Some Tartans Associated with the Clan Grant

Similar documents
42 nd Regiment Band or Musicians Tartan

MacGregor Black and Red (Rob Roy) Tartan

A Highland Revival Drawstring Plaid

No.1 Dress. Feather Bonnet. Hackle and Cap Badge. Guards Doublet. Plaid. Cross Belt. Waist Belt. Hand Made Heavy Weight Kilt.

MacDonald of Glenaladale

Two Plaids from Antigonish County, Nova Scotia

Kilts And Trews. Scottish Military Uniforms , A Pictorial Record. By David M. Whitecross

20% discount * Men s Highlandwear PRESTIGE TARTANS STANDARD TARTANS MEN S ACCESSORIES MEN S INDIVIDUAL ITEMS. for parties of 5 and over

DESIGNED & PRODUCED HGDesign INNERLEITHEN

District 8. Standard Operating Guidelines. The Pipes & Drums of the Associated Firefighters of Illinois Honor Guard

A Plaid given to Lady MacKintosh by Prince Charles Edward Stuart

Contents. 4 Modern Tweed Collection. 10 Argyll Collection. 14 Prince Charlie Collection. 16 Jackets & Waistcoats. 18 Accessories

Kilts available for hire

Anderson Kilts. Established 1854

Choosing your Chapel Outfit for Loretto Senior School

0 in. 0 cm. Portrait Miniatures Collection Catalogue 2012 The Cleveland Museum of Art

The House of Edgar FINEST QUALITY HIGHLANDWEAR

The Kiplings of Long Newton

Ernest John Altobello

Grey Spirit Kilt Worn with Grey Tweed Jacket, matching waistcoat and Raspberry ruche

The Canadian Scottish Regiment (Princess Mary s) Regimental Dress Regulations 2014

Anderson Kilts. Highland Wear to Buy. Established 1854

The Eric Robertson Collection of Fleming Family Charters

In 1687, a Henry Kipling of Chester-le-Street was named in a diocesan document, probably a bond, yet to be translated.

R.A.Houston and W.W.J. Knox The new penguin history of Scotland From the earliest times to the present day. 2 The Formation of the Scottish Kingdom

Highland outfit with waistcoat

AUGUST PAGE THE MAITLAND TATTOO

THE FIERY CROSS. Official Newsletter For Clan Am Cu JANUARY 2004 THE LATEST NEWS

Auction Prize Preview

Royal Navy bayonet belt frogs

John Henry Eden s full dress tunic,

Greenland Pipe Co. PDF Online Catalog Kilts 8 Yards. Details Kilt, Royal Stewart Tartan, Hand made, 8 yards on material, 70% wool 30% synthetic

Anderson Kilts. Hire Brochure. Established 1854

Robert Burns Public Memorials Missing, Destroyed or Undiscovered.

Material Encounters Catalogue The Black Watch Castle and Museum, Perth

CHAPTER VI Summary, Conclusions, and Implications The purpose of this research was to determine whether or not poetry (i.e., poems, ballads, and

DOWNLOAD PDF PRINCES AMONG MEN : THE STRIPED SUIT

Great Changes Afoot at Tartans Authority

EARL S BU, ORPHIR HISTORIC ENVIRONMENT SCOTLAND STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE. Property in Care (PIC) ID: PIC291 Designations:

But what those red things on his forearms are is anyone's guess.

This is the author s final accepted version.

WHY IS IT ENGLISH..2 1

THE KIPLING FAMILY HISTORY NEWSLETTER #6 AUGUST Bowes

The Queen of Souls. The intimate drawings of Violet Manners, Duchess of Rutland

The Kilt as National Dress

Inventory. Acc Edinburgh Festival Society

George III decanter. English c See Page 7. Fall 2018

London & The Home Counties 5 DAY CULTURAL EDUCATIONAL - HISTORICAL PROGRAMME

PROCEEDINGS. of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland

Something Vintage. by Gillian - Thursday, July 09,

Infant mortality and infant feeding in London c Gill Newton Cambridge Group for the History of Population and Social Structure

Remains of four early colonial leaders discovered at Jamestown 28 July 2015, bybrett Zongker

News. EDINBURGH ARCHAEOLOGICAL FIELD SOCIETY Scottish Charity No. SC Society News

HIRSCH Press Kit Hirsch 1765 History

B.Sc. DEGREE EXAMINATION, MAY (Examination at the end of Final Year) COSTUME DESIGN AND FASHION TECHNOLOGY Paper-I : Study of Apparel Industry

CHAPTER III Review of Literature The purpose of this research was to determine whether or not poetry (i.e., poems, ballads, and songs) could be used

Self-Guided Tour Onwards

EMPEROR CHARLES V CAPTURES TUNIS Documenting a Campaign

B.Sc. DEGREE EXAMINATION, DEC (Examination at the end of Final Year) Costume Design and Fashion Technology

The Rise of the London Barbershop

Connecting Businesses

CONSTANT WITNESS RE-FRAMING IMAGES OF THE SECOND WORLD WAR HELEN LEWIS

THE KIPLING FAMILY HISTORY NEWSLETTER #3 NOVEMBER Kiplings in the First World War

CHAPTER I Introduction Dress is a natural extension of one s identity due to the personal nature of clothing, accessories, and body modifications.

2019 The Royal Edinburgh Military Tattoo Packages

SCOTLAND. Belfast IRISH SEA. Dublin THE REPUBLIC OF IRELAND ENGLAND ENGLISH CHANNEL. Before and After

AUCTION CATALOGUE. Auction of surplus items from The Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders Regimental Museum, WOs & Sgts Mess and Company Property

HND DESIGN AND PRODUCTION OF FASHION AND TEXTILE

MASONIC REGALIA M. KENT BRINKLEY, PM Worshipful Master, Peyton Randolph Lodge of Research No. 1774

U N I F O R M P O P - U P S H O P

Loyola University Chicago ~ Archives and Special Collections

By the turn of the century, the Order s uniform had changed again. As described by the Order s Vice Grand Chancellor Sir Levitt Hanson GCJ in 1802:

CultureWatch. High. CultureWatch. Disc 1. Appearance Documentary Worksheets. High PHOTOCOPIABLE. Text Macmillan Publishers Limited 2012

Manufacturers History- Brainard & Wilson Corporation

ESTABLISHED Every piece of Grenfell clothing is produced in the UK at our own London factory.

CHAPTER 6 FULL DRESS AND UNDRESS UNIFORMS

CLACHAN THOGALAICH GLEANN RUAIDH (LIFTING STONES OF GLEN ROY)

LEQ: What country did the United States fight in the War of 1812?

CLAN GRAHAM AND CLAN GRAHAM SOCIETY PROTOCOL AND COMMUNICATIION INFORMATION. Updated 2005

BALNUARAN. of C LAVA. a prehistoric cemetery. A Visitors Guide to

FOUR 18th 20th CENTURIES HOARD REPORTS

BAA Course: Fashion Design 12

WESTSIDE CHURCH (TUQUOY)

Dress Code. Policy. Document Control. Contact person Karen Bond Contact position Principal Contact Number

HIGHLAND WEAR COLLECTION 2017

English Speaking Board Level 2 Award in ESOL Skills for Life (Reading)

Information for Teachers

The Queens Hat The Queen Collection

LIFE OF LADY MARY WORTLEY MONTAGU BY ROBERT HALSBAND

Barnet Battlefield Survey

Isomorphs. Published by Faculty of Art, Architecture & Design University of Lincoln Brayford Pool Lincoln LN6 7TS ISBN:

The Reflections of a Bespoke Shirt Maker Mr Paul Cuss

2. Renfrewshire Snuff Mills Stuart Nisbet

Holy Trinity Episcopal School Girls Uniform Guidelines

WADE DEACON TRUST KEY STAGE 3 & 4 UNIFORM POLICY

Queen Elizabeth II (Tell Me About Kings And Queen) By John Malam

The Man Who Broke Into Auschwitz: A True Story Of World War II By Denis Avey, Rob Broomby READ ONLINE

Destination Leaders Programme Case Studies. DLP Case Study: The Royal Edinburgh Military Tattoo

Design and Technology: Textiles Technology Unit 1 Written Paper

APPLEBY COLLEGE GRADE Uniform Guide ONLINE SCHOOL CODE. appc

Transcription:

Some Tartans Associated with the Clan Grant It is the prerogative of the chief of a clan to identify and authenticate the pattern to be known as the tartan of his clan. Our Chief, the Right Honorable Lord Strathspey, Sir James Patrick Trevor Grant of Grant, Baronet, selected the tartan designated by Plate XIX in The Tartans of the Clans of Scotland. Plate XIX Grant Tartan from The Tartans of the Clans of Scotland by James Grant, Edinburgh, 1886

The tartan of the Black Watch, the Royal Highland Regiment, also has a long association with the Clan Grant. A precursor of the Black Watch tartan was worn by the six Independent Companies formed in the highlands in 1725 by General (later Field Marshal) George Wade. The Independent Companies were called Am Freiceadan Dubh, the Black Watch, almost certainly because of the dark, somber colors of their plaids. One of the companies was originally recruited and commanded by Col. William Grant of Ballindalloch, and after his death in 1733, by the brother of the Chief of Grant, Major George Grant. It is almost certainly because of this early association that the Black Watch tartan also became known as the Grant Hunting tartan. Grant Hunting Tartan, also the tartan of the Royal Highland Regiment, the Black Watch

Other Tartans Associated with the Clan Grant before the Victorian Era There were essentially five genres or styles of tartan known to have been associated with the Clan Grant in the 18 th century. I. Tartan of red and Greine sett broad springed 1704 Ludovick Grant, Chief of the Clan Grant, ordered his tenants and members of his clan to be prepared to muster upon forty-eight hours notice in Heighland Coates trewes & short hose of tartane of red and Greine sett broad springed. This instruction from the Laird of Grant s Regality Court Book, dated July 20 th, 1704, is the first known reference to a tartan associated with the clan. (General Register Office, Edinburgh, RH 11/34/2) Although there was no specific pattern given, red and green tartans were apparently commonplace in Strathspey during the first decade of the 18 th century. No known remnant of these tartans remain today, but it is possible that they resembled the setts featured in the now-famous portraits of the Laird s Champion and the Laird s Piper, painted in 1714 by Richard Waitt. The Reidhaven Trust Alister Grant Mohr, the Laird s Champion, by Richard Waitt (1714) National Museum of Scotland William Cumming, the Laird s Piper, by Richard Waitt (1714)

II. A Dark Blue-Green-Black Sett 1725 As previously mentioned, another pattern inextricably linked to the Clan Grant was a blue-greenblack tartan worn by members of the six Independent Companies formed in the highlands by General George Wade circa 1725. The exact sett of the tartan is not known and no remnants of it have survived into the 21 st century, but it was almost certainly the forerunner of the sett known today as the Black Watch. In fact, the Independent Companies were called Am Freiceadan Dubh, the Black Watch, almost certainly because of the dark, somber colors of their plaids. Large quantities of this tartan were woven in Strathspey by over forty weavers on the estates of the Chief of Grant and the Laird of Ballindalloch during the years 1725-1739. In a well-known portrait of Robert Grant of Lurg, circa 1769, the sitter is featured in a tartan coat and plaid said to be the uniform he had worn as a sergeant in the Grant Independent Company many years before. The Black Watch tartan continues to be worn today by the Clan Grant as its undress or hunting tartan. Portrait of Robert Grant of Lurg, by an unknown artist, circa 1769, at Old Cullen, Morayshire Courtesy of The Earl of Seafield

III. Tartans with Green and Blue Stripes on a Red Field (1730-1780) Another genre or style of broad-springed red, blue and green tartans can be traced to several districts in Strathspey. Although not identical, these tartans are from the period 1730 1780 and share similar design characteristics. They are primarily from Rothiemurchus and the parish of Abernethy, but might also be indigenous to other locales in Strathspley. Their principal common trait is that they feature large stripes of blue and green on a field of red. A number of examples of this genre have survived into the 21 st century. Four are featured in the computer simulations below. 18 th Century Plaid from Rothiemurchus recorded by Miss Margaret MacDougall, circa 1950 An 18 th Century Asymmetric Offset Plaid from Rothiemurchus 18 th Century Curtain Plaid from Nethy Bridge, Abernethy Parish, Strathspey 18 th Century Plaid from Rothiemurchus with Initials PG for Patrick Grant

IV. Tartan of the 1 st Strathspey Fencible Regiment 1793 At least five settings of a tartan named simply Grant were recorded in the records of William Wilson & Sons. Wilson & Sons was a textile mill at Bannockburn, near Stirling, that supplied large quantities of tartan to the British regiments, as well as for Scottish retail trade and export. Many of their patterns or setts were documented in the Key Pattern Book of 1819. The tartan (below) was derived from the government or Black Watch sett, but with a thin yellow over-stripe flanked on each side by thin red stripes. It was almost certainly the breacan an fhéilidh or belted plaid of the 1 st Strathspey Fencible Regiment and perhaps the 97 th Regiment of Foot, as well. Both regiments were raised by Sir James Grant of Grant in the last decade of the 18 th century. No specimen of the original tartan has survived into the 21 st century. This tartan has been erroneously called Hunting Grant. The Grant hunting tartan, of course, is the same sett known as the Black Watch. Handwoven by the author, February 2013 Grant Tartan from William Wilson & Sons Key Pattern Book (1819), the tartan of the 1 st Strathspey Regiment, formed in 1793 by Sir James Grant of Grant, Baronet

V. The New Bruce and the Grant Kilt Tartans late 18 th /early 19 th Century The super-fine New Bruce tartan in the Key Pattern Book of William Wilson & Sons was the first red tartan specifically associated with the Clan Grant. In 1819, Patrick Grant of Redcastle ordered 200 yards of the New Bruce pattern, stating that it was the tartan of his own clan. The large purchase was almost certainly occasioned by his imminent marriage to Catherine Sophia Grant, a distant cousin. The only surviving specimen of the New Bruce tartan is in the collection of General Sir William Cockburn of Cockburn, Baronet. Cockburn s collection dates to circa 1815. That sample is labeled Drummond and is currently housed in the Mitchell Library in Glasgow. The clans Drummond and Grant share the same red tartan today. The New Bruce sett featured large expanses of red and green with relatively small stripes of navy and light blue. New Bruce was the forerunner of another Wilson pattern known as Grant Kilt, which probably came into being with the dawning of the 19 th century. The large red and green color bars of the New Bruce sett were scaled down about 50% in the Grant Kilt tartan to render it more suitable for the feilidh-beag, a late 18 th century innovation known as the man s kilt. The Grant Kilt tartan was essentially the same pattern known today as Modern Red Grant. Grant Kilt Tartan from the Key Pattern Book of William Wilson & Sons, 1819 Handwoven by the author, August 2014 [This article is condensed from a more comprehensive research report, Historical Notes on Some Tartans Associated with the Clan Grant, by James Grant, historian, Clan Grant Society USA.