PolarBear
Major
- Joined
- Feb 24, 2007
- Messages
- 6,706
Pvt. Willam Jenkins and Capt. Grant Pearson scan the horizon in search of Hadendoa tribemen, nicknamed Fuzzy-Wuzzies by Rudyard Kipling
Figures:
WB Redcoats
44007
44019
Gloss Poster Version
Thanks for the information Raymond it was very interesting to read im going to have to look up the camel corps & do some reading![]()
Hello Craig,
I am glad you found the ORBAT of the British Camel Corps in the Sudan of interest.
The uniforms can be confusing. It appears that the uniforms of the Heavy and the Guards Camel Regiments overlap.
It was my understanding that the "Heavies" wore light blue jackets, while the Guards had their red jackets.
Cheers, Raymond.
*
thats interesting! does that meal our 2 camel corps figures from the guards regiment should be wearing red then?
From what I have read (including eyewitness accounts) the Guards did wear red tunics and the Heavies grey-blue. That is the way Little Legion has made theirs (see below) and why I called my scene Heavy rather than Guards. However, the Osprey book The British Army on Campaign 4 (1882-1902) shows the Grenadier Guards (part of the Guards Camel corps) wearing the grey-blue tunic as is represented by the W. Britain figures in my scene. The new WB limited edition medic just says British Camel Corps,
Michael Perry's Guide to Uniforms of the Sudan War 1883-85 shows both Guards and Heavy Camel Regts wearing the grey-blue tunics.
http://www.wargamesillustrated.net/gallery/download/Sudan 1883 - 85.pdf
Perhaps my scene could have been called either Heavy or Guards but I decided to follow Lord Gleichen's eyewitness account With the Camel Corps on the Nile that says the Guards had red tunics while the Heavy wore the grey-blue.