The lost GMB flags for my British cavalry have surfaced, and those appropriate to the three Dragoon/Dragoon Guard regiments have been bestowed upon them with all due pomp and ceremony... As well as some white glue! There was probably some karma at work here. The post on the Canaanite army that Ken gifted me with has been in the "must do" queue for quite some time, and I finally got around to it. When I opened the Really Useful Box that I had them stored in, it had some "in process" figures within, and in my pre Historicon preparations, I found that I had swept the flags into the box as well, as I knew the cavalry was at the top of the list to do after the convention. Lost flags - found!
The guidon of the 3rd (Queen's Own) Dragoons is a very bluish green, almost a turquoise hue. The Hamilton-Smith diagrams show the green if this regiment as being a rather dull shade more towards the yellow than the blue end of the spectrum, which is how I painted them. In keeping with the unit's white lace, the fringe is silver.
Here they are in their splendor! The flags of the Dragoon Guards are square, like those of the Life Guards and the Horse Guards, because the Dragoon Guards descended from the regiments of Horse, which were heavy cavalry, while the Dragoon regiments have the swallow tail guidons associated with their arm of service. as noted previously, few if any British cavalry regiments carried any of their flags in the filed after 1812, but not so for my lads!
The 3rd (Prince of Wakes) Dragoon Guards standard has a white field and gold fringe, in keeping with the regiment's white facing and yellow lace. The three feathered cap of the regiment's namesake is prominent, if less easily distinguished due to the white feathers on a white field.
The 2nd (Royal North British) Dragoons have the usual guidon shaped flag. In British cavalry regiments, the first squadron caries the Kings standard, and each of the other squadrons has a regimental flag. Ordinarily, the King's standard has a crimson field, whereas the regimental flags have their fields in the facing color. Since I like the aesthetics of the flags matching the facings, most of my regiments carry their Regimental colors. I will use some of the left over King's colors for units that GMB doesn't list flags for.
The guidon of the 3rd (Queen's Own) Dragoons is a very bluish green, almost a turquoise hue. The Hamilton-Smith diagrams show the green if this regiment as being a rather dull shade more towards the yellow than the blue end of the spectrum, which is how I painted them. In keeping with the unit's white lace, the fringe is silver.
British Dragoons and Dragoon Guards, 1803 - 1812
Unit
|
Title
|
Facings
|
Lace
|
1st Dragoon Guards
|
King’s
|
Dark Blue
|
Gold
|
2nd Dragoon Guards
|
Queen’s
|
Black
|
Silver
|
3rd Dragoon Guards
|
Prince of Wales’s
|
White
|
Gold
|
4th Dragoon Guards
|
Royal Irish
|
Dark Blue
|
Silver
|
5th Dragoon Guards
|
Princess Charlotte f Wales
|
Green
|
Gold
|
6th Dragoon Guards
|
Carabiniers
|
White
|
Silver
|
7th Dragoon Guards
|
Prince Royal’s
|
Black
|
Gold
|
1st Dragoons
|
Royal
|
Dark Blue
|
Gold
|
2nd Dragoons
|
Royal North British
|
Dark Blue
|
Gold*
|
3rd Dragoons
|
King’s Own
|
Dark Blue
|
Gold
|
4th Dragoons
|
Queen’s Own
|
Green
|
Silver
|
5th Dragoons
|
vacant
|
--
|
--
|
6th Dragoons
|
Inniskilling
|
Yellow
|
Silver
|
* white lace for men
British Dragoons and Dragoon Guards, 1812
Unit
|
Title
|
Facings
|
Lace $
|
1st Dragoon Guards
|
King’s
|
Dark Blue
|
Yellow
|
2nd Dragoon Guards
|
Queen’s
|
Black
|
White
|
3rd Dragoon Guards
|
Prince of Wales’s
|
White @
|
Yellow
|
4th Dragoon Guards
|
Royal Irish
|
Dark Blue
|
White
|
5th Dragoon Guards
|
Prncs Charlotte of Wales's
|
Green
|
Yellow
|
6th Dragoon Guards
|
Carabiniers
|
White
|
White
|
7th Dragoon Guards
|
Prince Royal’s
|
Black
|
Yellow
|
1st Dragoons
|
Royal
|
Dark Blue
|
Yellow
|
2nd Dragoons
|
Royal North British
|
Dark Blue
|
White*
|
3rd Dragoons
|
King’s Own
|
Dark Blue
|
Yellow
|
4th Dragoons
|
Queen’s Own
|
Green #
|
White
|
5th Dragoons
|
vacant
|
--
|
--
|
6th Dragoons
|
Inniskilling
|
Yellow
|
White
|
$ Officer’s lace was gold or silver
@ 3rd D.G. changed facings to blue in 1815, then yellow in 1819
* Officer’s lace gold; men’s lace white until 1813, then yellow
# sometimes described as blue-green