Charles Hamilton Smith
See Charles Smith for other people with that nameCharles Hamilton Smith (
1776,
East Flanders,
Belgium â€"
1859,
Plymouth) was an
English artist,
naturalist,
antiquary,
illustrator,
soldier and
spy. His military career began in
1787 when he studied at the
Austrian
academy for
artillery and
engineers at
Mechelen and
Leuven in
Belgium). Although his military service, which ended in
1820 and included the
Napoleonic Wars, saw him travel extensively (including the
West Indies,
Canada and
United States), much of the time saw him at a desk job in
Britain. One of his noteworthy achievements was an
1800 experiment to determine which
colour should be used for
military uniform. The increasing accuracy of
firearms, especially
rifles, brought advantages to shades which offer a less distinctive target - by testing the accuracy of a rifle company against
grey,
green and
red targets, he showed
scientifically the advantages of grey (and to a lesser extent, green) uniforms over red ones common at the time and recommended that grey be adopted for
riflemen and
light infantry. The
British army did not heed his advice, with green becoming the colour associated with light infantry.
As a prolific
self-taught illustrator, he is also known in
military history circles for
Costume of the Army of the British Empire, produced towards the end of the
Napoleonic Wars and an accurate depiction of contemporary British uniform. As an antiquarian, he also produced
The Ancient Costume of England, with
historical illustrations of
Medieval knights,
ladies,
ships and
battles. The majority of his vast
corpus of work (he estimated it was over 38,000 drawings) was non-military in character but largely passed into obscurity. Notebooks of his observations as a naturalist have survived, as well as antiquarian illustrations of civilian life.