Now! Then! 2025! - A Yorkshire Almanac

Yorkshire On This Day, Comprising 365 Historical Extracts, Red-letter Days and Customs, and Astronomical and Meteorological Data

28 June 1727: Barnsley gentlemen celebrate the proclamation of George II with rather mysterious cockades

John Hobson. 1877. The Journal of Mr. John Hobson, Late of Dodworth Green. Yorkshire Diaries and Autobiographies in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries. Ed. Charles Jackson. Durham: Surtees Society. A (morbid) compendium of everyday England. It is sometimes unclear whether the date given is that of an occurrence or that on which news reached his capacious ears. Get it:

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Excerpt

28th, Wednesday. At Barnsley, at the proclamation of King George the Second. The gentlemen cockades in their hats, of red and orange ribbon. [The orange presumably refers to the Glorious Revolution and anti-Catholicism, but the red?]

To facilitate reading, the spelling and punctuation of elderly excerpts have generally been modernised, and distracting excision scars concealed. My selections, translations, and editions are copyright.

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Comment

The orange presumably refers to the House of Orange and anti-Jacobite feeling. Is the red related to the House of Hanover?

David Rowlands:

In the armies of the 1600s the Colonel of each regiment provided the uniform for his men, and so regiments wore coats of different colours. By the late seventeenth century, most English regiments wore red or crimson coats, but some wore blue or grey. Regiments in foreign armies, too, wore coats of various colours. The English Army (which became the British Army following the Act of Union with Scotland in 1707) often fought alongside Danish, Hanoverian, Prussian, etc, troops, all with different uniforms. Therefore it was necessary, when going into battle, to display a ‘field sign’ in their hats, to distinguish their own side from the enemy. There are numerous contemporary references in soldiers’ memoirs to the issue of a sprig of oak leaves, or a piece of white paper, or a bunch of ribbons worn in the hat to indicate which soldiers were on their side. The bunch of ribbons was tidied up and became known as a cockade, and worn in the hat or cap it became an significant part of a soldier’s uniform throughout the 18th and 19th centuries. Soldiers of the Stuart kings wore a white cockade. Following the overthrow of King James II of England in 1688, his followers (‘Jacobites’)continued to wear the white cockade. Soldiers of the French Royalist Army also wore a white cockade, until the French Revolution (1789), when it was replaced by a cockade of blue, white and red. From early in the 18th century, (there is evidence in a picture c1712) British soldiers have worn a black cockade in their hats or caps; it is still in evidence in certain forms of modern British Army uniform, eg on the glengarry headgear of Scottish regiments. Other national armies wore cockades of other colours. At the Battle of Culloden (1746) the Jacobites wore white cockades in their bonnets, while the British redcoats of King George II who were opposing them wore black cockades.

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Original

28th, Wednesday. At Barnsley, at the proclamation of King George the Second. The gentlemen cockades in their hats, of red and orange ribbon.

25 words.

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