A duffle coat, or more correctly duffell
coat, is a coat made from duffel, a coarse, thick, woollen material. The name
derives from Duffel, a town in the province
of Antwerp in Belgium where
the material originates. Duffle bags were originally made from the same
material. Although the material is named after the town Duffle, it is commonly
believed that the Duffle family (later changed to Duffel or Duffell) are
responsible for the spread of the garment, a notion which, despite being
debatable, is contested by few mainstream regional academics.
The duffle coat owes its popularity to the
British Royal Navy, who issued a camel-coloured variant of it as an item of
warm clothing during World War I. The design of the coat was modified slightly
and widely issued during World War II and made by "Original Montgomery",
the oldest surviving company chosen by the British Admiralty in the early
1890`s to make the first duffle coats. In the Navy, it was referred to as a
"convoy coat".Field Marshal Montgomery was a famous wearer of the
coat, as a means of identifying himself with his troops, leading to another
nickname, "Monty coat".
Large stocks of post-war military surplus
coats available at reasonable prices to the general public meant that these
coats became a ubiquitous and popular item of clothing in the 1950s and 1960s.
The British firm Gloverall purchased surplus military supply of coats after
World War II and in 1954 started producing their own version of the Duffle
coat. They have continued to make the Monty ever since and still do. Gloverall
made in the 50's what is known as today's Duffle by using leather fastenings
and Buffalo
horn toggles with a double-faced check back fabric. Every Duffle coat you see
today in that configuration is a copy of that original made by Gloverall.
1860
The first design template is received from
the Admiralty (Royal Navy) to create a universal utility garment for all ranks
to share when at sea. The Ideal Clothing Company makes duffels for first time.
1890
Expedition to Antarctica is the first
recorded use by Royal Navy marines of the duffel as an official part of the
uniform,Duffel development is confirmed as a semi double breasted design with
asymmetric closing held together with wooden toggles and sitting at mid thigh
length.
1915
Duffel development is confirmed as a semi
double breasted design with asymmetric closing held together with wooden
toggles and sitting at mid thigh length.Duffels now in wide use across the
Royal Navy.Many officers in the British Army swap their great coats for the
less formal duffel and the use of the duffel
1942
Duffels in use on motor torpedo boats as
well as destroyers.Fabric is now mainly made in Yorkshire
after protests by local politicians. Submariners issued with duffels which
prove unsuitable in the extremely confined spaces and a lighter version of the
original blazer (so called because either they were red or they were first used
on HMS Blazer) is made instead
1945
In the First World War becomes a talking
point of great note as officers had never been allowed to wear such a `rough
all ranks` item of clothing before. Young officer called Bernard Law Montgomery
champions the idea of copying the Royal Navy idea of a universal utility
garment and he takes to wearing his duffel at all times Deliveries of
unofficial duffels to the British Amy begin.
1956
Duffels still not recognized as proper
attire but are in increasing use amongst younger go ahead officer types. New
design is longer, double breasted but still closed with wooden toggles and held
on with rope tapes Outbreak of World War 2 and Montgomery is quickly promoted
to run the Africa campaign- he is always photographed in his by now instantly
recognizable duffel
1960's
SAS first formed as a specials operation unit
behind Rommels lines- standard kit is duffel coat,Following mass demobilisation
of Army and Navy personnel over a million duffel coats are returned to military
stores Military
1976
Flood Europe
with surplus duffels and they become the choice of poor intellectuals
everywhere. First duffel made with horn toggles as a fashion item ,Duffel sits
alongside US
parka as a statement of anti establishment rebellion,Viscount Montgomery of
Alamein dies.
1987
Ideal Clothing Company, part of Tibbett
plc, changes name to Montgomery as a celebration
of 100 years after Montgomery 's
birth.
Paddington fashion; THE HISTORY OF...
DUFFEL COATS
SUSANNAH CONWAY Sunday 20 December 1998 / http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/paddington-fashion-the-history-of-duffel-coats-1193476.html
TO BE trendy this season you need only
sport a decorative hood attached to your coat or top, yet the best-looking
hoods around can be found on that most classic of coat shapes: the duffel coat.
Fashioned with big pockets, check lining
and the ubiquitous toggles, this knee-length coat was created for the British Royal
Navy in the Second World War to protect its men against the biting winds of the
Atlantic and North Sea . The design evolved
from the need for practicality and the original duffel had a very roomy cut
that allowed it to be worn over another coat. The big hood was designed to fit
over the officers' peaked naval caps and the use of toggle fastenings instead
of buttons meant the coats could be fastened and unfastened while wearing thick
gloves.
The word "duffel" originally
referred to a heavy woollen cloth, similar to that which was used to make the
coats, manufactured in the Belgian town of Duffel . After the War, civilians began
wearing army surplus duffel coats and, in 1953, British company Gloverall
started manufacturing a commercial men's duffel coat. Women wore the smaller
sizes of the men's coat until the late Sixties, when duffel coats cut
specifically for women arrived on the market.
Duffel coats are worn across the world and
are particularly popular with the Japanese - 40 per cent of Gloverall's market
is in Japan .
Well- known manufacturers of the duffel coat include Burberry and Aquascutum,
as well as Gloverall, whose customers can be split into two main camps: the
older customer who shops at a gentleman's outfitters and the young and trendy
whose influences come out of the music scene - Liam Gallagher famously wears
one. A cashmere Aquascutum duffel coat features in the January '99 issue of FHM
and duffel coats are now being made for all seasons with neoprene, nylon,
elysian and cashmere versions all available.
Duffel coats are always popular with
children and perhaps the most famous owner of a duffel coat is Paddington Bear,
who first sported one in Michael Bond's book A Bear Called Paddington published
in 1958.
Susannah Conway
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