Protective leather and chain mail mask

Made:
1917-1918 in United Kingdom
Protective mask, leather and chain mail, worn by tank crews Protective mask, leather and chain mail, worn by tank crews Protective mask, leather and chain mail, worn by tank crews

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Protective mask, leather and chain mail, worn by tank crews
Science Museum Group
© The Board of Trustees of the Science Museum, London.

Protective mask, leather and chain mail, worn by tank crews
Science Museum Group
© The Board of Trustees of the Science Museum, London.

Protective mask, leather and chain mail, worn by tank crews
Science Museum Group
© The Board of Trustees of the Science Museum, London.

Protective mask, commonly referred to as a ‘splatter’ or ‘splash’ mask, with leather and chain mail face covering and slitted metal eye shields, worn by tank crews during the First World War, British, 1917-1918.

The industrialised weaponry of the First World War (1914-1918) could take a terrible toll on the bodies of those who fought in it. Faces were particularly vulnerable and soldiers dreaded serious facial wounds. Despite advances in practice, the treatments offered by the then fledgling discipline of plastic surgery could often provide only limited results.

British personnel manning the early armoured tanks increasingly appearing on the Western Front battlefields of France and Belgium from late 1916 were also in danger of receiving facial injuries. Although tanks were encased in thick armour plate, the impact from high explosives could cause a spray of ricocheting hot metal fragments within the confined space of the vehicles. This so-called ‘splatter’ or ‘splash’ mask, with slitted metal eye shields and leather and chain mail face covering was designed to protect the faces of those British tank crews.

Details

Category:
Therapeutics
Collection:
Sir Henry Wellcome's Museum Collection
Object Number:
A75825
Materials:
mask, leather, fittings, iron and straps, canvas
Measurements:
overall: 143 mm x 160 mm x 60 mm, .29 kg
type:
mask
credit:
Ogden, J.R.