Philadelphia Light HorseI will be painting a set of 15mm Philadelphia Light Horse as a birthday gift, so I wanted to get the details right (more than usual). Philadelphia Light Horse's assitant curator (they have a museum) sent me the following description in response to an email inquiry I sent earlier today:
"The troop authorized a uniform consisting of a short brown coat faced and lined with white, white vest, and breeches, high-topped boots, round black hat bound with silver cord and a buck’s tail sometime after its organization on 17 October 1774. Saddle housings were to be brown and edged with white, with the letters PH worked in them. Weapons were a saber, horse pistols, and carbine. In the Troop museum is a cockade from the hat of one of our officers-- the shape of the cockade is consistent with the type of headgear known as the 'round hat.' A 1785 painting by William Mercer shows the Troop in a sort of cap common to light dragoons. Between 1775 and 1777, the uniform probably more or less consistent, as there appear to be no further authorizations or purchases by or for the Troop. In 1778, the Troop modified its uniform in keeping with the current regulations to be a blue coat faced red. This was likely the first time that the Troop authorized such a color scheme."
Is anyone familiar with the William Mercer painting he mentions? What's the name of it?
I just ran across
this depiction of the early-war uniforms of the Philadelphia Light Horse. Some of the details look dubious (the headgear doesn't look quite right, and the collar looks to be of a post-war fashion), but I thought it was interesting none the less. As our own RtL persistently chides, a contemporaneous depiction would be much better.
The Philadelphia Light Horse accompanied Lafayette during the Battle of Barren Hill, which RtL has mentioned elsewhere may be included in the next BG! scenario book; so any information turned up here might aid us all in our little hobby.