Blood stripe

A blood stripe is a scarlet stripe worn down the outside leg seams of trousers on the dress uniform of the United States Marine Corps. This red stripe is 2 inches (5.1 cm) for general officers, 1+12 inches (3.8 cm) for other officers, and 1+18 inches (2.9 cm) for enlisted staff noncommissioned officers and non-commissioned officers. Modified versions are worn on the officers' evening dress uniforms, with the scarlet flanked with gold trim, and on members of the Marine Band, which wear the traditional red stripe with a white stripe in the center.

The blood stripe is visible on the uniforms of the Marine Corps Recruit Depot San Diego Band in 2003

History

While trouser stripes were in use in various militaries for many years[1] (especially the British Army, whose uniforms influenced American uniforms for many years, as well as the red stripes of the Spanish Navy Marines).[2] In 1837, President Andrew Jackson ordered uniform changes that included the Marine Corps adopt the Army's practice of wearing stripes the same color as uniform jacket facings.[1] These original stripes were buff white to match changes to the uniform jacket, but when the jacket was changed back to dark blue with red trim in 1839, the stripes remained, but altered to a similar blue edged in red. A U.S. Naval Institute history of USMC uniforms records that orders issued in January 1840 provided that officers and non commissioned officers were to wear a scarlet stripe down the outside seam of their blue trousers.[3]

According to Marine Corps history, the blood stripe is to honor fallen marines from the Battle of Chapultepec in 1847, https://www.marines.com/about-the-marine-corps/who-are-the-marines/uniforms-symbols.html

References

Public Domain This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the United States Marine Corps.

  1. "Lore of the Corps". National Museum of the Marine Corps. Archived from the original on 2009-11-05.
  2. "Reseña Histórica" [Historical review] (in Spanish). Spanish Navy. Retrieved 3 January 2010.
  3. Rankin, Robert H. (1962). Uniforms of the Sea Services. United States Naval Institute. p. 145.

Sources

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