enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Red coat (military uniform) - Wikipedia

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

    In Europe, red-coloured coats are still used by the Danish Royal Life Guards, [86] and the Garderegiment Fuseliers Prinses Irene of the Royal Netherlands Army. 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.

  3. 1st Pennsylvania Regiment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1st_Pennsylvania_Regiment

    (Source: James Thacher, "Military Journal during the American Revolutionary War from 1775 to 1783".) As described under "colours", the regiment in 1776 wore green hunting shirts with black caps trimmed white adorned with feather while the officers wore green coats with red facings and similar caps. [ 1 ]

  4. Forman's Additional Continental Regiment - Wikipedia

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

    Among the New Jersey soldiers under Forman, more than one observer distinguished between the militia and "General Forman's Red Coats". [8] This account by Major Asher Holmes of the 1st Regiment of the Monmouth County Militia reinforces the issuance of captured British uniforms earlier that year for Forman's Regiment.

  5. 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 ...

  6. Anglo-Cherokee War - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anglo-Cherokee_War

    The Anglo-Cherokee War (1758–1761; in the Cherokee language: the "war with those in the red coats" or "War with the English"), was also known from the Anglo-European perspective as the Cherokee War, the Cherokee Uprising, or the Cherokee Rebellion.

  7. Loyalists fighting in the American Revolution - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loyalists_fighting_in_the...

    Now Joseph Brant's Loyalist Indians devastated the frontier. In May, 1780, Sir John Johnson, commanding four hundred Loyalists and two hundred Indians, attacked many settlements in the Mohawk Valley. Brant then led his men down the Ohio, where he ambushed a detachment of troops under the command of George Rogers Clark. [35]

  8. 9th Connecticut Regiment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/9th_Connecticut_Regiment

    The regiment was merged into the 2nd Connecticut Regiment on January 1, 1781, at West Point, New York, which was disbanded at the end of the war on November 15, 1783. Colonel Webb, who was exchanged in 1781, was then given command of the reorganized 3rd Connecticut Regiment .

  9. Hessian (soldier) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hessian_(soldier)

    A 1799 portrait of Hessian hussars during the American Revolutionary War Hessian grenadiers. The use of foreign soldiers was common in 18th-century Europe. In the two centuries leading up to the American Revolutionary War, the continent saw frequent, though often small-scale, warfare, and military manpower was in high demand. [9]