Helen Bennett's 1980 booklet, "Sir John Hynde Cotton's Highland Suit", mentioned that Sir John was a zealous English Jacobite who visited Scotland in 1744, where his Scottish friends procured the tartan suit for him. Sir John was a large man, at well over six feet tall and weighing about 300 lbs (which would make him almost a giant by 18th c. standards). Ms. Bennett's book provides a pattern for the pieces of Sir John's suit, and after examining the pattern, it appeared to me that the "trews/truibhs" were a combination of standard European breeches (about the hip section) joined to long footed tartan hose (that joined the hip section just below the crotch). With Sir John being such a tall and heavy individual, I surmise that the tailor who made his suit had to piece things together to enable him to get a proper fit. That the pinked edges were left exposed suggests that the suit was made in some haste, as I have seen no other piece of 18th c. men's clothing where that was done. Usually pinked edges of cloth were concealed within seams or tucked under, as they are today.

A few interesting facts concerning Sir John:

He was considered one of the most zealous Jacobites in England. He was 3rd Baronet of Landwade (Cambridgeshire). His unusual size has been mentioned. Although he visited Scotland in 1744, there is no record of him participating as a Jacobite during the '45 Rising. He was asthmatic. He was a Member of Parliament between 1708-1752, and served as Treasurer of the Chamber in the Royal Household from 1744-1746. He was afflicted with a stammer, which resulted in his speeches being short. He was also said to be ill-humored. He was described as being "artful," by which is meant he knew how to manipulate the political system in order to gain an advantage or to keep himself out of tight spots.