M1917 US AEF Camouflage Helmet

83rd Infantry Division

The helmet featured here is a nice original U.S. WWI M1917 Doughboy Helmet With Camouflage Panel Paint with Unique Artwork and a hand painted 83rd Infantry Divison insignia. This is a fantastic genuine Great War hand painted camouflage helmet, unfortunately, there is no liner. Helmet features original period colored panel camouflage paint in various shades of green, brown, blue, yellow, red and orange.
The helmet is stamped with serial number 'ZC222', ZC-Marks belong to Edward G. Budd Manufacturing Co. - Philadelphia - Pennsylvania.

Helmet
Helmet

Brodie steel helmet with German-style camouflage. The helmet has been painted most probably after the war. The best feature is the 83rd Infantry Division emblem painted on the front side, adding a beautiful even more personal touch to the helmet.

M-1917 Helmet

The American Army entered Europe with no helmet or design they could call their own. Many American soldiers were isued the British Model 1915 Mark I helmet or the "Brodie" helmet. Some 400.000 British Mark I helmets were issued to American troops already in Europe. The American M1917 helmet was a direct copy of the Britisch Mark I. These helmets were made under contract by American firms in the fall of 1917. By the fall of 1918 some two million helmets were made in US factories. The M1917 helmet had its own characteristics, making it unique from the British model. The M1917 helmet was painted olive drab, sawdust was then applied, and the helmet was once again painted with olive drab. The sawdust was to cut down on helmet glare.

Did Doughboys Wear Camouflage Helmets at the Front?

It’s a well-known fact that thousands of American Doughboys brought back souvenir helmets, many of which were decorated with camouflage paint schemes that were painted after the singing of the Armistice took place on November 11, 1918. But did any of the two million plus Doughboys who served with the AEF in France actually wear camouflage painted helmets at the front or in combat? This question has been debated by collectors and historians for decades. The overwhelming consensus has been that camouflage helmets were never worn at the front.