A few years back when I first started collecting figures
for this project, I won a mixed batch of Hinton Hunt on eBay that included a
unit of British Guards in bearskins. I rejected these figures and eventually
swopped them because of course the Guards didn’t wear bearskins at Waterloo. I
wish I’d hung on to them because my feeling now is - so what if they didn’t?
BN/72 Fusilier Private (charging) - test figure for my next unit. |
I was really pleased therefore to recently be offered some British Fusiliers in bearskin that are ex Eric Knowles collection. Nice first-generation castings and enough to make a full unit using the charging and firing figure types. Again, it’s unlikely that the Fusiliers (other than possibly the Sergeants) wore their bearskins at Waterloo but certainly the Victorians didn’t have a problem representing them that way.
Here's the proof from the Victorians - they DID wear bearskins at Waterloo! |
And at Corunna of course... |
At first, I was planning to designate the unit as the 23rd Royal Welch Fusiliers but when I looked at the Hinton Hunt painting instruction sheet, I saw that Marcus Hinton had decided on the 7th Royal Fusiliers so that’s what I’ll be calling them. Of course, the 7th didn’t make it to Waterloo because they were away fighting in America, but I won’t let a little thing like that stop me using them.
Boer War Blog - if 20mm Colonials is your thing take a look at my latest post (click HERE)