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Thread: 42 rhr kit

  1. #1
    Join Date
    12th February 11
    Location
    michigan
    Posts
    48

    42 rhr kit



    1763 kit

  2. #2
    Join Date
    5th November 08
    Location
    Marion, NC
    Posts
    4,192
    Quote Originally Posted by clan campbell View Post


    1763 kit
    You sure?
    --dbh

    When given a choice, most people will choose.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    12th February 11
    Location
    michigan
    Posts
    48
    did the picture show up? and yes im sure

  4. #4
    Join Date
    29th March 11
    Location
    Kettering, OH
    Posts
    476
    No picture that I can see.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    12th February 11
    Location
    michigan
    Posts
    48

  6. #6
    Join Date
    12th February 11
    Location
    michigan
    Posts
    48
    For so long as one hundred men remain alive,
    we shall never under any conditions submit to the
    domination of the English.

  7. #7
    Join Date
    12th February 11
    Location
    michigan
    Posts
    48
    For so long as one hundred men remain alive,
    we shall never under any conditions submit to the
    domination of the English.

  8. #8
    Join Date
    18th October 09
    Location
    Orange County California
    Posts
    2,110
    All I see are X's.

    Is it like this?


  9. #9
    Join Date
    3rd June 09
    Location
    Aberdeen NJ
    Posts
    206
    #6 looks like Davidson
    ~Kyle

  10. #10
    Join Date
    11th July 05
    Location
    Alexandria VA
    Posts
    92
    OC Richard's graphic is an illustration from Liliane and Fred Funcken's book, British Infantry Uniforms From Marlborough to Wellington, London: Ward Lock Limited, 1976, of which I have a copy. It was published at a time when interest in the 18th c. British Army was revving up in the US (due to Bicentennial reenactments), and accurate illustrated publications about Army uniforms were few and far between. The Highland soldiers illustrated feature a few idiosyncracies, such as the 19th c. thistle-shaped dirk handles depicted on 1740's Highland soldiers, but they are, overall, fairly accurate depictions.

    I liked the book because it contained regiment-by-regiment illustrations of the evolution of regimental lace from 1742, 1751 and 1768 (which last continued in use until the 1830's, when regimental lace was abolished in favor of plain white lace. There is also a page depicting in color the cloth grenadier mitre caps of each regiment that existed in 1751.
    Semper Fidelis

    Bibamus moriendum est

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