Uniform, Accoutrements & Weaponry
The Queen's Rangers was the first regiment in the British Army to wear green uniforms for purposes of camouflage. As Simcoe later wrote,
"green is without comparison the best colour for light troops with dark accoutrements, and if put on in the spring, by autumn it nearly fades with the leaves, preserving it's characteristics of being scarcely discernible at a distance".
Our group seeks to recreate the Light Infantry Company of the Queen's Rangers as it would have looked in the campaign season of 1780. Our principal source of information has been Captain James Murray's watercolours of the period with additional material drawn from contemporary evidence of light troops serving in British regiments. All members are clean-shaven as required in the British Army.
Leather cap with plume, feather, cockade.
Short, round jacket with lace and 'QR' buttons.
White linen shirt with black neck stock.
White regimental breeches.
Leather garters with brass buckles.
White stockings.
Painted canvas half-gaiters.
Shoes, rough side out.
Cartridge box on shoulder belt, with brass plate.
Bayonet and hatchet on shoulder belt.
Painted canvas knapsack with 'RP' blanket.
Linen haversack.
Tin canteen on red cord (during 1780 wood canteens)
Brown Bess musket, short-land pattern, with leather sling.
Footnote
The smart appearance above was rarely maintained during campaigns.
Simcoe acknowledged an occasion when many rangers were barefooted!
Our display, however, claims to show soldiers preparing to set off on expedition
with uniforms and accoutrements newly issued.
© Photographs by Karyn Shields