Share your favorites on Show & Tell

French Tirailleur Officer’s Jacket

In Military and Wartime > Military Jackets and Coats > Show & Tell.
southcop's loves277 of 764Japanese? carved figuresYogi Bear For President 1964 Campaign
12
Love it
0
Like it

RadegunderRadegunder loves this.
jscott0363jscott0363 loves this.
HarborguyHarborguy loves this.
ron1939ron1939 loves this.
fortapachefortapache loves this.
southcopsouthcop loves this.
blunderbuss2blunderbuss2 loves this.
lisalisa loves this.
SEAN68SEAN68 loves this.
JewelsJewels loves this.
aghcollectaghcollect loves this.
ManikinManikin loves this.
See 10 more
Add to collection

    Please create an account, or Log in here

    If you don't have an account, create one here.


    Create a Show & TellReport as inappropriate


    Posted 10 years ago

    Chrisnp
    (310 items)

    Among the most colorful uniforms of the French Army were those of its colonial troops. “Tirailleur” is a term dating back to Napoleon for skirmishers - light infantry who fought ahead of the advancing columns. Eventually it became the title for light infantry regiments raised in the French colonies mainly in Africa, although some were also in French Indochina

    The braid on the sleeve indicates the owner was a first lieutenant. As an officer, he would be a Frenchman in charge of Africans, and not ethnically African himself. The blue tabs on his yellow collar would have originally included his regimental number. The nine brass buttons are spherical, except for the bottom button which is an old replacement. The six decorative buttons on the back are half spheres with Maurice Bourdon, Paris back marks, which date this piece to no earlier than 1918. The jacket features a slit at the side (visible at the back) for attaching a sword to a belt worn under the jacket. The jacket is fully lined with two inside pockets.

    As shown in the illustration, the jacket would have been worn with scarlet trousers and a blue and scarlet kepi, the colors worn into the field in 1914.

    logo
    Military Jackets and Coats
    See all
    Vintage Souvenir Vietnam Paratrooper Jacket Sukajan Made In Japan
    Vintage Souvenir Vietnam Paratroope...
    $660
    Vtg 40s WW2 USMC P44 Frogskin Camo Reversible Field Jacket/Shirt HBT WWII
    Vtg 40s WW2 USMC P44 Frogskin Camo ...
    $840
    Original US Navy N-1 Deck Jacket
    Original US Navy N-1 Deck Jacket...
    $202
    IHWCU Hot Weather Top Coat ACU OCP Jungle Multicam M-R
    IHWCU Hot Weather Top Coat ACU OCP ...
    $39
    logo
    Vintage Souvenir Vietnam Paratrooper Jacket Sukajan Made In Japan
    Vintage Souvenir Vietnam Paratroope...
    $660
    See all

    Comments

    1. SEAN68 SEAN68, 10 years ago
      stunning!!!
    2. blunderbuss2 blunderbuss2, 10 years ago
      You came thru again for us. Thought that red was universally accepted by Euro as meaning artillery as well as many other countries? Great item!
    3. Chrisnp Chrisnp, 10 years ago
      I always look forward to your comments, Blunder. Actually red trousers and caps were pretty typical colors in the French army, although the M.C. Hammer style parachute pants (how many here are too young to get that reference?) were more specific to colonial troops.
    4. blunderbuss2 blunderbuss2, 10 years ago
      Does make it an easy target to pick out. Reminds one of the Zouaves of the U.S. Civil War & don't think they wore that clown outfit throughout the war.
    5. Chrisnp Chrisnp, 10 years ago
      “Éliminer le pantalon rouge? Jamais ! Le pantalon rouge, c'est la France!” (Get rid of the red pants? Never! The red pants, that's France!) - Eugene Etienne, War Minister, in a cabinet meeting on the subject of issuing less conspicuous uniforms, 1913.

      “To the right and above us lay Hill 325 still covered with fog. In the tall fields of grain on its southern slope, we could not recognize friend or foe. Off to the right and about a half mile ahead of us on the far side of a draw, we saw the red breaches of French Infantry in company strength on the front edge of a yellow Wheatfield behind fresh earthworks.” Then Lieutenant Erwin Rommel, describing his first battle in which his riflemen made easy targets of the French, 1914.

      Actually, the French had designed a less conspicuous “horizon blue” uniform just prior to the war, but it wasn’t in large enough quantities to be general issue when the war broke out. It was about the color of this jacket. The horizon blue uniform was mediocre concealment at best, and then only when you were standing above the horizon line with bushes in front of you. British khaki or German field grey worked much better.

    Want to post a comment?

    Create an account or login in order to post a comment.