X Marks the Scot - An on-line community of kilt wearers.
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16th August 10, 02:11 AM
#1
In the UK, you remove your hat -
When passing or being passed by a funeral cortège (one also stops walking and stands still).
When walking through a lychgate at the entrance to a churchyard. Not necessarily in the churchyard itself.
When one is part of a funeral procession. Mourners, following the coffin are bare headed, but the gravediggers, (standing to one side, waiting for the internment to finish) are not.
Regards
Chas
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17th August 10, 06:55 AM
#2
Memories come flooding back -
When passing or being passed by marching troops, one removes one's hat. If they are carrying colours, one also stops walking and faces the colours.
For some reason that I cannot remember, one removes one's hat when passing a woman pushing a baby carriage - regardless, of whether the woman is a maid, nanny or the mother.
When church-bells sound in the middle of the day, it usually means there is a funeral. At some point in the ringing the tenor bell will toll out the years of the persons life (the angelus if the deceased is a child). Hats are removed during the tolling of the years.
Regards
Chas
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