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Victorian Piper's Kit on Campaign: Boer War Zulu War, etc.
I have had a question concerning what kit Regimental Pipers wore during the Boer War. I have collected sources on this topic, as I am a Piper, and have put together living history impressions of Regimental Pipers in several eras. The first order of business is to define the "load bearing" equipment issued to troops in the two conflicts discussed below, (1) the Zulu War, 1879 et. seq. and (2) the Boer War, 1899-1902. In the nomenclature of the era, it was called "White Equipment". Then, we can look at what Pipers wore.
For the Zulu War, troops were issued the 1870 pattern White Equipment, called "Valise Equipment", as the piece that performed the function of a backpack was actually...a Valise.
Here is an illustration of such a set from Pierre Turner's "Soldiers' Accoutrements of the British Army 1750-1900" :
https://i36.photobucket.com/albums/e...ps0qc2xcks.jpg
Later in the 19th Century, beginning in the 1890's, the 1870 Pattern Valise Equipment was superseded by something called "Slade Wallace Equipment" after the men who developed it and convinced the British Army to adopt it. That equipment is also illustrated in Turner's work:
https://i36.photobucket.com/albums/e...pshxwci29h.jpg
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Pipers DID wear the White Equipment issued in each conflict discussed here, but they also sometime wore a black version, which better matched the traditional black Piper's waist belt. Here is are photos of Black Watch Pipers of the era, and in the close ups you can see that the shoulder straps of their "White Equipment" are, in fact, black.
https://i36.photobucket.com/albums/e...psez5vgbic.jpg
And the close up:
https://i36.photobucket.com/albums/e...psi3ydmbae.jpg
https://i36.photobucket.com/albums/e...psufo6owki.jpg
And the second close Up:
https://i36.photobucket.com/albums/e...psfg2u7njg.jpg
Seaforth Highlander Piper with Black Equipment:
https://i36.photobucket.com/albums/e...psymfy3bd8.jpg
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Some of you have been fans of the Osprey series of illustrated books about military subjects, a noted scholar of the British Army in African campaigns, Ian Knight, co-authored one in which an illustration shows a Piper's version of the kit we are discussing:
https://i36.photobucket.com/albums/e...psqvvjj3qk.jpg
And the close up:
https://i36.photobucket.com/albums/e...psyledtmai.jpg
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Pipers 1st Bn Argyll & Sutherland Highlanders Boer War 1899-1902
Here are some photos of the 1st Bn Argylls Pipers in the Boer War:
https://i36.photobucket.com/albums/e...ps2n3eqfok.jpg
Here is a watercolour by famous military artist W. Skeotch Cummings of the 1st Bn Argylls Pipes and Drums later in war, on the march across the Veldt. The photos that follow are from the Argyll Regimental Photo Album, and were very likely Cummings' source for his watercolour.
https://i36.photobucket.com/albums/e...ps4q35lule.jpg
https://i36.photobucket.com/albums/e...psqogd5yut.jpg
https://i36.photobucket.com/albums/e...psgvtej0h4.jpg
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Boer War
My dad’s uncle died in the Boer war. I think he may have been in the Gordon’s, however I can’t tell as the only picture of him he is wearing a slouch hat and a kilt apron. Looks like the troops in one of the pictures.
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Those are some great references, thanks!
So interesting that they would blacken the ordinary leather equipment and adapt it to the wide piper's dirk belts.
I suppose the equipment was probably issued buff, and it was up to the soldiers to pipeclay it white, or in the case of the pipers polish it black.
The only image of piper-in-khaki I had studied was this group of photos taken in the Boer War period of members of the Black Watch, widely used for post cards at the time.
https://i.imgur.com/Jare1Tg.jpg
In it you can see the piper wearing his ordinary Full Dress dirk, dirk belt, and crossbelt, which doesn't seem practical for campaign.
(For comparison the Black Watch piper's ordinary uniform, with dark green doublet)
https://i.imgur.com/hCYhEcG.jpg
BTW here's your photo of the Argylls pipers reduced to fit the size of the page here a bit better
https://i.imgur.com/pKQ9c1o.jpg
Wow look how open they're playing "C"! The PM was one of THOSE guys like "I want to see those fingers come all the way off!"
And no "open C" in that band!
Oh, and speaking of the Argylls this shows a piper wearing the ordinary field equipment rather than the elaborate wide black leather piper's belts
https://i.imgur.com/GenSRt1.jpg
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About Osprey books, the text and photos are great, but some of the illustrators were horrible, and obviously had no knowledge of what they were illustrating.
The Osprey illustration you post there is very nice, by somebody familiar with the equipment and uniforms.
I did a thread a while back reviewing the illustrations of Highlanders in various Osprey publications.
I start with the good, then detail numerous inaccuracies in the bad ones.
http://www.xmarksthescot.com/forum/f...-errors-79267/
One error I was able to trace back to its probable source, an old post card showing a Black Watch piper, a black & white photo that had been incorrectly hand-coloured.
I can't find that post card now, and it's disappeared from that old thread, but here's a different incorrectly hand-coloured post card of a Black Watch piper.
This one is fairly good except as is so often the case the painter was unfamiliar with how regimental diced hose are made.
https://i.imgur.com/Ar1o4JT.jpg
Sadly these hose were copied by one of the Osprey illustrators.
(The top is from a Crimean Hero photograph)
https://i.imgur.com/DzOQYKc.jpg
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Quote:
Originally Posted by OC Richard
BTW here's your photo of the Argylls pipers reduced to fit the size of the page here a bit better
https://i.imgur.com/pKQ9c1o.jpg
Wow look how open they're playing "C"! The PM was one of THOSE guys like "I want to see those fingers come all the way off!"
And no "open C" in that band!
And a lefty with his right playing high hand!
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Macman
And a lefty with his right playing high hand!
Yes fully reversed. We have a guy like that in our pipe band.
The band with the most ciotach pipers has got to be Strathclyde Police (Police Service Scotland) that's been seen with four of them in the ranks.
Here's three, looks like, in the front rank
https://i.imgur.com/phiQ9bH.jpg
Years ago I was at a piping school lead by Evan MacRae, long the Pipe Major of the Cameron Highlanders. He said look at photos of the band back when he was PM, you'll always see ciotach pipers. He said it was because there was an island in the Camerons' recruiting region where all the pipers played that way (I can't remember which island).
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I just came across one of those old incorrectly-coloured post cards, which unfortunately was used by an Osprey artist as the basis for one of their illustrations.
Note the doublet has been painted red (it should be green) and the plaid appears to be a different tartan than the kilt.
There's the typical confusion about how to paint diced hose.
The strangest thing is that halfway up the kilt itself changes tartan!
https://i.imgur.com/nPE3DbL.jpg
In the Osprey book The Black Watch illustrator Michael Youens' illustrations are horrendous. The one thing he gets right are the hose-tops, but everything else is a mess.
Here's his illustration of a Black Watch Pipe Major which includes some misinformation obviously copied from the post-card above.
However Youens has added several new errors:
1) putting only two tassels on the sporran
2) having the musician's shells be of the facing-colour rather than the colour of the main body of the doublet
3) making the spats far too tall
4) not putting the ribbons/rosettes on the kilt
https://i.imgur.com/b27Dt0i.jpg
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