necessary.
The uniforms are now equipped with United States Army buttons." [38]
That winter, Sigmund Eisner of Red Bank, New Jersey,
began negotiating with the department to furnish new uniforms for the
park rangers. In his correspondence. he offered to have "buttons made to
any design for the service for which they are intended. I would keep
these buttons in stock subject to your orders." [39] At a subsequent meeting with Chief Clerk
Clement Ucker in Washington in December or early January 1912, Eisner
was apparently shown one of the park service badges as a possible
pattern for the new buttons. [39]
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Karl Keller, c.1910.
Keller was a ranger at Sequoia National Park (1908-1917?). His uniform
has 1907 Forest Service buttons on it. Also note the Army officer's U.S.
on his collar and the sprig of Sequoia on his sleeve. Photograph given
to Lawrence F. Cook (NPS) by his daughter, Erma Tobin. NPSHPC-Hammond
Photo-HFC#WASO D726A
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First authorized National Park
Service uniform, Glacier National Park, c.1911. This uniform,
made by Parker, Bridget & Co., Washington, DC, was delivered with
1910 U.S. Army buttons on it. Man on left is wearing a Model 1910 US
Army uniform, minus military insignia. NPSHPC-1915 Anderson photo
album GLAC/HPF#9638
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Soon after the interview, Assistant Secretary Arno
Thompsom wrote Eisner requesting drawings of the proposed uniforms,
together with "advice as to whether bronze buttons bearing the eagle
design surrounded by the words "National Park Service, Department of the
Interior," as used upon the park ranger service badge shown you, will be
purchased and placed upon the uniforms." Eisner agreed to this and
stated that he would "have die made for these buttons in all
sizes."badges as a possible pattern for the new buttons. [40]
Subsequently, not only were these buttons used on the
uniforms made by Eisner, but the department also purchased them for
uniforms the rangers had made by other manufacturers and to replace
those lost through attrition. Even though the rangers had to furnish
their own uniforms, the buttons were given without charge.
These buttons were stocked and sold to the department
by Eisner. The early buttons were made by the Waterbury Button Company
of Waterbury, Connecticut, but were back-stamped SIGMUND EISNER/RED
BANK, N.J. Later buttons carry the Waterbury back stamp. As stated
above, they were modeled after the 1906 badge and were finished in what
was classified as a "bronze" finish. This appears to be a sort of heavy
coating. This coating was the subject of much controversy in later years
because of its chipping and flaking.
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Walter Fry, 1920.
Fry was Ranger-in-Charge at Sequoia in 1911 when he wrote the letter
that supposedly credited him with suggesting the badge be used as a
model for the new NPS button. But this appears to be a misunderstanding
of his intent. He merely wanted to be sure his new (1911) uniform had
the Army buttons with the eagle instead of the Forest Service buttons he
had previously worn. This image was taken while he was guiding the House
Appropriations Committee during its visit to Sequoia. He is wearing the
1920 NPS uniform with Army wrap-leggings. NPSHPC-J. W. Good
Album-HFC#92-40-1
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The 1926 Uniform Committee (to report at the 1927
meeting) voted four to two to change the uniform coat buttons from
bronze to gilt. They believed that gilt buttons would set off the
forestry-colored cloth to a greater advantage and added "distinctiveness
and snappiness" to the uniform. This recommendation was included in the
proposed changes for the new uniform regulations. Upon reviewing the
committee's suggested regulation changes, Horace Albright, then
Yellowstone superintendent and assistant director (field), found several
of the proposed revisions "particularly objectionable." Among them was
the change to gilt buttons. He recommended that the current regulations
be continued in force for 1927 and that the revisions be submitted to
the superintendents for their comments. [45]
Albright must have done his work well, for nothing else was heard of
"gilt" buttons.
Complaints were still being heard about the lacquered
finish on the buttons flaking and coming off. In the mid-1930s Waterbury
started using an "acid treated" process. This insured that the button
was clean and the resulting chemical coloring was bonded securely to the
metal, obviating the use of heavy lacquers. This process is still used
on the National Park Service buttons today. [46]
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Walter Fry, the ranger in charge at Sequoia National
Park, has long been credited with suggesting that the "National Park
Service" badge be used as the model for this button. This may or may not
be partially correct. In a letter he wrote to the Secretary of the
Interior requesting authority to purchase "Forestry green winter
uniforms." he also requested that they be "equipped with the bronze Army
buttons, bearing design of eagle, same as our badges now worn, instead
of the Forest Service button." [41] The
rangers at Sequoia National Park had worn the forest green uniform with
Forest Service buttons since 1909, and Fry probably only wanted the new
uniforms to have "bronze Army buttons" like the new uniforms then being
made. It is possible that his statement "bearing design of eagle, same a
sour badges now worn" may have influenced the department when they
considered a design for the new buttons, but there is no documentation
to substantiate this.
In a letter dated May 14, 1915, Mark Daniels, general
superintendent of national parks (a position roughly equivalent to the
later director), proposed that a "bright" button replace the "bronze"
buttons then being used on the service uniforms. [42] He included a sample button with his request,
which the department forwarded to Sigmund Eisner, requesting prices.
Eisner responded with prices of $5.00 and $2.50 per gross for large and
small buttons respectively, whereupon the department ordered a gross of
each. [43]
Delivery lagged for months, with the department
requesting the buttons, and Eisner promising them any day, until finally
in October he wrote the secretary that he was unable to make the
manufacturer (Waterbury) understand what was requested and needed
another sample. [44] This request was
forwarded to Daniels, but the records are mute as to the disposition of
the matter. There is no evidence that these buttons were ever made.
Almost all 2-piece buttons of this type are made of
brass and "bright" was a trade term meaning polished brass with a
lacquer finish. There is a brass button in the NPS History Collection
that was never plated, but it is without provenance.

Mark Roy Daniels, general
superintendent of parks, 1914-1915. Daniels designed a new
NPS uniform in 1915 and wanted to replace the bronze, Army style buttons
with "bright" (unplated) ones, but a series of mishaps and the formation
of the new bureau cancelled this out. Portland Journal, 15 April,
1915
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