Royal Tyrone Regiment at Dublin Castle, 1801 - Richard Simkin (1850-1926)
Royal Tyrone Regiment at Dublin Castle, 1801 - Richard Simkin (1850-1926)
Royal Tyrone Regiment at Dublin Castle, 1801 - Richard Simkin (1850-1926)
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Royal Tyrone Regiment at Dublin Castle, 1801 - Richard Simkin (1850-1926)
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Royal Tyrone Regiment at Dublin Castle, 1801 - Richard Simkin (1850-1926)
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Royal Tyrone Regiment at Dublin Castle, 1801 - Richard Simkin (1850-1926)

Royal Tyrone Regiment at Dublin Castle, 1801 - Richard Simkin (1850-1926)

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Overall: 60cm (23in) x 77cm (30.5in)

Watercolour and gouache on paper. Study of the Grenadier Company of the The 2nd Royal Tyrone Regiment drawn up infront of the Cork Hill Gate, Dublin Castle. Framed and glazed.

Simkin’s unusually large and detailed uniform study depicts Grenadiers of the Tyrone Militia, distinguishable by their bearskin caps, mounting guard at Dublin Castle. The officer in the centre carries the new King’s Colour granted in 1801 due to the passing Act of Union of that year which added the Cross of St Patrick to the British flag. 

Richard Simkin (1850-1926) was born in Kent, served in the Artists Rifles and attended the Heatherley Art School. He was employed by the War Office designing recruiting posters and providing illustrations for the ‘Army and Navy Gazette’. He married in 1880 and lived for six years at Aldershot before moving to Herne Bay. He illustrated ‘The War in Egypt’ for publisher George Routledge in 1883; and in 1888, produced a volume of illustrated verse under the title ‘Following the Drum - Sketches of Soldier-Life in Peace and War, Past and Present’. Regarded as an authority on British military uniforms, he depicted imperial and colonial troops to create such series as 'Types of the Indian Army' for the ‘Army and Navy Gazette’ in 1901, having gained much first hand information at the Colonial and India Exhibition of 1886. During his lifetime, he contributed illustrations to numerous publications including ‘The Graphic’ and ‘Boy’s Own Magazine’. His work can be found in many regimental museums.