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  2. Red coat (military uniform) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_coat_(military_uniform)

    The latter unit's red-coloured tunics are derived from British style red coats, in commemoration of the unit's foundation in exile in the United Kingdom during World War II. [ 87 ] Several South American units continue to wear red-coloured coats for ceremonial purposes, including the Brazilian Marine Corps , and the Bolivian Colorados Regiment ...

  3. Redcoats and Rebels - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Redcoats_and_Rebels

    Redcoats and Rebels: The American Revolution through British Eyes is a history of the American Revolutionary War (or using its British name "The American War of Independence") from the British perspective, by historian Christopher Hibbert.

  4. British Army during the American Revolutionary War - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/British_Army_during_the...

    The standard uniform of the British army consisted of the traditional red coat with cocked hats, white breeches and black gaiters with leather knee caps. [64] Hair was usually cut short or fixed in plaits at the top of the head. As the war progressed, many line regiments replaced their cocked hats with slouch hats. [65]

  5. 71st Regiment of Foot, Fraser's Highlanders - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/71st_Regiment_of_Foot...

    It included a diced bonnet, short red coat with white facings (collar, lapels, and cuffs) and white lace with a red worm, a Government Sett kilt, and diced hose. The kilt and hose were typically only worn while in garrison. In the field, the regiment wore the standard British Army gaitered trousers. In the summer, they were made of linen.

  6. British Regulars - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/British_Regulars

    A final possibility is that red is the primary color in the Royal Standard, the Royal Coat of Arms, and is the color of St George's cross (St George is the patron saint of England). During the Napoleonic Wars , the British Regulars were a well disciplined group of foot soldiers with years of combat experience, including in the Americas, the ...

  7. Forman's Additional Continental Regiment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forman's_Additional...

    Forman's "Red Coats" and the other Maryland "enlisted men" appear to have performed well during their rear guard movements when they helped cover the withdrawal of the entire militia column. After the Battle of Germantown, Forman's Regiment returned to New Jersey with the NJ Militia Brigade under Forman's command.

  8. Battles of Lexington and Concord - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battles_of_Lexington_and...

    For example, older participants' testimony in later life about Lexington and Concord differed greatly from their depositions taken under oath in 1775. All now said the British fired first at Lexington, whereas fifty or so years before, they weren't sure. All now said they fired back, but in 1775, they said few were able to.

  9. Royal Nova Scotia Volunteer Regiment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Royal_Nova_Scotia...

    The Royal Nova Scotia Volunteer Regiment, also known as the Loyal Regiment of Nova Scotia Volunteers and Loyal Nova Scotia Volunteers, from 1775-1780, the Royal Regiment of Nova Scotia Volunteers, from 1780-1783, and the Royal Nova Scotia Volunteer Regiment and Nova Scotia Volunteers, was a British Loyalist provincial battalion, of infantry, raised in 1775, to defend British interests, in the ...

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