The Original Military Tartan –
The Black Watch
©2006 Matthew A. C. Newsome, FSA Scot,
GTS
published in the Scottish Banner, April 2006
As
I write this, the Ministry of Defense has again been in the news
regarding the newly amalgamated Royal Regiment of Scotland. This
time it involves the tartan, specifically the quality and origin of
the cloth to be used for the new regimental kilts. It seems that
the MoD has decided to allow woolen mills, even those outside the
country, to bid for the contract to produce the tartan. To allow
foreign mills to better compete, they are lowering the formally high
standards of regimental cloth.
Many are, of course, up in arms
over this recent move. Jeremy Purvis, Borders MSP, has been quoted
in The Scotsman newspaper (Feb. 23) as saying, “The kilts are
clearly going to be sub-standard. Now there will be different cuts
and shades on parades and it will be an embarrassment.” I
personally think that if the cloth for the regimental kilts is
produced outside of Scotland, it will be a great blow for Scottish
heritage. It’s not that other countries are not capable of
producing tartan cloth. But as the kilt is worn by the Scottish
military as a symbolic garment (they are no longer worn in combat),
and are meant to be indicative of Scottish heritage, then having the
cloth woven, and the kilts tailored, in Scotland is of added
importance.
But all of this uproar over
military tartans has caused me to go back and revisit the origins of
the most recognized of all military tartans – the Black Watch
(otherwise known as the “government sett”). We mentioned this
tartan in last month’s column, as one that bears many names,
including Campbell, Hunting Munro, and Hunting Grant. The reason
these clans all wear the Black Watch tartan is due to their early
involvement in that regiment.
There has in the past been some
argument over the origins of the tartan – was it originally a clan
tartan of that was adopted by the Black Watch, or was it originally
a military tartan that was adopted by the Campbells?
In Campbell Tartan,
Alastair Campbell of Airds, the younger, gives a brief account of
the origins of the Independent Highland Companies raised to keep
peace in the Highlands. He writes, “In 1725 there were six
companies and, for the first time, it appears that their dress was
standardized and that they were all clothed in the same tartan.
Three of the six companies were Campbell ones… It would appear that
this sett, or one very like it, was the one appointed for the
Highland Companies in 1725 and became the tartan adopted by the
Black Watch… when the six companies were regimented to form that
famous military unit in 1739.”
He then goes on to outline the
two theories of the tartan’s origin (clan or regiment). H. D.
MacWilliam, in The Black Watch Tartan is the chief proponent
of it originally being a Campbell clan tartan. However, one only
needs look at the dates for this theory to become suspect. 1739 is
far too early for a “clan tartan” to be in use. Alastair Campbell
himself believes the tartan to be of military origin – saying that
the use of this tartan also by the Grants, Munros, and Sutherlands
points to this conclusion.
He writes, “The earliest
reference to the plain sett having a specific Campbell significance
that I have found is on a label on a sample of the tartan in the
Cockburn Collection of c.1810-1820.”
D. C. Stewart, author of The
Setts of the Scottish Tartans, gives a few theories as to the
possible origins of this tartan. Ultimately he states that the
tartan seems to have been created new at the time of the formation
of the regiment, but gives the possibility that it was created by
combining elements of other pre-existing tartans.
Keep in mind, however, that
Alastair Campbell wrote in 1985 and D. C. Stewart in 1950.
Thankfully, more current research has been able to shed some light
on this issue. The interested reader is referred to The Origins
and Development of Military Tartans: A Re-Appraisal, by James D.
Scarlett, published by Partizan Press in 2003.
I’ll leave the specifics of
Scarlett’s research to those interested in reading his account. But
his conclusion, after considering all of the available evidence, is
that the Black Watch tartan is actually the result of some
evolution. The “Highland Independent Companies in 1725 wore their
own individual patterns that were designated within a regulated
framework and later developed into a standard pattern worn by all
the Companies and the 43rd Regiment which embodied them,”
he writes. The Black Watch tartan he sees as the result of this
development, and did not come into use until “some ten years later
than what is generally supposed.” In other words, he disagrees with
the notion that the Black watch is what was assigned to the
Independent Companies in 1725.
To summarize this development,
Scarlett shows how the Independent Companies in 1725 wore dark
tartans, based on a simple pattern of equal amounts of blue, black
and green, with a narrower band of color on either end of the
pattern to distinguish them. In 1733 the companies wore a tartan
common to all. We do not know what this tartan was, but it was not
the Black Watch. Scarlett is of the opinion that a tartan with a
red stripe on the blue, and a black stripe on the green, was most
likely. Lastly, it is his opinion that the Black Watch tartan as we
know it was not assigned until the regiment was renumbered the 42nd
in 1749.
What makes the Black Watch
tartan so distinctive is the occurrence of alternating single pairs
and double pairs of black lines on the blue. This change
effectively doubles the size of the tartan sett, and would appear to
be unique at the time of the tartan’s inception. Since that time,
this motif has been found in many other tartans. Most of the time
the reason is because of a military connection – for instance, the
Gordon tartan and the MacKenzie tartan each have this
characteristic, as they are each simple variations of the Black
Watch. Other tartans that possess this element would be Lamont,
Forbes, Urquhart, and Hunting MacRae.
Even the MacLachlan and MacNab
tartans are Black Watch variants. Though at first glance these
latter two seem to have little resemblance with the government
tartan, due to the dramatic color difference, the actual designs are
the same. Just look at black and white images of these three
tartans to see the similarity.
What modern tartan research has
clearly shown is that the idea of Scottish regiments adopting the
tartan of a clan is a false one. Instead, it seems much more likely
that clans would adopt the tartans of regiments (as is known to be
the case with the Gordons, MacKenzies, and others) and indeed, that
the practice of clans wearing these regimental tartans may have in
fact been the inspiration for the “clan tartan” system as we now
know it.
It would seem that
tartan-wearing Scots everywhere owe a great cultural dept to these
early regimental tartans.