New Releases For April 2017 - The Eighteenth Century Collection (1 Viewer)

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THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY COLLECTION

EECPIC.JPG

The Royal Ecossais was raised by John Drummond in 1744 and disbanded 1763.

Their organisation was to be based on that of the Irish regiments ,to be made up of 11 companies of fusiliers and 1 of grenadiers each of 50 men plus officers for a total of 660 effectives. The officers and men used to form the regiment came from several different sources, firstly from Scotsmen serving in the Irish regiments, Scottish exiles living in France together with recruits smuggled out of Scotland. With an effective of 500 men and officers assembled at St.Omer, with John Lord Drummond as lieutenant colonel, (as for all Royal Regiments, the King of France was always the colonel ) although Lord Drummond wrote on the 29th December 1744 that he was missing only 10 men to complete the regiment.

This regiment, as many other foreign regiments in tjhe French Army were not mercenaries as is often claimed, they were more often than not political or religious refugees who could not safely return to their homeland for fear of persecution.

The regiment had a strength of 350 men at the Battle of Culloden on the16th of April 1746 were they were in the second line and later they helped to cover the retreat of the Highlanders right wing, an attempt by Argyll Militia to interfere was pushed aside but in the skirmish the two battalions became separated and one , probably the 2nd battalion, was caught and surrounded by British Dragoons and forced to surrender in Inverness, the other one, together with their colours continued its retreat towards Ruthven Barracks and did not surrender until the 19th of April.


EEC03.JPG

EEC-03
THE JACOBITE REBELLION 1745,
REGIMENT ROYAL ECOSSOIS,
2 LINE INFANTRY,
(2pcs)


EEC03N.JPG

EEC-03N
THE JACOBITE REBELLION 1745,
REGIMENT ROYAL ECOSSOIS,
4 LINE INFANTRY,
(4pcs)




THE RAID ON ST. FRANCIS 1959

Birch Bark Canoes were the main type and mode of transportation used by the Native American tribes who inhabited the Northeast woodlands, and eastern Canada. The design and style of the birch bark canoes were based on the natural resources that were available to the tribes, in this instance the people made use of the numerous birch trees found in the forests and woodlands of their tribal lands. The tribes built canoes made from the bark of the birch trees over a wooden frame. These canoes were broad enough to float in shallow streams, strong enough to shoot dangerous rapids, and light enough for one man to easily carry a canoe on his back.

The birch bark canoes were built in many different sizes. They could be used by a single person but were usually built for 4 - 6 people. Some of the war canoes could take up to 12 Native Indians

The Huron canoes measured about 21 feet long (7 metres) and 3 feet wide (1 metre) and could carry four or five men and about 200 pounds of cargo (91 kilograms). Their ability to travel long distances was seen as great assets by the French who quickly allied with the Huron to gain an advantage in the lucrative beaver fur trade


CAN06.JPG

CAN-06
THE RAID ON ST. FRANCIS 1759,
WOODLAND INDIANS AND LARGE CANOE,
(10pcs)


CAN06a.JPG


PLEASE NOTE IT IS POSSIBLE TO ADD EXTRA FIGURES TO THE LARGE CANOE. THESE ARE AVAILABLE BY USING FIGURES FROM SETS CAN-04A and CAN-04B, OR THE NEW CAN-07.
UP TO FIVE FIGURES CAN FIT INTO THE LARGE CANOE.
PLEASE NOTE IF EXTRA FIGURES ARE ADDED, THE ACCESSORY PIECES WILL NOT BE ABLE TO FIT.


ALSO PLEASE NOTE THAT CANOE SETS WITHOUT FIGURES WILL BE AVAILABLE NEXT MONTH.

More to follow..............................................................
 
CAN07PIC.JPG




CAN07.JPG

CAN-07
THE RAID ON ST. FRANCIS 1759,
2 Woodland Indians Paddling,
(3pcs)




**PLEASE NOTE THAT IT IS POSSIBLE TO ADD CAN-04 TO THE CAN-06 SET




CAN04PIC.JPG


FRENCH MILITIA

For the campaign of 1759 the militia companies were amalgamated into 3 brigades by region of origin. They wore the knitted “tuque” or stocking cap typical of the French habitant, in different colours according to their brigade. Red was for Quebec, White for Trois Rivieres, and blue for Montreal.

MF08W.JPG

MF-08W
THE RAID ON ST. FRANCIS 1759,
FRENCH MILITIA,
TROIS RIVIERES BRIGADE,
2 Militia,
(2pcs)




MF08WN.JPG

MF-08WN
THE RAID ON ST. FRANCIS 1759,
FRENCH MILITIA,
TROIS RIVIERES BRIGADE,
4 Militia,
(4pcs)



More to follow....................................................
 
MF08R.JPG

MF-08R
THE RAID ON ST. FRANCIS 1759,
FRENCH MILITIA,
QUEBEC BRIGADE,
2 Militia,
(2pcs)




MF08RN.JPG

MF-08RN
THE RAID ON ST. FRANCIS 1759,
FRENCH MILITIA,
QUEBEC BRIGADE,
4 Militia,
(4pcs)





MF08B.JPG

MF-08B
THE RAID ON ST. FRANCIS 1759,
FRENCH MILITIA,
MONTREAL BRIGADE,
2 Militia,
(2pcs)




MF08BN.JPG

MF-08BN
THE RAID ON ST. FRANCIS 1759,
FRENCH MILITIA,
MONTREAL BRIGADE,
4 Militia,
(4pcs)




**PLEASE CONTACT YOUR LOCAL DEALER FOR FURTHER INFORMATION**
 
THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY COLLECTION

View attachment 209040

The Royal Ecossais was raised by John Drummond in 1744 and disbanded 1763.

Their organisation was to be based on that of the Irish regiments ,to be made up of 11 companies of fusiliers and 1 of grenadiers each of 50 men plus officers for a total of 660 effectives. The officers and men used to form the regiment came from several different sources, firstly from Scotsmen serving in the Irish regiments, Scottish exiles living in France together with recruits smuggled out of Scotland. With an effective of 500 men and officers assembled at St.Omer, with John Lord Drummond as lieutenant colonel, (as for all Royal Regiments, the King of France was always the colonel ) although Lord Drummond wrote on the 29th December 1744 that he was missing only 10 men to complete the regiment.

This regiment, as many other foreign regiments in the French Army were not mercenaries as is often claimed, they were more often than not political or religious refugees who could not safely return to their homeland for fear of persecution.

The regiment had a strength of 350 men at the Battle of Culloden on the16th of April 1746 were they were in the second line and later they helped to cover the retreat of the Highlanders right wing, an attempt by Argyll Militia to interfere was pushed aside but in the skirmish the two battalions became separated and one , probably the 2nd battalion, was caught and surrounded by British Dragoons and forced to surrender in Inverness, the other one, together with their colours continued its retreat towards Ruthven Barracks and did not surrender until the 19th of April.

View attachment 209042

EEC-03N
THE JACOBITE REBELLION 1745,
REGIMENT ROYAL ECOSSOIS,
4 LINE INFANTRY,
(4pcs)


...FANTASTIC....more Royal Ecossais....always a pleasure to have more Jacobites figures......I will definitely get the four figure version.....just one thing.....and I know I'm being picky, but these figures are similar, especially the kneeling pose, (at least to my eye) to the figures that exist for 'EEC-05 Line Infantry at the ready'....not that I'm complaining or ungrateful, consider it more of a personal observation........

...besides the forthcoming Royal Ecossais NCO and the Grenadiers, I'm still hoping for the wish-list winner Royal Artillery and Crew....and then maybe some 4th Regt. of Foot in kneeling firing positions.....Irish Piquets....Bagot's Hussars (these would be stunning if made by JJD)....Lowlanders, and of course the series is still crying out for Charles himself...
...
 
ALSO PLEASE NOTE THAT CANOE SETS WITHOUT FIGURES WILL BE AVAILABLE NEXT MONTH.


...ohhh yes, more empty canoes and many figures (French and Brit soldiers, trappers, militia, women etc) to feet in please!!
ciao
 
...FANTASTIC....more Royal Ecossais....always a pleasure to have more Jacobites figures......I will definitely get the four figure version.....just one thing.....and I know I'm being picky, but these figures are similar, especially the kneeling pose, (at least to my eye) to the figures that exist for 'EEC-05 Line Infantry at the ready'....not that I'm complaining or ungrateful, consider it more of a personal observation........

As usual with John's figures intended for a line setup (either at the ready or firing position), it is the musket strap that most clearly makes the variation. EEC-05 have the tight strap, and the new EEC-03 have the loose strap!

Niels
 

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