The regiment was first raised on 14, January 1776 under the command of Colonel William Smallwood and fought in most the major battles of the war including The New York Campaign, Battle of Trenton, Princeton, Brandywine, Germantown, Monmouth, Camden, Guilford Courthouse before being disbanded on 15 November 1783. The regiment really stood out on Long Island where it virtually by itself earned the nickname "The Maryland 400" by holding off some 2000 British long enough for Sterling's entire Brigade to retreat and join the rest of the American army intact by charging the enemy some 6 times, before itself withdrawing. They fought stubbornly in most engagements and only retreated when ordered to do so.
When deciding to do my first Continental unit in coats I knew the first regiment was going to be the 1st Maryland. They were originally in brown hunting shirts, but I decided to do them in the latter Continental army regulation uniform of blue coats with red turnbacks. I painted them to look somewhat like the painting from H. Charles McBarron 1st Marylanders at Guilford Courthouse which I've long admired, but took some liberties. What I like about the painting other then the drama is how it shows even this well equipped regular army unit isn't perfectly uniformed and is how I picture American units to look and not surprisingly is how I model and paint them. It was fun to paint the unit, but time consuming with the color changes all the straps which I find difficult.
The figures are a mix of Perry and Foundry(early Perry) and the awesome flag is from GMB designs. A little on the flag in that to my knowledge nobody knows exactly what flag the 1st Maryland carried so I had the freedom to pick and choose what I wanted. Since GMB does two conjectural flags for the 2nd Maryland and I only use one flag for my American units I decided to give one to the 1st Maryland and the second I'll give to the 2nd Maryland. Since I really like the flag I was very happy to have the choice!
More units coming soon(ish)!
Thanks for viewing!:-)
Miniature Company-Perry, Foundry
Another splendid painted AWI Regiment Christopher, and nice to have the historical info too!
ReplyDeleteThank you very much Chris and happy you found the info useful!
DeleteChristopher
Very very impressive paintwork and basing Christopher!
ReplyDeleteThank you kindly Rodger!
DeleteChristopher
Fantastic AWI regiment Christopher with an interesting regimental history!
ReplyDeleteThank you very much Cyrus glad you liked both!
DeleteChristopher
As I already told you they're splendid. Figures, painting and arrangement really capture the feel.
ReplyDeleteThank you very much Nick!
DeleteChristopher
What a superb looking unit, seriously impressive work Christopher.
ReplyDeleteThank you kindly Michael very kind of you to say.
DeleteChristopher
Impressive painted unit !!!
ReplyDeleteBest regards Michael
Thank you kindly Michael!
DeleteChristopher
Beautifully painted figures. That flag is unusual, certainly makes an interesting focal point.
ReplyDeleteThank you very much Matt and GMB did indeed do a fantastic job on the flag.(Like always)
DeleteChristopher
Very impressive as always: the painting, the basing and the flag – top-notch work!
ReplyDeleteThank you very much Jonas!
DeleteChristopher
A beautiful unit, details are awesome!
ReplyDeleteThank you kindly Phil!
DeleteChristopher
A great looking unit. Just how I like AWI units to look
ReplyDeleteThank you very much Neil.
DeleteChristopher
This is another beautiful AWI unit. It has look of what an American unit should look like like IMO. The blue coats with red facings, as well as a smattering of civilian attire - to include the ubiquitous hunting frock coats. Best, Dean
ReplyDeleteThank you very much Dean I do appreciate your kind support.
DeleteChristopher
I love that little history lesson you incorporated into the post and as for your miniatures ... excellent painting! ^_^
ReplyDeleteThank you kindly Monster!
DeleteChristopher
More stunning brushwork! I agree with Dean. Perfect rendering of the mix of American infantry. Beautiful composition.
ReplyDeleteThank you very much Jonathan I really do appreciate the kind sentiment!
DeleteChristopher
Superb painting and basing. This unit would be perfectly at home under display glass, but better on a tabletop!
ReplyDeleteThank you very much Monty! I hope it does see the tabletop this year!
DeleteChristopher
Wonderful stuff Christopher. Beautifully detailed and superbly based.
ReplyDeleteThank you kindly Michael.
DeleteChristopher
Lovely neat and clean painting style!
ReplyDeleteThank you very much BP!
DeleteChristopher
More fine work Chris - positively splendid!
ReplyDeleteThank you very much Scott!
DeleteChristopher
Hi Chris, I'm painting the 9th of foot for Saratoga if they look half as good as yours I will be doing well . I hope you put some more pictures up soon. The one thing I don't do is set the units in a proper background, something you get right every time .
ReplyDeleteRegards Furphy.
Thank you very much Furphy. Saratoga is interesting campaign and I wish you luck on the 9th of foot!
DeleteChristophe
It's great to see you painting AWI again! They look fantastic!
ReplyDeleteThank you very much Cory!
DeleteChristopher
Did I tell you liked firing lines best? Well, you know now. They might be impractical for gaming sometimes but done right you can't beat a firing line. Great stuff!!
ReplyDeleteThank you very much Michael and I do enjoy firing lines as they give a feeling of action! Currently I'm doing quite a few as I'll be adding other posed formations a bit latter.
DeleteChristopher
Excellent work on these Christopher
ReplyDeleteThank you very much Captain!
DeleteChristopher