“Any British regiment with any pretensions to smartness had its corps of black musicians, gorgeously dressed”
[Guard Mounting, St James's Palace]
[1790].
Engraving with contemporary hand colour.
Image: 310 by 460mm (12.25 by 18 inches). Sheet: 350 by 497mm (13.75 by 19.5 inches).
11586
notes:
A print showing the regimental band of the Grenadier Guards at St James's Palace, the oldest band in the British army. The procession is made up of the musicians, the time-beaters, and the drummers, each wearing a different uniform. Of particular interest are the three black men in the group. It became a tradition in the British army to use black musicians as military bandsmen, a trend that seems to have started with regiments posted in the West Indies (Strachan). By the en...
bibliography:
C. ffoulkes,'Notes on Early Military Bands', Journal of the Society for Army Historical Research 17 (1938), p.194; Peter Fryer, Staying Power: The History of Black People in Britain, (University of Alberta Press, 1984), p.84; Hew Strachan, British Military Uniforms 1768-1796 (Arms and Armour Press, 1975), p.333.
provenance: