A field desk is a portable desk which is meant to be used in rear areas near a battlefield and moved around rather frequently in difficult conditions. It is in contrast to the campaign desk, which is usually heavier and meant for areas further in the rear.

Field desk in Vietnam, Operation Double Eagle, 1966
World War I field desk

The field desk is both an antique and a modern desk form. The antique form is usually made of fine woods and brass fittings. The smaller versions can often be confused with the civilian writing slope. This is quite understandable, because during the 18th and 19th centuries they were often used interchangeably. There is a wide variety of antique field desks, ranging from small suitcase-sized ones to fairly big chests, like the one general Thomas J. "Stonewall" Jackson used during the American Civil War in the United States. Until recently, General Jackson's desk was exhibited in the museum of the Virginia Military Institute (VMI). At one point, VMI gave a licence to a furniture manufacturer to produce copies of the desk, available on the web.

The field desk was a civil war officers "office in a box." This portable, upright desk has a drop-down front used for a writing surface.

The most common modern field desk is made of resistant plastic composites and steel or aluminium. It is built to NATO standards or to the standards of national armies. There are several variants, but the most common one is a nearly cubic chest whose lid is removed to expose internal drawers and then reattached on the side to serve as a desktop.

See also

edit

References

edit
  • Christopher Schwarz. "Field Desk". Campaign Furniture. Lost Art Press. 2014. Chapter 9. Pages 214 to 233. See also pages 28, 33, 159, 309, 310 and 314.
  • Nicholas A Brawer. British Campaign Furniture: Elegance Under Canvas, 1740-1914. Harry N Abrams. 2001.
  • "Company Field Desk". Company Administration. Special Regulations No 57. 1919. Section 10. Pages 117 to 123.
  • "Company Field Desks". Annual Reports of the War Department. 1906. p 142