The pith helmet
(also known as the safari helmet, sun helmet, topee, sola topee,
salacot or topi ) is a lightweight cloth-covered helmet made of cork
or pith, typically pith from the sola, Aeschynomene aspera, an Indian
swamp plant, or A. paludosa, or a similar plant. Designed to shade
the wearer's head and face from the sun, pith helmets were often worn
by people of European origin in the tropics, but have also been used
in other contexts
Crude forms of pith
helmets had existed as early as the 1840s, but it was around 1870
that the pith helmet became popular with military personnel in
Europe's tropical colonies. The Franco-Prussian War had popularized
the German Pickelhaube, which may have influenced the distinctive
design of the pith helmet. Such developments may have merged with a
traditional design from the Philippines, the salakot. The alternative
name salacot (also written salakhoff) appears frequently in Spanish
and French sources; it comes from the Tagalog word salacsac (or
Salaksak). During the Revolution in the Philippine-American War,
Emilio Aguinaldo and the Philippine revolutionary military used to
wear the pith helmet borrowed from the Spaniards alongside the straw
hat and the native salakot.
Originally made of
pith with small peaks or "bills" at the front and back, the
helmet was covered by white cloth, often with a cloth band (or
puggaree) around it, and small holes for ventilation. Military
versions often had metal insignia on the front and could be decorated
with a brass spike or ball-shaped finial. The chinstrap could be in
leather or brass chain, depending on the occasion. The base material
later became the more durable cork, although still covered with cloth
and frequently still referred to as "pith" helmet.
The earliest
appearance of sun helmets made of pith occurred in India during the
Anglo-Sikh wars of the 1840s. Adopted more widely during the Indian
Mutiny of 1857–59, they were generally worn by British troops
serving in the Ashanti War of 1873, the Zulu War of 1878–79 and
subsequent campaigns in India, Burma, Egypt and South Africa. This
distinctively shaped headwear came to be known as the Foreign Service
helmet.
During the
Anglo-Zulu War, British troops dyed their white pith helmets with
tea, mud or other makeshift means of camouflage. Subsequently
khaki-coloured pith helmets became standard issue for active tropical
service.
While this form of
headgear is particularly associated with both the British and the
French empires, all European colonial powers used versions of it
during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The French tropical
helmet was first authorised for white colonial troops in 1878. The
Dutch wore the helmet during the entire Aceh War (1873–1914) and
the United States Army adopted it during the 1880s for use by
soldiers serving in the intensely sunny climate of the Southwest
United States. It was also worn by the North-West Mounted Police in
policing North-West Canada, 1873 through 1874 to the North-West
Rebellion and even before the Stetson in the Yukon Gold Rush of 1898.
European officers
commanding locally recruited indigenous troops, as well as civilian
officials in African and Asian colonial territories, used the pith
helmet. White troops serving in the tropics usually wore pith
helmets; although on active service they sometimes used such
alternatives as the wide-brimmed slouch hats, which were worn by US
troops in the Philippines and by British Empire forces in the later
stages of the Boer War.
At the same time,
the military adopted a broadly similar helmet, of dark blue cloth
over cork and incorporating a bronze spike, for wear in non-tropical
areas. This helmet led to the retirement of the shako headdress.
While not considered a true "pith helmet" this headdress
did resemble its tropical counterpart and during the 1890s a white
version which could be worn in both the United Kingdom and India was
experimentally issued to some British regiments. Modeled on the
German Pickelhaube, the British Army adopted this headgear (which
they called the "Home Service Helmet") in 1878. Most
British line infantry, artillery (with ball rather than spike) and
engineers wore the helmet until 1902, when khaki Service Dress was
introduced. With the general adoption of khaki for field dress in
1903, the helmet became purely a full dress item, being worn as such
until 1914.
The Home Service
Helmet is still worn by some British Army bands or Corps of Drums on
ceremonial occasions today. It is closely related to the custodian
helmet worn by a number of police forces in England and Wales.
The US Army wore
blue cloth helmets of the same pattern as the British model from 1881
to 1901 as part of their full dress uniform. The version worn by
cavalry and mounted artillery included plumes and cords in the colors
(yellow or red) of their respective branches of service.
Black helmets of a
similar shape were also part of the uniform of the Victoria Police
during the late 19th century. It may have been worn by some of the
police involved in the shootout with the legendary bushranger Ned
Kelly at Glenrowan, although contemporary sketches show kepis being
worn.
Pith helmets were
widely worn during World War I by British, Belgian, French,
Austrian-Hungarian and German troops fighting in the Middle East and
Africa.
Helmets of this
style (but without true pith construction) were used as late as World
War II by Japanese, European and American military personnel in hot
climates. Included in this category are the sun helmets worn in
Ethiopia by Italian troops, the Royal Netherlands East Indies Army,
Union Defence Force, and Germany's Afrika Korps, as well as similar
helmets used to a more limited extent by U.S. and Japanese forces in
the Pacific Theater.
Pith helmets
abandoned by retreating Italian forces during the North African
campaign.
During the 1930s the
locally recruited forces maintained in the Philippines, (consisting
of the army and a gendarmerie), used sun helmets. The Axis Second
Philippine Republic's military, known as the Bureau of Constabulary,
as well as guerrilla groups in the Philippines also wore this
headdress.
The Ethiopian
Imperial Guard retained pith helmets as a distinctive part of their
uniform until the overthrow of Emperor Haile Selassie I in 1974.
Imperial Guard units serving in the Korean War often wore these
helmets when not in actual combat.
The British Army
formally abolished the tropical helmet in 1948.
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