While I was in Australia I took an extra week and a bit and stayed with my siblings. At my sister’s place I managed to get these guys painted. This unit has an interesting provenance. The First Corps Minis came from a Facebook marketplace purchase of a bunch of ACW figures here in New Zealand. I wanted to make a firing line but only had a few firing poses, and I think both of them had broken muskets. The commander of the unit is the First Corps character figure of General Heth – something I did not know until I checked through the First Corps website. I was talking to my old mate Paul Crouch and he said he had a bunch of spare Dixon minis. He offered them to me and I gladly accepted and they were posted to my sister’s house in Sydney. So, Paul, thank you for the contribution. They work pretty well mixed in with the First Corps figures. Both ranges share the giant hands characteristic!

These were once again painted using speed paints over a white dry brushed onto black undercoat. Paul even undercoated them for me. The unit was based when I returned to New Zealand. I had no standard bearers but converted two artillerymen that were in the First Corps bunch I picked up. Replaced rammers and spikes with North Star 100mm brass spears, clipped down a bit. These things are razor sharp and I have impaled my hands picking them up about fifty times when doing this unit. Turns out I am in fact, bleeding for the Confederacy. I was pretty pleased with how the standards came out. GMB flags with some paint added.

3 responses to “18th Mississippi Regiment (Dixon and 1st Corps Miniatures)”

  1. Lovely looking unit. Steel spears look great until you actually game with them. Learned that with my Dacian army.

    Like

  2. That seems like a very productive holiday Brian. I had to shift my painting stuff upstairs while I kept an eye on the dog recently and found I had to keep ducking back to my hobby room every half hour, so you are obviously far more organised than I am.

    Like

    1. I only have to pivot my chair in my work study 90 degrees to be at my painting table 🙂

      Like

Leave a reply to plutarch64 Cancel reply

Trending