Red Coat or
Redcoat is a
historical term used to refer to
soldiers
of the
British Army because of the red
uniforms formerly worn by the majority of
regiments. From the late 17th century to
the early 20th century, the uniform of most British soldiers,
(apart from
artillery,
rifles and light
cavalry), included a
madder
red coat or coatee. From 1870 onwards, the more vivid shade of
scarlet was adopted for all ranks,
having previously been worn only by
officers,
sergeants
and all ranks of some cavalry regiments.
History

Evolution of the British infantry
uniform 1750 – 1835
The red
coat has evolved from being the British
infantryman's ordinary uniform to a garment retained only for
ceremonial purposes. Its official adoption dates from
February 1645, when the
Parliament
of England passed the
New Model
Army ordinance. The new English Army (there was no 'Britain'
until the union with Scotland in 1707) was formed of 22,000 men,
divided into 12 foot regiments of 1200 men each, 11 horse regiments
of 600 men each, one
dragoon regiment of
1000 men, and the
artillery, consisting of
50 guns. The infantry regiments wore coats of
Venetian red with white facings. However, the
uniforms of the
Yeoman of the
Guard (formed 1485) and the
Yeomen
Warders (also formed 1485) have traditionally been in Tudor red
and gold and indicate that the tradition of English Infantry
wearing red coats may long predate the formation of the
New Model Army.
Oliver Cromwell wrote to
Sir William Spring in 1643:
"I had rather have a plain,
russet-coated captain that knows what he
fights for, and loves what he knows, than that which you call a
gentleman and is nothing else" (
Oxford Dictionary of
Quotations)
The adoption and continuing use of red by most English soldiers
after the
Restoration (1660) was the
result of circumstances rather than policy, including the relative
cheapness of red dyes.There is no known basis for the
myth that red coats were favoured because they
did not show
blood stains. Blood does in fact
show on red clothing as a black stain.
From an early stage red coats were lined with contrasting colours
and turned out to provide distinctive regimental 'facings' (lapels,
cuffs and collars). Examples were blue for the
8th Regiment of Foot,
scarlet for the
33rd Regiment of
Foot, yellow for the
44th
Regiment of Foot and
buff for the
3rd Regiment of Foot. An
attempt at standardisation was made following the
Childers Reforms of 1881, with English and
Welsh regiments having white, Scottish yellow, Irish green and
Royal regiments dark blue. However some regiments were subsequently
able to obtain the reintroduction of historic facing colours that
had been uniquely theirs.
British soldiers fought in scarlet
tunics for
the last time at the
Battle of
Gennis on 30 December 1885.
Even after the adoption of
khaki service dress
in 1902, most British
infantry and some
cavalry regiments continued to wear scarlet
tunics on parade and for off-duty "walking out dress", until the
outbreak of the
First World War in
1914.
Scarlet tunics ceased to be general issue upon British mobilisation
in August 1914. The Brigade of Guards resumed wearing their scarlet
full dress in 1920 but for the remainder of the Army red coats were
only authorised for wear by regimental bands and officers in
mess dress or on certain limited social
or ceremonial occasions (notably attendance at Court functions or
weddings). The reason for not generally reintroducing the
distinctive full dress was primarily financial, as the scarlet
cloth requires expensive
cochineal
dye.
As late as 1980, consideration was given to the reintroduction of
scarlet as a replacement for the dark blue "No. 1 dress" and khaki
"No. 2 dress" of the modern
British
Army, using cheaper and fadeless chemical dyes instead of
cochineal. Surveys of serving soldiers' opinion showed little
support for the idea and it was shelved.
Modern use in Commonwealth armies
In the modern British army, scarlet is still worn by the
Foot Guards, the
Life Guards, and by some
regimental bands or
drummers for ceremonial
purposes.
Officers and
NCOs of those regiments which
previously wore red retain scarlet as the colour of their "mess" or
formal evening jackets.
Some regiments turn out small detachments,
such as colour guards, in scarlet full dress at their own expense.
e.g. the Yorkshire
regiment before amalgamation.The Royal Gibraltar
Regiment
has a scarlet tunic in its winter
dress.
Scarlet is also retained for some full dress, military band or mess
uniforms in the modern armies of a number of the countries that
made up the former British Empire.
These include the Australian, Jamaican
, New Zealand
, Fijian, Canadian
, Kenyan
, Ghanaian
, Indian
, Singaporean
and Pakistani
armies. The Royal Canadian Mounted Police
also wear a Red Serge
jacket, based on a British military pattern tunic.
Red Coat as a symbol
The epithet "redcoats" is familiar throughout much of the former
British Empire, even though this colour was by no means exclusive
to the British Army.
The entire Danish
Army wore red coats up to 1848 and particular units in the
German
, French
, Austro-Hungarian, Russian
, Bulgarian
and Romanian
armies retained red uniforms until 1914 or
later. Amongst other diverse examples, Spanish
hussars, Japanese
army and United States Marine Corps
bandsmen, and Serbian
generals had
red tunics as part of their gala or court dress. However the
extensive use of this colour by British, Indian and other Imperial
soldiers over a period of nearly three hundred years made red
uniform a virtual icon of the
British
Empire. The significance of military red as a national symbol
was endorsed by King
William IV (reigned
1830-1837) when light dragoons and
lancers
had scarlet jackets substituted for their previous dark blue,
hussars adopted red pelisses and even the
Royal Navy were obliged to adopt red facings
instead of white. Most of these changes were reversed under
Queen Victoria
(1837-1901).
A red coat and black tricorne remains part of the ceremonial and
out-of-hospital dress for in-pensioners at the Royal Hospital
Chelsea
.
American War of Independence
In the
United
States
, "Redcoat" is associated with British soldiers who
fought against the colonists during the American Revolution. It does not
appear to have been a contemporary expression - accounts of the
time usually refer to "Regulars" or "the King's men". Abusive
nicknames included "bloody backs" (in a
reference to both the colour of their coats and the use of
flogging as a means of punishment for military
offences) and "lobsters" (most notably in Boston around the time of
the
Boston Massacre) often
anachronistically changed in later books to "lobsterbacks".
It was not until the 1880s that the term "redcoat" as a common
vernacular expression for the British
soldier appears in literary sources such as
Kipling's poem, "Tommy" - indicating some
degree of popular usage in Britain itself.
However an isolated earlier use of this term relating to the
American War of Independence appears in “The Riflemen’s Song at
Bennington,” an old folk song that supposedly goes back to the
1770s.The first verse is:"Why come ye hither, Redcoats, your mind
what madness fills?In our valleys there is danger, and there's
danger on our hills.Oh, hear ye not the singing of the bugle wild
and free?And soon you'll know the ringing of the rifle from the
tree".
Rationale for red
From the modern perspective, the retention of a highly conspicuous
colour such as red for active service appears inexplicable,
regardless of how striking it may have looked on the parade ground.
It should be noted, however, that in the days of the
musket (a
weapon of limited
range and accuracy) and
black powder,
battle field visibility was quickly obscured by clouds of smoke.
Bright colours enhanced morale and provided a means of
distinguishing friend from foe without significantly adding risk.
Furthermore, the vegetable dyes used until the 19th century would
fade over time to a pink or ruddy-brown, so on a long campaign in a
hot climate the colour was less conspicuous than the modern scarlet
shade would be.
As noted above, no historical basis can be found for the suggestion
that the colour red was favoured because of the supposedly
demoralising effect of blood stains on a uniform of a lighter
colour. In his book "British Military Uniforms" (Hamylyn Publishing
Group 1968), the military historian W.Y. Carman traces in
considerable detail the slow evolution of red as the English
soldier's colour, from the Tudors to the Stuarts. The reasons that
emerge are a mixture of financial (cheaper red, russet or crimson
dyes), cultural (a growing popular sense that red was the national
English colour) and simple chance (an order of 1594 is that coats
"be of such colours as you can best provide").
During the English Civil War red dyes were imported in large
quantities for use by units and individuals of both sides. The
ready availability of this pigment made it popular for military
clothing and the dying process required for red involved only one
stage. Other colours involved the mixing of dyes in two stages and
accordingly involved greater expense. In financial terms the only
cheaper alternative was the grey-white of undyed wool - an option
favoured by the French, Austrian, Spanish and other Continental
armies . The formation of the first English standing army (
Oliver Cromwell's
New Model Army in 1645) saw red clothing as
the standard dress. As Carman comments (p24) "The red coat was now
firmly established as the sign of an Englishman".
High visibility was not considered a military disadvantage until
the general adoption of
rifles in the 1850s,
followed by
smokeless powder after
1880. The value of drab clothing was quickly recognised by the
British Army, who introduced khaki drill for Indian and colonial
warfare from the mid-19th century on. As part of a series of
reforms following the
Second Boer
War, (which had been fought in this inconspicuous clothing of
Indian origin) a darker
khaki serge was
adopted in 1902 for service dress in Britain itself. From then on,
the red coat continued as a dress item, only, retained for reasons
both of national sentiment and its value in recruiting. On the
whole, the British military authorities showed more foresight in
their balancing of emotional and practical considerations than did
their French counterparts, who retained highly visible blue coats
and red trousers for active service until several months into
World War I.
Material used
Whether scarlet or red, the uniform coat has historically been made
of wool with a lining of linen to give shape to the garment. The
modern scarlet wool is supplied by "Abimelech Hainsworth" and is
much lighter than the traditional material, which was intended for
hard wear on active service.
Other military usage
Members
of the United States Marine
Band wear red uniforms for performances at the White House
and elsewhere. This is a rare survival of
the common 18th-century practice of having military bandsmen wear
coats in reverse colours to the rest of a given unit (U.S. Marines
wear blue/black tunics with red facings so U.S. Marine bandsmen
wear red tunics with blue/black facings).
Detachments from some units of the
Canadian Forces wear ceremonial scarlet
uniforms for special occasions or parades.
In addition the
scarlet uniform is the ceremonial dress for cadets at the Royal
Military College of Canada
.
The
Brazilian Marine Corps
also wear the red coat as a part of their ceremonial uniform.
The combined Danish-Norwegian army wore red uniforms from the
17th-century until Norwegian independence in 1814. Most DanishArmy
infantry, cavalry and artillery regiments continued to wear red
coats until they were replaced by dark blue service tunics in 1848.
The modern Royal Life Guard of Denmark continues to wear the
historic red on special ceremonial occasions
References
Sources
- Barnes, Major R. M.. "History of the Regiments & Uniforms
of the British Army". Seeley Service & Co Ltd 1951
- Barthorp, Michael. "British
Infantry Uniforms Since 1660". Blandford Press 1982 Ltd 1982. ISBN
1 85079 009 4
- Carman, W.Y.. "British Military Uniforms". Hamlyn Publishing
Group 1968.
- Lawson, C.P. "A History of the Uniforms of the British Army".
Kaye & Ward Ltd 1967.