Official Clothing Guidelines

Introduction

The goal of the Lexington Training Band is to accurately portray a Massachusetts militia company as it appeared between April 18, 1775 and October 18, 1775.  As a result, every member of the Lexington Training Band is expected and, more importantly, required, to accurately portray a Massachusetts militiaman to the extent permitted by up to date research.

Wearing outfits made of polyester, sewing plastic or modern buttons to clothing, wearing 18th century clothing uncommon to the Massachusetts Bay Colony, or simply wearing an outfit without a coat, smock or jacket, actually distorts the historical period and events we cherish so deeply.  Further, by knowingly recreating clothing and equipment incorrectly, we engage in mis- education and do a disservice to American History.

The Lexington Training Band adheres to the “five-foot rule”, the Continental Line’s standard for authenticity.  The five-foot rule came into existence in 1988 when the Continental Line was created as an umbrella organization to oversee Revolutionary War reenactments.  All member units of the Continental Line are required to follow this rule.

There are several prerequisites to the five-foot rule:
  • All clothing MUST be produced from natural sources (Cotton, linen, wool, or leather) rather than man made sources.
  • All clothing and equipment must be from the correct period AND from the correct location.  For example, a reproduced 1778 linen hunting shirt from the Ohio River Valley would not be appropriate for a person portraying a 1775 Massachusetts militiaman, but a reproduced wool frock coat from 1767 Massachusetts would.
  • All clothing and equipment must be supported and justified by at least two (2) primary and documentable sources. Primary sources include prints, paintings, letters, diaries, depositions, court records, Provincial Congress minutes, petitions, journals, newspaper advertisements, estate inventories and town resolves.
The five-foot rule is defined as:

A person will be authentic if the spectator, from a distance of no more than five feet cannot:

  • Identify or observe any items that are not reproductions of 18th century articles of clothing, weapons or equipment.
  • Identify or observe any article of clothing that is not cut and fit in the proper 18th century manner. “Cut in the proper 18th century manner” is defined as clothing that is produced, cut and sewn so that it is identical or nearly identical to 18th century clothing-patterns and surviving articles of clothing. “Fit in the proper 18th century manner” is defined as clothing worn on the body tight yet not constricted.
  • Identify or observe any 20th century anachronisms, including, but not limited to, modern shoes, modern shoes with buckles tied to them, modern glasses and modern wristwatches.

Please keep in mind that under the five-foot rule, the “spectator” is considered to be an experienced reenactor who is able to identify and observe what does or does not look authentic. However, for the five-foot rule even to apply, you meet the required pre-requisites listed above. If your clothing and equipment do not qualify under the five-foot rule, you will NOT be allowed to participate in an event with the Lexington Training Band.

MANDATORY AND PROHIBITED ITEMS

The following items are mandatory and must be acquired by members of the Lexington Training Band before they can field with the unit.  Failure to acquire these items will result in exclusion from events with the Lexington Training Band.

  • Coat and/or jacket
  • Knapsack, blanket roll, snapsack, or market wallet
  • Tin or wooden canteen, gourd, rumlet and/or leather covered glass bottle
  • Mess kit: knife, two-prong fork, wooden bowl and spoon and cup
  • Cartridge box or hunting pouch
  • Flashguard and hammerstall
  • Lock-pick and brush
  • Bayonet, cutlass, sword or tomahawk

Please keep in mind that under the five-foot rule, the “spectator” is considered to be an experienced reenactor who is able to identify and observe what does or does not look authentic. However, for the five-foot rule even to apply, you meet the required pre-requisites listed above. If your clothing and equipment do not qualify under the five-foot rule, you will NOT be allowed to participate in an event with the Lexington Training Band.

The following items are prohibited by the Lexington Training Band and cannot be worn or carried onto the field. Failure to remove these items will result in exclusion from events with the Lexington Training Band.

  • 19th century clothing and equipment
  • Belts with round hand forged buckles from JAS Townsend
  • Military overalls
  • Blanket shirts from JAS Townsend
  • Hunting shirts or hunting frocks
  • Frontier knives and axes
  • Scottish dirk knives and basket-hilt swords
  • Rifles
  • Company pins, logos, and nameplates
  • Economy tricorn hat from JAS Townsend (TH-915 and 918)
  • Suede leather hunting bags/ canvas hunting from JAS Townsend
  • Breeches, trousers, waistcoats, coats, great coats and sailor‟s jackets from JAS Townsend
  • Haversacks and cloth “hunting bags”
  • JAS Townsend belt bags not converted to over the shoulder hunting bags
  • Modern glasses, cell phones and watches
  • Food carried in modern containers (Tupperware, modern paper bags, coke cans, tinfoil, etc.) and exposed to the public
  • Capes/cloaks
  • Hat decorations, including Masonic pins, continental money, clay pipes and feathers.
  • Wearing a smock or frock coat without a workshirt and weskit underneath
  • Horizontal striped stockings
  • Modern shoes with buckles tied to the laces
CLOTHING STANDARDS

All clothing and equipment must pass inspection. Clothing worn will be properly and well fitted and all visible stitching will be sewn by hand. If you are not absolutely certain of the accuracy and appropriateness of ANY items, please find out before you acquire them. No unapproved clothing or equipment will be allowed. All uniform and equipment items will be changed when changes are necessitated due to new documentation.

Members are encouraged to allow their clothes to age and weather in a manner appropriate to life in the field and/or at work.  Thus, clothes can/should be stained and patched, but patches should be neatly done and in a manner that allows for preservation of clothes.

Absolutely refrain from washing small clothes (shirt and trousers) with bleach or modern heavy detergents. This will degrade the fibres and wash out their natural color.

The following are applicable to those portraying male militia men. The proper fit of clothing is paramount. See Appendix A for a discussion of this topic.

Hats: Hats must be round blocked and constructed of wool or fur felt. Acceptable styles include civilian cocked hats, flop hats, round hats, and partially cocked hats. Hats must be black, tan, grey or brown in color.1  
Dress Uniform hats are prohibited.

Caps: Caps must conform to period examples. Acceptable styles include Monmouth caps, French caps, and workman‟s caps. They must be made of wool or linen and be of appropriate colours (striped Monmouth caps are permitted).2 Highland bonnets and voyageur caps are BANNED.

Workshirt:  Shirts must be appropriate to the mid 18th century. The collar should be no more than two and three quarter inches high and must close with one to two buttons. Wristbands should not exceed one inch in width. The neck opening should extend no more than nine inches down the chest. Acceptable materials for shirts include tow, linen, flannel, or light weight wool in white, natural, striped, or checked colors. Buttons must be made of bone, pewter, wood or natural or bleached linen thread. Wrists may be closed with thread buttons or with sleeve buttons.3

Neck Clothes/Rollers: Should be made of linen, linen/cotton blend, or silk and be cut triangular or square. Solid, checked, spotted, or striped colors are acceptable. They must be tied and knotted under the collar.

1 Most commercially available hats/hat blanks are oval blocked. See list of suppliers for makers of period correct hats.
2 James P. McGuane, Heartof Oak: A Sailor’s Life in Nelson’s Navy, (New York: W. W. Norton and Co., 2002), 87.
3 Paul V. Dickfoss, “„white Flannel Shirt,‟ „striped Linen Shirt,‟ „tow cloth Shirt:‟ Shirts of Runaways Advertised in Rhode Island,” The Brigade Dispatch: The Journal of the Brigade Of The American Revolution 34, No. 2, (Summer, 2004).

Waistcoat:  Must be made out of wool or linen.  Must conform to 1750s, 1760s and 1770s examples.  The 1750’s style must extend to between mid-thigh and knee, and have 8 to 10 buttons down the front. Functional or false welt pockets should be located at waist level, and be covered by flaps with or without buttons and buttonholes.  The 17660/1770s style should extend below the waist to the hip and have 10 buttons down the front. “Roundabout” waistcoats are also permitted.  Pockets may be either functional or false welt or flap covered pockets. Waistcoats can be made of materials of a contrasting color and texture to the coat and breeches.  Buttons should be pewter, brass, horn, or cloth/thread covered.4

Under Jackets: Under jackets, or sleeved waistcoats, should fit close to the body and in the sleeves. They may be made of wool, linen, and linsey-woolsey. Solid and striped colours are acceptable. Buttons may be pewter, brass, horn, or cloth-covered.5

Farmer’s/Waggoner’s Smock:  Should be slightly larger than a body shirt and constructed of medium weight linen or lighter weight wool. These can be worn over body shirt and waistcoat or act as an extra work shirt. The length of the smock should be at least at the knee. Thigh and waist length smocks are mid to late war styles and are prohibited. Button arrangement should be the same as for work shirts. Natural, striped, solid, or checked colors are acceptable.6 Work Shirts are not to be used in place of a coat or jacket. They are for fatigue duty only.  A lightweight cotton, osnaburg or linen work shirt from JAS Townsend is not an acceptable substitute for a smock.

Frock Coats: Frock coats are the most common outer garment for men regardless of class. They should be made of wool or linen. The frock coat, always worn over a waistcoat, could be of the same color and fabric as the waistcoat, or more commonly, as noted in ads concerning run-away servants or slaves, of quite different fabrics and colors altogether. The linings of frock coats were often of a complementary shade, with some being quite bold in pattern and bright in color. They may have a falling collar or no collar and either round or slashed cuffs. Acceptable colours

include blue, brown, red, black, green, “cloth,” and other period correct solid colours. Buttons should be pewter, horn, wood, copper or cloth-covered.7

Bounty Coat:  A bounty would have been issued to Lexington men serving at the Siege of Boston with Captain John Wood‟s Company, Colonel Baldwin‟s Regiment in October, 1775. The coat was a tobacco brown laborer‟s jacket and would be cut much like a sleeved waistcoat with a collar and cuffs.  The buttons, stamped with the regimental number “38”, would generally be larger than 5/8-inch diameter and, therefore, spaced further apart. The bounty coat would have

pockets and pocket flaps without buttons on the flaps.  Acceptable material is wool.8   Bounty

coats cannot be worn at events recreating an engagement prior to October 1, 1775.

Jackets:  Jackets, or workman‟s coats, should extend no lower than mid thigh. They may be cut “roundabout” the waist if desired. Double breasted jackets are permitted. All jackets should be close fitting in the sleeves. They should have round or slashed cuffs and rolled or fall down

4 Dickfoss, “„striped Flannel Jacket,‟ „blue coarse jacket Kersey wove,‟ „an old brown Broadcloth jacket‟: Jackets of Runaways Advertised in Rhode Island.”

5 Ibid.

6 Cain, “A Frock and Trowsers, Spade and Hoe, Will Do For My Remaining Days: An Analysis of the Use of Farmer‟s Smocks by Massachusetts Militia on April 19, 1775,” New England Rev War Campaigners, 2008.

7 Henry M. Cooke IV, “Unlined Frock Coat,” Historical Costume Services, 1999.

8 Cooke, “The Massachusetts Bounty Coat of 1775,” Historical Costume Services, 1992.

collars. Pockets are optional but, if included, should be flap or welt style. Jackets should be made out of wool, linen, linsey-woolsey, or similar materials. Acceptable colors include blue, brown, red, and striped. Buttons should be pewter, brass, horn, or cloth-covered.9

Great Coats: Great coats must be made of wool, have a collar and at least one circular shoulder cape sewn into the coat. Cuffs should not have buttons and must be long enough that they may be turned down over the hands. The coats should have six to eight buttons down the front.

Pockets are optional but if included should be flap covered and without buttons. Buttons may be silver, steel, pewter, brass, horn, wooden, or cloth-covered. Appropriate colors include blue, shades of brown, shades of gray, red, and black.10

Breeches: Breeches must conform to period examples. They must be fall front style and should fit closely about the legs. They should be made out of leather, wool, linen, or fustian. Breeches may be solid, striped, or checked in pattern and colour.  The most common colours for wool breeches were blue, black, brown, and “light.” Other colours are also acceptable. Ties, buckles, or buttons may secure the knee-bands. Acceptable buttons include pewter, brass, horn, wooden, or cloth-covered.11   White canvas breeches are prohibited.

Trousers: Must be fall front style, above the ankle in length, fit relatively close above the knee, have a baggy rear seat, and adjustable ties in the rear. Trousers may be solid, striped, or checked in pattern and colour. Fabrics may include wool, linen, linsey-woolsey, or fustian. Buttons should be pewter, brass, horn, wooden, or cloth-covered.

Stockings: Stockings must come up over the knee and be wool, linen, or cotton. Colours may be white, gray, navy, black, mixed, or brown. Horizontal striped stockings are prohibited.  Tube or athletic socks are prohibited.  Stockings should be held up by garters made of leather (with period correct buckles) or worsted wool tape (with or without buckles).12

Gaiters or Half/Farmer’s Boot: These should be made out of linen canvas or wool in black or brown. They should close with pewter or horn buttons, and extend about eight to ten inches above the ankle. Gaiters should be tight fitting and not sag. They must cover the laces or buckles of your shoes. Military style high (full) gaiters or Indian leggings are not appropriate for the civilian militia impression.

9 Dickfoss, “„striped Flannel Jacket,‟ „blue coarse jacket Kersey wove,‟ „an old brown Broadcloth jacket‟: Jackets of Runaways Advertised in Rhode Island,” The BrigadeDispatch:The Journal of the Brigade Of The American Revolution 32, No. 2, (Summer, 2002). Also see Cooke, “The Massachusetts Bounty Coat of 1775,” Historical Costume Services, 1992.

10 Dickfoss, “Greatcoats of Runaways Advertised in Rhode Island and Pennsylvania,” The Brigade Dispatch: The Journal of the Brigade Of The American Revolution 33, No. 2, (Summer, 2003). Also see Cooke, “Keeping Out the

Cold: Men‟s & Women‟s Outerwear in America, 1750-1800,” Historical Costume Services, 2010.

11 Dickfoss, “„dirty buckskin breeches,‟ „blue broadcloth breeches,‟ „black knit Breeches:‟ Breeches of Runaways

Advertised in Rhode Island,” The Brigade Dispatch:The Journalofthe Brigade OfTheAmericanRevolution 35, No. 4, (Winter, 2005).

12 Dickfoss, “„grey worsted,‟ „mixt blue Yarn,‟ „White ribb‟d worsted:‟ Stockings of Runaways Advertised in Rhode

Island,” TheBrigadeDispatch: The Journal of the Brigade Of The American Revolution 31, No. 3, (Autumn, 2001).

Footwear: Should be plain, mid 18th century style leather shoes. Leather may be black or brown, smooth or rough side out. They should be closed with buckles (brass or steel) or laces.

Link to Official Clothing and Equipment Guidelines PDF

EXAMPLES OF CLOTHING

Note that the breeches on all four militia men are tight fitting from the knee and up the leg.

An assortment of militiamen wearing breeches, trousers, coats and jackets. Note how the jackets and breeches are tight yet not restricted:

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