Submitted by AutoModerator t3_z5703a in history
_Dead_Man_ t1_ixyhqyj wrote
Why are hessians during the revolutionary war depicted in both green and blue coats? Whats the background?
malthar76 t1_ixzc04k wrote
Regular hessian mercenaries wore blue uniform coats, Jaeger rifle units wore green coats.
In the American Revolution, the British also hired mercenaries from Brunswick and other German states. Some other uniform differences could have come that way too.
_Dead_Man_ t1_iy0qh2j wrote
What makes the jaeger corps stand apart from regular hessians?
I'm designing a character and I want to give him a green coat but I wanna know what that would mean for him.
malthar76 t1_iy0x8b0 wrote
Hessen-Kassel provided the British fifteen regiments of infantry, each with five companies of men, four grenadier battalions and two companies of Jäger (known as chasseurs or sharpshooters in English).[8] The Jäger in particular were in high demand.[9] Jäger, a German word that translates to “hunter” and can be used as both a singular and plural word, were recruited from huntsmen and foresters who were skilled in the use of rifled weapons normally used to hunt boar.[10] They were skilled shots, self-sufficient in battle, and swift, able to efficiently load and fire a rifle, a skill which took greater dexterity than firing the muskets of the day. Most importantly, they were valiant.
https://allthingsliberty.com/2015/05/the-hessian-jagerkorps-in-new-york-and-pennsylvania-1776-1777/
shantipole t1_iy188o6 wrote
The really short version is that blue coats indicated regular infantry armed with smoothbore muskets--your classic "let's stand in a couple of lines and shoot until one side gives up"--while the green coats were for skirmishers armed with rifles who acted as a screen, sharpshooters, etc.
[deleted] t1_ixz88hw wrote
[removed]
Viewing a single comment thread. View all comments