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  1. #1
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    18th October 09
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    Quote Originally Posted by Manu View Post
    Great song, thanks for sharing. I noticed the guys with cheetah pelts drapped over them. Does that have any expeditionary significance with the Gordon Highlanders?
    Not cheetah probably, they're usually tiger and leopard.

    Yes expeditionary significance exactly. Bass drummers especially, serving in India, didn't want the drum hardware to damage their uniform tunics so they cut a hole in a tiger or leopard skin and wore it as sort of a protective bib. Tenor drummers often wear them too. Sometimes you'll see the bass drummer in a tiger skin and the tenor drummers in leopard skins.

    These skins were a mark of overseas service.

    Strange to think that a tiger skin would be less valuable than a uniform tunic, but in the 19th century skins were evidently cheaper than a tunic (which had to come all the way from Britain).

    Here you can see drummers of The Black Watch wearing them.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KM3lSOLv9Ow

    I wonder how many of the skins used by the regiments are old genuine ones. Highland Outfitters sell new ones made from fake skins. Sometimes they have the animal's heads on the back.
    Last edited by OC Richard; 23rd September 18 at 05:45 PM.
    Proud Mountaineer from the Highlands of West Virginia; son of the Revolution and Civil War; first Europeans on the Guyandotte

  2. #2
    Join Date
    6th April 05
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    Hollywood, Florida
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    Quote Originally Posted by OC Richard View Post
    Not cheetah probably, they're usually tiger and leopard.

    Yes expeditionary significance exactly. Bass drummers especially, serving in India, didn't want the drum hardware to damage their uniform tunics so they cut a hole in a tiger or leopard skin and wore it as sort of a protective bib. Tenor drummers often wear them too. Sometimes you'll see the bass drummer in a tiger skin and the tenor drummers in leopard skins.

    These skins were a mark of overseas service.

    Strange to think that a tiger skin would be less valuable than a uniform tunic, but in the 19th century skins were evidently cheaper than a tunic (which had to come all the way from Britain).

    Here you can see drummers of The Black Watch wearing them.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KM3lSOLv9Ow

    I wonder how many of the skins used by the regiments are old genuine ones. Highland Outfitters sell new ones made from fake skins. Sometimes they have the animal's heads on the back.
    Excellent, I figured there was a connection there somewhere. Thanks! It's one thing I love about military uniforms, everything has a meaning and a connection to something in the history of the unit/service. It's like wearing history!

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