The Captain's Kit Bag : Intro
Wellington declared that the Battle of Waterloo was won on the
playing fields of Eton but the association of the British armed
forces with sports stretches back even further. Drake is known
as much for refusing to cut short his game of bowls as he is for
defeating the Spanish Armada. In the 18th, 19th and early 20th
centuries the life of a gentleman was often a sporting one. It
was also likely that he spent some time in the military where he
might further these pursuits. This joint catalogue explores the
strong relationship between the military and sports. Sports were
used to build character amongst the officer class as well as develop
the team ethic. J.E.C. Welldon, the headmaster of Harrow between
1881 and 1895, firmly believed that ‘the pluck, the energy,
the perseverance, the good temper, the self-control, the discipline,
the co-operation, the esprit de corps which merit success in cricket
or football, are the very qualities which win the day in peace
or war.’ Some sports
were also very practical for training purposes and the advantages
for a cavalry regiment to play polo or go pig sticking and tent
pegging are obvious.
Games were also a welcome diversion to colonial life
for both the military and the administrators of the Empire. The army
was a rich channel by which sports were both introduced to the colonies
and existing pastimes were absorbed, adapted and regulated to become ‘British’.
There was a great interest back home in the exotic life to be had
in a country such as India, as the book ‘Oriental Field Sports’ (No.2)
testifies. A century later the interest was still there. Snaffles
had already captured the ideal life of the sporting gentleman with ‘The
Finest View in Europe’ showing the lay of the land from the
saddle. He transported his subject to India in ‘The Finest View
In Asia’ (No.8) and summed up perfectly the relationship between
the two continents as far as a gentleman was concerned.
Good sport was to be had in both.
There are very strong connections
between the manufacturers of portable furniture and sporting goods. Some
made both, such as the Army & Navy Store or S.W. Silver and realised
the practicalities of having agents or outlets throughout the
Empire. Others purely capitalized on the good business sense of
marketing folding furniture to both the traveller and the sportsmen.
The cross over between campaign furniture and sporting antiques
is just as relevant today. In putting together this catalogue
both businesses involved, Christopher Clarke Antiques and Manfred
Schotten Antiques, have brought different areas of expertise.
There is much we have taught each other about our common ground
and we hope you will share with us our fascination with this absorbing
subject.
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