mulceber
Moderator
The AN-J-3A began production in 1943 and its production continued all the way into the second quarter of 1949, based upon Federal Register records. Contracts were awarded to nine companies: American Sportswear, Arnoff Shoe Co., Bogen & Tenenbaum, Burjac Sportswear, Gordon & Ferguson, H&L Block, L.W. Foster, Monarch, and Willis & Geiger. Moore notes, that “[w]hile H&L Block made a good number of M-422A jackets, it is thought that they made very few AN-6552 jackets”; thus making the H&L Block AN-6552s amongst the rarest of an already scarce group of jackets.
Besides the major Navy bureaus there were purchasing offices and base installations that also procured clothing, such as “N288s” the prefix used by the Aviation Supply Office (ASO) in Philadelphia, between Feb 1942 and May 1945, during which period it was jointly controlled by the Bureau of Aeronautics and Supplies & Accounts. The N383s prefix was used by the ASO for the last contract listed in 1949.
The jacket labels used either Spec No. AN-J-3A or its associated Drawing No. AN6552. Why? It is a joint Army/Navy jacket and the Army Air Force normally orders items from Supply using the Drawing number, just as seen on the A-2 labels with Drawing number 30-1415, while the Navy typically used the Spec number on the label. (It does not matter if the Army Air Force ordered any AN-3-JA jackets or not, but as a joint effort they had to account for both branches.) Of the sixteen contracts eight are labeled AN-6552 and eight are labeled AN-J-3A. Per the AN-J-3A specification, nylon thread is used for the jacket and cotton thread for the buttons.
Besides the major Navy bureaus there were purchasing offices and base installations that also procured clothing, such as “N288s” the prefix used by the Aviation Supply Office (ASO) in Philadelphia, between Feb 1942 and May 1945, during which period it was jointly controlled by the Bureau of Aeronautics and Supplies & Accounts. The N383s prefix was used by the ASO for the last contract listed in 1949.
The jacket labels used either Spec No. AN-J-3A or its associated Drawing No. AN6552. Why? It is a joint Army/Navy jacket and the Army Air Force normally orders items from Supply using the Drawing number, just as seen on the A-2 labels with Drawing number 30-1415, while the Navy typically used the Spec number on the label. (It does not matter if the Army Air Force ordered any AN-3-JA jackets or not, but as a joint effort they had to account for both branches.) Of the sixteen contracts eight are labeled AN-6552 and eight are labeled AN-J-3A. Per the AN-J-3A specification, nylon thread is used for the jacket and cotton thread for the buttons.