Mk 1 Brodie helmet.
This helmet came into my collection via my uncle, who picked this up in his travels here in the US. It was first thought to be a US Model 1917 helmet from WW1, but on closer inspection, it turned out to be British. The two WW1 Brodie Helmets, British and American, are nearly identical. Only a few very minor details set them apart from each other.
These original British Brodie helmets were designated the Mk 1 Steel Helmet, and nicknamed after the inventor who designed and patented them in 1915, "John Leopold Brodie". Production of the Mk 1 Brodie helmets began in 1915 and continued through the end of the war.
British soldiers in the trenches. |
With this in mind, my helmet could just as easily have been issued to some of the first US soldiers in France, or it could have been issued to a British soldier. The fact that it was picked up in the US almost 90 years after the war, might indicate that it came back over with the US soldier it was issued to, but we will never know for sure.
My particular helmet is in pretty good condition considering it went through one World War and has survived for 100 years!
My helmet is stamped H.V. / 349 on the underside of the front rim. The "H" indicates that the helmet was made by Hutton and Sons Ltd. of Sheffield (they produced helmets beginning in 1915). The "V" stands for the steel supplier, Vickers Ltd. of Sheffield (they began supplying steel in 1916). The "349" is the heat treating lot number of the steel used to press the helmet.
One of the easiest features that distinguishes a British Helmet from an American helmet, is how the chinstrap bail is attached. The British helmets used a spit pin rivet, and the American Helmets used a solid, peened rivet. My helmet has the distinctive British split pin.
The glossy finish is from the varnish I used to seal the old asbestos! |
The remainder of the liner was sewn from a coated "oil cloth" with a ring of mesh support netting.
The chinstrap is leather with a stamped sliding adjuster. The American helmets used a cast sliding adjuster.
On the backside of the oilskin liner, there is a faint printed area in red ink that is no longer readable. This is where the information about the "Brodie Helmet" is printed. This red printed label is only present on the British helmet liners. This is what the printed label looks like, if not faded out:
BRODIE’S STEEL HELMET
Registered No. 081,990.
WAR OFFICE PATTERN
PATENT No. 11803/15
Registered No. 081,990.
WAR OFFICE PATTERN
PATENT No. 11803/15
The faded red printed label on the backside of the oilskin liner. |
And now we've come to the traditional Photo Album! Enjoy!
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