British Army Fitness: Then and Now - How do they compare to modern standards?

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  • @Tadicuslegion78
    @Tadicuslegion78 2 місяці тому +792

    Napoleonic era: two eyes, two hands, all your digits, not a cripple. Front line infantry!

    • @redcoathistory
      @redcoathistory  2 місяці тому +54

      Ha ha yeah that sounds about right.

    • @rhonin255
      @rhonin255 2 місяці тому +169

      Thing is, when there was a 95% chance your average recruit had done manual labour since being 12 years old, physical fitness becomes less of a requirement, but more of a given...

    • @sherwoodforester4666
      @sherwoodforester4666 2 місяці тому +74

      Don't forget the front 4 teeth to bite the rough the paper cartridge. Hardcore men back then!

    • @Tadicuslegion78
      @Tadicuslegion78 2 місяці тому +22

      @@sherwoodforester4666 Shattered your teeth cause you got a mouth full of cavities that need to be pulled? that's dentistry!

    • @tomtaylor6163
      @tomtaylor6163 2 місяці тому +15

      @@sherwoodforester4666I’m pretty sure it was just to have enough opposing teeth . In the American Civil War that was at first a requirement . So some potential draftees would actually have their teeth pulled

  • @barryj388
    @barryj388 2 місяці тому +507

    When I started work at the railway I went for a physical. I ran up the stairs to the doctor's office. The doctor was an old man, even back then. He asked me "are you tired from running up the stairs?" I said no and he responded "you're in better shape than me!" then he said "can you hear?"... yes. "can you see?...yes. "OK, you're good to go!" When I told the older guys at work about this, they said "that's the same physical he gave us during the war."

    • @johnnyarvind
      @johnnyarvind 2 місяці тому +7

      😂

    • @forthfarean
      @forthfarean Місяць тому +22

      When I joined the police decades ago the medical consisted of standing stark naked to attention ( grow up!) in front of a panel of 3 men ,at least one was a doctor. I was told to turn around and touch my toes. That was it; passed. Next please!

    • @mercurycid
      @mercurycid Місяць тому +5

      i did my apprenticeship in he railway...fond memories, (i deliberately forget the bad shit...) great, learnt lots and learnt well. also learnt how to play cards( 500. dont bet as a teenager ego and just being dumb is enough to have you eating noodles and toasties lol). aside from that in the 80s, there was no physical, you could do the job, or learn and work how top do the job.
      would not trade it!

    • @adamc1272
      @adamc1272 Місяць тому +11

      A driver I know told me about his physical at Crewe. They checked one eye, which was fine, but the other eye he didn't reach the standard. "OK, we'll do your weight and then come back to that." Probably helped that the scales were right next to the chart. Needless to say he passed with flying colours and has driven every train imaginable over the past 36 years. 😊

    • @iangarrett741
      @iangarrett741 Місяць тому +8

      I remember a French Foreign Legion doctor saying he got potential recruits to run up and down several flights of stairs. He wasn’t interested in how quickly they could run but how quickly they recovered.

  • @dg20120
    @dg20120 2 місяці тому +300

    My grandfather spent much of his teenage years plowing behind a mule. When he went into the army in 1944, he thought that basic training, including marches with full gear weren’t that bad.

    • @zhufortheimpaler4041
      @zhufortheimpaler4041 Місяць тому +38

      thats the thing.
      in a society where heavy manual labor was the norm, as it was in the 1930´s and 40´s, certain "feats" were not as amazing as they seem today.
      spend 2/3 of your live working hard in the field, steelworks or similar with 1930´s tech, meaning primarily manual work and maybe horsedrawn etc, you got a very different stature than a modern day men.
      similarly you grow thick callus or weals on your hands etc.
      so grabbing a hot barrel of an MG42 or Browning M1918 after sustained fire without gloves is not going to bother you the same way as a modern day human would be affected by it.
      Most modern day humans would burn their hands, humans with thick callus wouldnt so easily.
      etc.

    • @cattysplat
      @cattysplat Місяць тому +25

      @@zhufortheimpaler4041 There is however a modern fallacy, that musculature gives endurance strength. It's simply not true, muscles just give very short performance strength, useful for sports and short events. You can watch the skinniest Africans without an inch of muscle dig out giant boulders with picks, carry on their heads and crack them open for 10 hours a day everyday, even the women. They also live off just cracked wheat and dehydrated due to no running water. The brain training and pain tolerance is by far the most powerful aspect to human capability.

    • @BudgetGainsByJJ
      @BudgetGainsByJJ Місяць тому +8

      @@zhufortheimpaler4041during my young adult years I worked as a brick labourer and later a bricklayer, I would still also workout in the afternoons, I trained with a lot of marines and did many military style types of training (like rucking heavy with a heavy rifle) and a lot of the things they thought were “hard” I found weren’t that bad. If someone wants to prepare for military labouring for a year or 2 (bricklaying specifically) might be of great help

    • @aaronb2779
      @aaronb2779 Місяць тому +5

      @@cattysplat yeah… that’s not how the human body works. “Endurance strength” is a product of muscle strength and anaerobic/aerobic conditioning (fitness).
      And neither do “muscles give short performance strength”, not how the human body works whatsoever. You body has no way of performing any kind of movement without muscle.
      If you can dig better than someone who is stronger and fitter than you, that’s because you’ve developed the skill of digging better than they have.

    • @alexanderaugustus
      @alexanderaugustus Місяць тому +3

      I reckon it's what you're used to. Plowing a field and doing work on the farm really make you strong and tough. People in the past were simply strong enough to do some heavy war stuff. But as the presenter says, young lads from the city didn't have that experience, so they weren't as strong, even if they worked in a factory. Medieval peasants were ready to pick up a polearm any day, but some kid from a factory was probably struggling with a rifle.

  • @ThePierre58
    @ThePierre58 2 місяці тому +212

    Royal Marines training, 1980. The PTIs were savage on correct posture, hydration and diet. At 65, I can still do 30 press-ups

    • @bastogne315
      @bastogne315 Місяць тому +3

      I'd like to see that mate..upload a video.

    • @juliandavies9591
      @juliandavies9591 Місяць тому +23

      Since when could a bootneck count to 30?

    • @ThePierre58
      @ThePierre58 Місяць тому

      Hahaha, I suspect RAF has joined the chat.@@juliandavies9591

    • @luciusesox1luckysox570
      @luciusesox1luckysox570 Місяць тому

      So can I, Im 66... Dont use it you lose it.@@bastogne315

    • @GoreTexTillEndEx
      @GoreTexTillEndEx Місяць тому +6

      Hi Royal - RM training for me also; went through CTC in 2007-2008. At the time it’s the hardest thing ever, and everything gets worse. I didn’t realise how much they were conditioning us for life in units though - apart from operational deployments, things like Norway and mountain training packages were harder than nod training.

  • @briangulley6027
    @briangulley6027 2 місяці тому +243

    Back when I was in the USAF one of our harder requirements was, we had to get out of our chairs for at least 30 minutes per day. You read that right 30 minutes per day. The Gestapo didn't treat suspects that bad. I somehow manage to survive until retirement yes, the USAF has some hard as nails people don't underestimate us.

    • @jonathanhicks140
      @jonathanhicks140 2 місяці тому +49

      Love it, as British ex infantry I understand that the RAF are still working up to these exacting standards, but still have a bit of a way to go……😈😂😂

    • @jon9021
      @jon9021 2 місяці тому +8

      Hahaha! Well done sir!

    • @jon9021
      @jon9021 2 місяці тому +2

      @@jonathanhicks140😂😂

    • @Matt_Alaric
      @Matt_Alaric 2 місяці тому +13

      As pilots and pen pushers surely you should be getting encouraged to spend more time sitting down to really push that iron ass experience!

    • @freespeech4023
      @freespeech4023 2 місяці тому

      ​@jonathanhicks140 hey us RAF do the 5 mile of death march ,let's see you crayon munchers do that ❤❤❤😂😂😂😂

  • @davidryan4454
    @davidryan4454 2 місяці тому +244

    King Harold's march to Stamford Bridge & then back to Hastings....... impressive in any era.

    • @redcoathistory
      @redcoathistory  2 місяці тому +24

      Oh damn I wish I'd thought of that as I could have included it. Any good sources?

    • @PortilloMoment
      @PortilloMoment 2 місяці тому +13

      @@redcoathistory 'Anglo Saxon Chronicle' is the only real source and it provides little detailed info. The general distance is known and the time taken to cover it but beyond that the detail regarding fitness is very limited.
      A large proportion of the force taken north would have been composed of Housecarls and some Thegns (perhaps the most senior of the Hundred), and these can be expected to have been professional, well equipped and fit but definite detail is lacking.
      Harold's casualties of about 5,000 from Stamford Bridge would probably have been decisive 3 weeks later at Hastings.

    • @Arcwelder12
      @Arcwelder12 2 місяці тому +15

      The Anglo Saxon Fyrd is likely to have been largely mounted. The expectation was that a man would serve from every 5 hides of land. This was about the average size of a thegns estate and most members of the fyrd were probably thegns themselves. Being relatively wealthy part time soldiers (rates of pay and the amount of land required to provide a fyrdman was about the same as that used for knights after the conquest) the fyrdmen were expected to provide their own equipment and mounts. This and accounts from Alfred the Greats tine make it likely that the Anglo-Saxon armies fought as mounted infantry. Using horses for strategic mobility and (mostly) dismounting to fight.
      The Normans initially changed over to a more Calvary centric system like they had used in France (and were actually pretty famous for) but encounters with Welsh longbowmen and Scottish sciltrons during Edward I's reign led to a similar system re-emerging for the Hundred Years War. With mounted Archers and Men-at-arms dismounting to fight on prepared positions.

    • @jkent9915
      @jkent9915 Місяць тому +4

      You’re not wrong. The crazy part isn’t the soldier, I expect almost any modern infantryman fresh out of basic can make 45 miles a day, it’s the logistics that are overwhelmingly impressive.

    • @2adamast
      @2adamast Місяць тому +1

      @@Arcwelder12you overestimate horses, they will have just as many problems covering the distance.

  • @davepangolin4996
    @davepangolin4996 2 місяці тому +298

    Harold and his march up to Stamford Bridge and back was quite some effort

    • @olwens1368
      @olwens1368 2 місяці тому +29

      Amazing- fight and win, then march all the way back and fight again.

    • @uncletiggermclaren7592
      @uncletiggermclaren7592 2 місяці тому +22

      And he would have won both, if his men had of obeyed orders.

    • @kennethsanders786
      @kennethsanders786 2 місяці тому +10

      Harold and his elite Karls were mounted for longer maneuver but fought their battles on foot. Local militia, the fyrd, maneuvered locally on foot. However, this did not change this remarkable achievement of Harold.
      Perhaps, Harold thought his surprisingly rapid entry onto the field of battle was worth more than waiting for reinforcements. Who knows?

    • @MarlboroughBlenheim1
      @MarlboroughBlenheim1 2 місяці тому +2

      They didn't march. They rode on horses. And the locals were raided in the locality.

    • @MarlboroughBlenheim1
      @MarlboroughBlenheim1 2 місяці тому +1

      @@olwens1368they rode on horses

  • @shaunpcoleman
    @shaunpcoleman 2 місяці тому +103

    I joined the military when I was 19. At that age I could pass the standard. Go all day in all full kit, sleep rough wrapped in a ground sheet and be ready to go again. At 40, not so much. Anybody who says they are as good at 40 as they were at 20 was not very bloody good when they were 20.

    • @fyrdraca77
      @fyrdraca77 Місяць тому +8

      Depends on how active one is throughout their lives. Been at athlete most of my life and at 46 still work out 5 days a week between Brazilian Jiu Jitsu & weight training. As I age the difference I find is that it does take me longer to recover. A few years ago I would train 6 days a week and only need 1 rest day to feel refreshed, whilst now I need 2!

    • @747urhdh
      @747urhdh Місяць тому +2

      I enlisted as a Tanker (19k) at the age of 33. After about 1 month of OSUT I was running a 12min and some small change 2 mile. Knocking out 80 push ups in 2 min, and around 70 sit ups in 2 min. I’d say that was def above the standard, but also common from the young guys. At 40 I’m in college and pushing pencils😂

    • @jamie49868
      @jamie49868 Місяць тому +4

      Come on man, we all know that it is the 40yr's who dominate athletic competition...oh wait. We all know that those 40yr's can drink and party all night and work all day the next...oh wait. Okay, we all know it's 20yr's who need knee/elbow/ankle wraps, have aching backs, take naps in the middle of the day, and can't get out of the chair without making noises...oh wait.
      I was really fit for a 40yr but couldn't carry my 20yr jock. It is what it is.

    • @shaunpcoleman
      @shaunpcoleman Місяць тому +2

      @@jamie49868 It truly sucks getting old.

    • @jamie49868
      @jamie49868 Місяць тому +3

      @@shaunpcoleman Well it does beat the alternative.

  • @nicolasberesford4933
    @nicolasberesford4933 2 місяці тому +194

    Some of the men who worked on the railway walked miles to work every day and when they got there, worked for 16 hours or more , then walked home again. I wonder when they found time to sleep? I worked on the railway after leaving the RAF and I'm glad that I didn't have to do what they did.

    • @redcoathistory
      @redcoathistory  2 місяці тому +17

      Yes, they were certainly tough cookies. Thanks for sharing.

    • @BigSkySix
      @BigSkySix 2 місяці тому +30

      Careful, we're heading into Monty Python Yorkshiremen area.

    • @rule3036
      @rule3036 2 місяці тому

      No electricity, instant hot water, motor transport etc. If you wanted to cook you had to chop up wood for a fire, pump water by hand and unless wealthy had to walk everywhere...that was normal daily life let alone in the field so people were used to physical work as a norm unlike us today.

    • @jonathanhicks140
      @jonathanhicks140 2 місяці тому +12

      Nothing can compare with Monty Python Yorkshire Men! I mean, when I wer’ a lad………….

    • @tdoran616
      @tdoran616 2 місяці тому

      Oh but remember! They’re now trying to push the narrative that diversity / Africans built Britain. I’m tired of seeing that sh*t.

  • @andrewcarter7503
    @andrewcarter7503 2 місяці тому +106

    I'm sure every military person and sports player would like to thank that wonderful chap who came up with that simple, most loved exercise. The wonderfully named Dr Royal Huddleston Burpee.

    • @redcoathistory
      @redcoathistory  2 місяці тому +5

      Ha ha I hadn't realised that it was named after a person - will look it up. Thanks for the info.

    • @andrewcarter7503
      @andrewcarter7503 2 місяці тому +15

      @@redcoathistory if I remember right it was developed as a quick standardised initial fitness assesment in the 1930s for the US army. You were only supposed to do 4! Then timed as to how long it took your heart rate to return to normal. No jumping, no clapping, And only 4.
      If only he knew the monster he created!

    • @ThePsiclone
      @ThePsiclone Місяць тому +2

      I think you're being optimist on the probability of thanks giving. Unless the thanks are being given warmly and firmly around the neck? In which case I believe there's a queue over there -------->

    • @topsysdad1
      @topsysdad1 Місяць тому

      Love burpees

    • @michaelmurdock4607
      @michaelmurdock4607 Місяць тому

      ​@@ThePsicloneI'll grab a number!

  • @sillymesilly
    @sillymesilly 2 місяці тому +83

    Our ancestor were mostly farmers, therefore already physically ready for battle.

    • @nathangriffiths6218
      @nathangriffiths6218 Місяць тому +5

      Depending on how far you go back, by the 18th and 19th century a lot of their recruits would have been from urban slums (and hence the decline in fitness seen)

    • @DevilbyMoonlight
      @DevilbyMoonlight Місяць тому +3

      this is true, and were much fitter in their daily lives,

    • @NMahon
      @NMahon Місяць тому +3

      Nutrition was very mixed though a lot of people weren't well nourished

    • @gromm93
      @gromm93 Місяць тому +1

      @@NMahon ... except the farmers. Who made food.

    • @NMahon
      @NMahon Місяць тому +4

      @@gromm93 that really depends, a lot of farmers (unless you were a farm owner) were very poor and most people were labourers and they wouldn't have had access to the wide variety of foods available now. Just look at the heights of people in the 19th century compared to now. People are much taller now and that comes down to nutrition, we don't have to deal with winter scarcity which nearly everyone but the rich had to deal with

  • @cymro6537
    @cymro6537 2 місяці тому +47

    Consider this :
    Immediately after his victory at the battle of Stamford bridge against the Vikings,Harold Godwinson was informed that the Normans had landed at Pevensey - 185 miles south.
    Harold then rushed his infantry to Hastings (and to his doom)in just four days.
    That's 46.25 miles a day
    Incredible.

    • @the13thdukeofwybourne77
      @the13thdukeofwybourne77 2 місяці тому +2

      Something to take on board next time one has 'a bad day at the office'!

    • @ubcroel4022
      @ubcroel4022 Місяць тому +2

      I think a modern soldier or marine would die trying to do that, they were just built different backin the day.

    • @jameson1239
      @jameson1239 Місяць тому +3

      @@ubcroel4022modern soldiers carry a lot more weight then back then average gear weight now is like 80-120lbs back then they had non soldiers and pack animals carry all the gear

    • @aaronb2779
      @aaronb2779 Місяць тому +1

      @@ubcroel4022complete nonsense. A modern soldier is more than capable of doing that.

    • @StevenWJRichards
      @StevenWJRichards 4 дні тому

      They were probably to knackered to fight!

  • @ak9989
    @ak9989 2 місяці тому +57

    As an American I can't get enough of Redcoat military history 😊!

    • @redcoathistory
      @redcoathistory  2 місяці тому +2

      Excellent news!

    • @Kyoto_Ed
      @Kyoto_Ed Місяць тому +2

      Is that cus we burnt down the white house in 1812? lol jk. Respect on both sides

    • @thomasmurphy6595
      @thomasmurphy6595 Місяць тому +1

      ​@@Kyoto_EdIt was 1814, and you lost a month later at Baltimore, so we got over it soon enough 😉

    • @Kyoto_Ed
      @Kyoto_Ed Місяць тому +1

      @@thomasmurphy6595You're right! Fair enough. Good thing we're both on the same side now lol. Stay cool my colonial brother.

  • @brightmodelengineering8399
    @brightmodelengineering8399 2 місяці тому +60

    My father was a WW2 commando and later opened a supermarket. During the winter of 1962 we lived 3 miles from the town where his shop was and 1.5 miles from a main road. A customer had ordered a large turkey but it was in our freezer, so dad set off through snow up to 4 feet deep the mile and half carrying this 30lb plus turkey and managed to get a lift at the main road. So even at the age of 44 he was capable of doing that.

    • @redcoathistory
      @redcoathistory  2 місяці тому +4

      Great story - thanks a lot for sharing.

    • @Briselance
      @Briselance Місяць тому +6

      Eh, 44 isn't that old.

    • @Michael-fj5sh
      @Michael-fj5sh Місяць тому

      I’m 44 and I’m the fittest I’ve ever been!

    • @Putseller100
      @Putseller100 15 днів тому +1

      @@Michael-fj5sh It is important to let people know that. Too many people let themselves go and they all like to blame it on age.

  • @welshwarrior5263
    @welshwarrior5263 2 місяці тому +53

    As a young frontline soldier of the 80's and 90's, I was as fit as any athlete. I could have gone out with the lads, drank ten pints of beer, and ran 20 miles the next day. Now, at the ripe old age of 52, it's a struggle to walk up the stairs. Lol.

    • @redcoathistory
      @redcoathistory  2 місяці тому +13

      Ha ha yes age certainly catches up with us. I look back and wander how the hell did I drink all night and still manage to work the next day - now I have three pints and can barely walk the next day,

    • @welshwarrior5263
      @welshwarrior5263 2 місяці тому +2

      @@redcoathistory I could get a hangover just by smelling it now. Lol.

    • @DGE123
      @DGE123 Місяць тому +3

      @@welshwarrior5263 chwarae teg bro-try a low carb diet its a game changer and I am older than you! also include Curcumin!

    • @naughtyUphillboy
      @naughtyUphillboy Місяць тому +2

      52 is no ripe age.

    • @jamiemackay1037
      @jamiemackay1037 Місяць тому +1

      💯 % with you on this....

  • @trickydicky2908
    @trickydicky2908 2 місяці тому +72

    Remember in the movie, Zulu, where the soldier opined about the absurdity of running, in order to fight a battle? A great line. Lol

    • @redcoathistory
      @redcoathistory  2 місяці тому +4

      Ha ha yep that is a classic line.

    • @realhorrorshow8547
      @realhorrorshow8547 2 місяці тому +4

      Worth bearing in mind that he is a squaddie carrying up to 70lbs, comparing himself to a Zulu carrying only his weapons, with boys to bring along a little food, for a very short campaign.

    • @the13thdukeofwybourne77
      @the13thdukeofwybourne77 2 місяці тому +3

      Pvt William Jones......"Well, there's daft, it is then. I don't see no sense in running to fight a battle."

    • @craigbaxter4595
      @craigbaxter4595 Місяць тому +1

      Very good movie

    • @Toxoplasma13
      @Toxoplasma13 Місяць тому +1

      ​@realhorrorshow8547 the Shakan system pushed "pack light, move fast, show up first" to the limit of what a man can do in foot.

  • @johnvelas70
    @johnvelas70 2 місяці тому +27

    I'm a USN Vet.
    I do high volume calisthenics.
    My Grandfather worked for the Bethlehem Steel for 40 years.
    In that time, he took of 4 days.
    Once the day after his hernia operation, once when he broke his rib walking to work (he never owned a car), once when my uncle gave his 1st Mass, and the day of my Grandmother's funeral.
    People back then were a cross between mules and bulls.
    Modern man would die to death before days end.

    • @fazole
      @fazole Місяць тому +6

      That's why FDR admin set the retirement age of 65 for social security, most did not make it much past that age back then.

    • @johnvelas70
      @johnvelas70 Місяць тому

      @@fazole He died young at eightyfour (84)

    • @thelostcosmonaut5555
      @thelostcosmonaut5555 Місяць тому +2

      Seems a bit silly to spend your entire life working like that, though. I'd much rather have more time to explore the world and be with loved ones.

    • @johnvelas70
      @johnvelas70 Місяць тому +5

      @@thelostcosmonaut5555 He had 11 mouths to feed. But coming from someone like you, this answers itself.

    • @thelostcosmonaut5555
      @thelostcosmonaut5555 Місяць тому +2

      @johnvelas70 You don't even know me haha. Plus, I don't plan on having 11 kids.

  • @zetectic7968
    @zetectic7968 2 місяці тому +69

    Back before the 20th century most people either worked locally or could only walk about an hour or so to work (so 4 or 5 miles each way). There is a family story from my mother side that her maternal grandfather in his 80's walked from High Wycombe to Gerrards Cross & back in a day (8 miles each way). You had to be hardy to survive before modern medicine.

  • @Halberd1216
    @Halberd1216 2 місяці тому +54

    I went through Royal Engineer training back in 1990 as a 17 year old, and amongst the many highly physical stuff we did as Sappers such as field fortifications, trench systems, construction and FIBUA was bridge building, either improvised bridging, using wood and steel or building Heavy Girder Overbridge ( HGOB ) or Medium Girder Bridge ( MGB )
    I recall the instructors pointing to various bits of bridge to learn and the components being described as a " 4 man lift " Top panel 180kg or a " 8 man lift " Bankseat Beam 280kg and so on ( this was the lightweight alloy bridge )...The Sappers who did the builds for the instruction book must have been human gorillas.
    Lifting 180kg between 4 of you to above shoulder height at night time with no lights and driving rain, covered in mud, bouncing the panel about so the locking pins go in, then doing another 20 panels, before booming the bridge, decking it and setting out trackway and route defiling is a feat to be experienced.
    Doing a " Bridge Gallop " on exercise in Germany where you build a whole succession of bridges in a short span of time, to enable a battlegroup of armour to cross a route is character building.
    HGOB was even heavier.
    Look up bridging by hand by the Royal Engineers with the HGOB and MGB, but not modern clips as we now have safe manual handling.....ie 4 man lift is now a 6 man lift.

    • @jameseadie7145
      @jameseadie7145 2 місяці тому +3

      I was 171/2 in Cove doing my RE training building the Bailey Bridge, that's heavy stuff especially in the summer of 1976

    • @Halberd1216
      @Halberd1216 2 місяці тому

      @@jameseadie7145 Cove was just an empty bit of field on the other side of the M4 from Gib Barracks back in 1990. We still did a bit of bridging there, but it was all being wound down.Troop ran there from the barracks and crawled through the M4 irrigation tunnels to get there.

    • @tsubadaikhan6332
      @tsubadaikhan6332 2 місяці тому +4

      You mention how many men it took to lift items. There is a book by a chap who ended up on the Thai Burma Railway Line as a POW, and there the Japanese told the men they were worth 1/16 of an Elephant, ie. It took 16 men to lift what one elephant could, so the elephants were treated better than the men. Anyway, this method of measuring weights by the number of men it took to lift them appears to work across cultures, as the Japanese were using it too. Obviously without the safety regs.
      (Book is called 'One Sixteenth of an Elephant'. Worth a read as it's also an interesting average mans' insight into that time period).

    • @owensae45
      @owensae45 2 місяці тому +4

      I joined the Engineers in 1975 at the age of 17. Classed as an Adult Soldier, I had nothing but sympathy for the Junior Soldiers, who used to get seriously beasted (And my training was not easy). They had to be hard, to lift the bridge loads you describe, aged 15/16 and not get injured so beasting was essential!

    • @MiketheMadness
      @MiketheMadness Місяць тому +1

      I’m a sapper at the moment and I can tell you our PT regime has moved into powerlifting and weight lifting to compensate for the huge number of injuries bridging at speed can result in.

  • @Busybee-tt1qu
    @Busybee-tt1qu 2 місяці тому +6

    You have to remember there was no teenage in the Victorian era for most of the Victorian era the school leaving age was 10yrs . Then if you were poor like most people you worked and most of that was hard physically work. So by the time they could enlist 17-18yrs life had already made them pretty tough.

  • @fatmanfaffing4116
    @fatmanfaffing4116 2 місяці тому +57

    I joined the Australian Regular Army as an Apprentice at 16 in 1978. We had our PFTs, Physical Fitness Tests and a BFT, Battle Fitness Test. At that age I could do all of the things required by the AGS tests and I suspect, so could you... at 18. I'm now 62 with bursitis, arthritis, diabetes, a huge hernia and heart disease (I had the heart disease all along!) and am fully capable of doing all the requirements to serve as a soldier in the Victorian British Army, adjusted for age and role ie; sod all of them, hahaha Enjoyed the video as always. I like these everyday life videos. Can you some on how they enjoyed their off duty time, what leave they got, pay rates and what it bought? My greatgrandfather served then, my grandfather 1910-1919 and my father 1949-76, me 1978-85. Lots of changes but lots of things were the same like the mateship, the BS etc.

    • @redcoathistory
      @redcoathistory  2 місяці тому +8

      Loved this line - "am fully capable of doing all the requirements to serve as a soldier in the Victorian British Army, adjusted for age and role ie; sod all of them." Ha ha. Thanks for sharing and for your thoughts on future videos.

  • @daviddilley8310
    @daviddilley8310 2 місяці тому +19

    It was said of Tiberius' legions that their drills were bloodless battles, and their battles, bloody drills. The 'practice swords" were twice as heavy as the real one.

    • @cowboy4378
      @cowboy4378 Місяць тому +2

      train hard, fight easy

  • @Caratacus1
    @Caratacus1 2 місяці тому +16

    The most astonishing British army marching and then fighting battle I know of was Quatre Bras. Napoleon had caught Wellington with his pants down and the British were scattered all over Belgium. They marched from all corners of the country in blazing summer heat and fought a pitched battle as soon as they arrived on the field. Hardly any of the cavalry got there in time but the endurance of the infantry was incredible.

    • @2adamast
      @2adamast Місяць тому

      Is it, I thought the British were undecided, waiting for orders and blocking the roads. Crouchy failed to push through the units that rushed there and will over compensate the whole day at Waterloo

  • @thomasholden3323
    @thomasholden3323 2 місяці тому +33

    As someone who is just starting High Medieval re-enactment it's mental to think we used to fight in all that gear and equipment 😅😅 it's bloody hard work

    • @redcoathistory
      @redcoathistory  2 місяці тому +2

      i once filmed guys competing HEMA in full medieval body armour - looked absolutely exhausting! Where do you train?

    • @thomasholden3323
      @thomasholden3323 2 місяці тому

      @@redcoathistory I'm part of the warminster medieval society, the chain maille and gambeson is the hardest part so far

    • @thomasholden3323
      @thomasholden3323 2 місяці тому

      @@redcoathistory so far the training is mostly cardio

    • @MrTangolizard
      @MrTangolizard 2 місяці тому +1

      Try patrolling in full body armour with 40kg in 30 degree weather on 2 hours sleep up and down hills for hour after hour

    • @thomasholden3323
      @thomasholden3323 2 місяці тому

      @@MrTangolizard um OK 👌

  • @julianmhall
    @julianmhall 2 місяці тому +8

    Hi Christian... in previous generations work was in general more physical in nature, so soldiers had a natural fitness, and even getting to work meant walking not just sitting on your bum in a warm car. Take the fictional Richard Sharpe and his men. Hagman, a poacher whose whole time was spent walking so his endurance would be good, even Harris a discredited teacher, would have walked to schools he taught in. Then of course there were actual manual jobs - farm labourers, road labourers, coal miners, etc. Nowadays fitness is manufactured in the gym, not natural, consequently the gap between the fitness required and the starting point is much bigger, and I think that's a major factor.

    • @minuteman4199
      @minuteman4199 2 місяці тому +1

      For the men who where farmers, miners, lumberjacks, fishermen, stevedores, and porters going to war was probably a break from their civilian lives, not so much for urban folk who worked in factories or trade. After I got out of the army I ended up working in construction, and even being fit it exhausted me until I got used to it. As an apprentice it was my job to unload trucks and move material to where it was needed and it was very hard work. Now at 60 I'm a qualified electrician and doing maintenance work instead of construction and I have my own apprentice to do the heavy lifting

  • @reinhardtsiebert1834
    @reinhardtsiebert1834 2 місяці тому +13

    I believe what you said about our forefathers being tough as nails, sums it up perfectly. Not only did the British army perform some impressive feats marching, but if you look at the distances covered by both Union and Confederate troops during the American Civil War it continues to astonish me how those lads had the energy and grit to keep going on those often long campaigns and in all manner of weather.

    • @minuteman4199
      @minuteman4199 2 місяці тому +5

      And they did it it some pretty wonky boots too.

    • @fazole
      @fazole Місяць тому +5

      ​@@minuteman4199
      Often in shoes without socks, but the southern boys grew up barefoot anyways...

    • @dustyak79
      @dustyak79 Місяць тому

      Look Up General Joe Shelby ride From Missouri/Arkansas to Mexico City that old John Wayne movie undefeated where the battle flag is sunk into the rio grand is very loosely based off that. Turns out they were still an organized force that maintained order in Texas as they marched through saving the Texas gold deposit from looting and I’ve only found one reference but supposedly broke up a siege of a French fort inside Mexico .

  • @richardschafer7858
    @richardschafer7858 Місяць тому +3

    Great channel, just discovered it!
    I was a paratrooper (recon) stationed in Vicenza late 80s early 90s. We were very fit, and even had a 6 mile run once a week wearing an 80lb minimum rucksack. Long term, my knees are messed up, and I've had a hip replacement from a parachute accident during an airfield seizure . We were extremely fit without regards for long term consequences.

    • @redcoathistory
      @redcoathistory  Місяць тому +2

      Hi Richard. Thanks for the comment. Yep, it seems dodgy knees do seem to be the downside of years in the military. I hope you are generally well though.

  • @Sagittbrit
    @Sagittbrit 2 місяці тому +40

    A point about the Roman Legions fitness, they had a requirement that you be avlento march 20 miles in under 5 hours, in full armour, build a fortified camp at the end of it, and trained forn2 hours a day with weapons and shields twice as heavy as the real ones

    • @robertcottam8824
      @robertcottam8824 2 місяці тому +7

      I’m not disputing what you say but I’d be interested in your source.
      Best wishes

    • @jerryappleton6855
      @jerryappleton6855 2 місяці тому +6

      This is a common myth dating back to the 19th century.
      I'm in the military. What you're suggesting is that with 80lbs (35kg), the Roman Legionairre would march 4 miles an hour, in hard sandals, on those bumpy roads, without issue.
      Nonsense. The modern infantryman is required to march 4km per hour (2.5 miles) with the same weight for no more than 2-3 hours whilst moving from one sleeping location to the other (patrolling is different: far less weight).
      In reality, if we take the we'll documented and proven speed of late Medieval/ Early modern armies that required infantryman to carry a similar weight, 8 miles a day was the maximum. In time-sensitive moments, 12 miles. Only in an emergency would 20 miles even be contemplated (and done for 1 or 2 days maximum before the soldiers were exhausted).

    • @Matt_Alaric
      @Matt_Alaric 2 місяці тому +6

      @@jerryappleton6855 Just saying it's hard doesn't mean it isn't true. We know for a fact that soldiers in many armies in history have marched 20+ miles per day repeatedly. In the American civil war Stonewall Jackson's infantry routinely marched 30 miles a day, and their fastest recorded march was 54 miles in 36 hours.
      In modern military all Royal Marines have to be able to march 30 miles in 8 hours whilst carrying 40 lbs of equipment or they don't pass basic selection.
      So no marching 20 miles a day is far from unrealistic.
      Edit: Also just from the video above he gives the example of the British army marching to Talavera covering 42 miles in a single day while carrying 45 lbs. So the extreme that can be attained in emergencies is a hell of a lot more than just 20 miles.

    • @sanjivjhangiani3243
      @sanjivjhangiani3243 2 місяці тому +1

      ​@Matt_Alaric, I'm not sure if you are wrong, but remember, Jackson's troops were called "Jackson's Foot Cavalry." So, they were unusually rapid in their marching by the standards of the day.

    • @RayvenQ
      @RayvenQ 2 місяці тому +2

      A roman mile was slightly shorter than a modern mile, about 0.9 miles to the 1 modern mile, so 20 miles would have been about 18 modern miles, so about 3.6mph marching speed, in a time where people pretty much walked everywhere all their lives, long before they even joined the legion. Seems fairly achievable.

  • @user-he5so4gz4r
    @user-he5so4gz4r 2 місяці тому +14

    I was based in with BAOR in Germany in 1978, we regularly ran a couple of miles every morning, pre breakfast. We were sent to a US base for 4 weeks as part of the exterior perimeter security of a Strategic Arms Supply site. The US personnel would gather for their morning run, then set off, from the PX to the gate and back. Ooh, must have been 100 metres there and back at most!

  • @hound3000
    @hound3000 2 місяці тому +5

    I think at first, the army soldiers were physically fit to the highest level. However, if there was a prolonged campaign, I got the feeling that there might be some corners being cut to hasten up the reinforcements.
    Sean Bean hosted a Waterloo documentary talking about the battle, the area itself and other things. One of the things that was mentioned was about the remains of a soldier, most likely for the French army. As the archaeologist checked the remains, they found out that the soldier was physically unfit (spine problem if I remember correctly) to be a soldier, but he was still pressed into conscription. It kinda meant that one side or both lost too many men along the way to the point they don't care about the fitness and cared more about filling the ranks.

  • @muskett4108
    @muskett4108 2 місяці тому +10

    Different fitness to today. Work was about a steady pace for long periods. People didn't rush about as that would be a fast way to get injured, but wow could they keep the sedate and safe pace going for hours on end.
    I remember cutting wood with an old woodsman. I was young and military fit and he was in his 50s. I was puffed after two hours, he just kept going and by days end his pile was three times larger than mine. He never broke a sweat and his work rate was methodical and dine for far longer without a break.
    People were more used to manual labour and better able to control heat or cold.
    There is a picture of the 95th in snow without boots, as their military boots had fallen apart on the march. Well many came from the Glasgow slums and grew up without shoes or boots, so it wasn't such a big deal.
    However, far more men just keeled over dead from disease or exhaustion?

  • @MegaWillieo
    @MegaWillieo 2 місяці тому +16

    I barely survived Boot Camp. I could run but fell off slide for life and could barely do pull ups! But made it Nam

    • @yeildo1492
      @yeildo1492 2 місяці тому +7

      Glad you made it back. 💪

    • @redcoathistory
      @redcoathistory  2 місяці тому +4

      Thanks for sharing, Sir and thanks for your service.

    • @alastair9894
      @alastair9894 2 місяці тому

      Of course you did, they needed cannon fodder.

  • @johnsharp6618
    @johnsharp6618 2 місяці тому +17

    With regards to the jump test, the army back in the 80s used to make the potential recruits do a jump test at sutton coldfield as part of the fitness tests prior to being accepted.
    They had a board that was dusty with chalk suspended on a beam, you stood directly under it and reached up with both arms and they would lower it so it just touched your fingers , you then had to lick your fingers on one hand and do a jump up and hit above a line painted on the board to pass.
    I cant remember the hight.

    • @66lesjo
      @66lesjo 2 місяці тому +4

      Yep, I remember doing this in 86, in Sutton Coldfield. But the board was behind you so you had your jump and turn. I guess also a test for coordination.

    • @redcoathistory
      @redcoathistory  2 місяці тому +2

      Thinking about it that is probaby similar to how they would have done it in Victorian times. makes sense. I should have tried to set that up.

    • @Rabies4818
      @Rabies4818 2 місяці тому +1

      Yeah I also remember doing that test at Sutton Coldfield, also in 1986.

    • @reachandler3655
      @reachandler3655 2 місяці тому

      St George's Barracks? I used to work there!

    • @simplefieldcraft
      @simplefieldcraft 27 днів тому

      I did that in 1985 at SC. Still test myself with the same style and I’m in my 50’s. Not as high as I was in my teens

  • @Braun30
    @Braun30 2 місяці тому +5

    In 1914 a Swiss infantry battalion marched from Bellinzona to Liestal to secure the border with Germany.
    I met one of the fusiliers who lived this, they entered service and were kitted to be told that the next day the would have walk to Liestal.
    The distance is just about 230 km and they did it in 5 days walking through the Gotthard rail tunnel in pitch darkness with one every 10 men carrying a lantern.

  • @FranciscoPreira
    @FranciscoPreira 2 місяці тому +14

    I still have nightmares with that darn calestenics with pine logs, the ropes, the water pits and the running like a bloody idiot to nowhere, I hate running still do, the hellish marches with 40 poud bagpacks, the ammo boxes filled with sand to simulate the weight. Great video mate, thanks for reminding me of that :), I will get a pint in your honor later on, best regards mate.

    • @redcoathistory
      @redcoathistory  2 місяці тому +2

      Enjoy the pint! I hope I haven't triggered too many bad memories. Do you still keep fit?

    • @FranciscoPreira
      @FranciscoPreira 2 місяці тому +1

      @@redcoathistorymore or less, I have diabetes, so every morning 40 minutes walking and that is it.

    • @cattysplat
      @cattysplat Місяць тому

      Must make you wonder at all the lycra clad joggers and cyclists, preparing for office warfare.

  • @patrickpaganini
    @patrickpaganini Місяць тому +2

    Awesome video - thanks for this. I'm surprised it was so tough back then.

  • @sd3457
    @sd3457 2 місяці тому +22

    I only heard about the march to Talavera when I fell in love with history, long after leaving history lessons at school behind. I'm a child of the 70's and 80's though, so the legendary advance of the Marines and Paras across the Falklands meant that every hike we made as Scouts, became a "Yomp".

    • @redcoathistory
      @redcoathistory  2 місяці тому +4

      Thanks for the comment. Thinking about it I should have mentioned some recent feats of endurnce such as Falkands.

    • @RupertBear412
      @RupertBear412 2 місяці тому +3

      YOMP = Your Own Marching Pace whereas TAB = Tactical advance To Battle - the Marines YOMP and the Army TAB. typically the Army Tac for 8 miles at a very fast pace where the Marines may go further slightly slower

    • @Rzagski
      @Rzagski 2 місяці тому

      I could do 10 pull-ups well into my late 40s. Not anymoee

    • @richardsimpson3792
      @richardsimpson3792 Місяць тому

      interesting that the Marines and Paras could 'yomp' across the horrible terrain of the Falklands, but the Guard's Regiment fresh from squarebashing outside Buck House couldn't and had to get back on the ship and go round to Bluff Cove.

  • @sherwoodforester4666
    @sherwoodforester4666 2 місяці тому +9

    I was infantry back in the early 90s. The 3 main things were the basic fitness test. A 1. 5 mile warm up run @15mins and immediately after a second 1.5 mile run best effort but you had to do it in under 10.30. My best was 9.20 The second thing was the CFT 8miles in kit with weapon in under 2hrs if I remember right. The 3rd thing was circuit training in the gym, pull ups press ups dips squats and all that fun stuff. Loved it.

    • @redcoathistory
      @redcoathistory  2 місяці тому

      Tough tests. Do you think current fitness standards are harder or easier?

    • @sherwoodforester4666
      @sherwoodforester4666 2 місяці тому +2

      @@redcoathistory Aye they were hard especially as a kid fresh out of school, I forgot to mention at the end of the CFT you had to jump a 6foot trench and do a casualty carry for 100mtr. As for today I'm not sure on the times for the runs or gym standards but the tests I saw on your video looked easy enough to me.Id say they're just as fit now as back then what with how busy the army has been for the last 20 years. The kit they have now is a million times better especially the new boots are fantastic. I was shocked at the requirements of the Victorian era I had no idea it was such a high standard for the time. I learned a lot today so thankyou for another excellent video.

    • @jonathanhicks140
      @jonathanhicks140 2 місяці тому

      I’ll second the vote of thanks for that!👍

    • @Bombardier9011
      @Bombardier9011 Місяць тому +1

      Great clip…and,I was that bastard PTI that ran you ragged, but gave the less fit and the fittest the same degree of workout. I always knew who was not pulling their weight! BFT failures were usually the heavier WRAC and the QM’s dept wimps who had gotten soft. Remedial PT for them! Great days!

    • @ianwatson129
      @ianwatson129 Місяць тому

      i've been there with BFT and CFT. I used to love the March 7 Shoot, a CFT followed by range work.

  • @mineplow1000
    @mineplow1000 Місяць тому +1

    A very, very interesting look at things. Thanks, man!

  • @HueroVat
    @HueroVat Місяць тому +1

    Excellent segment.

  • @bigbattleslittleworlds
    @bigbattleslittleworlds 2 місяці тому +6

    Great video and very enlightening. I left the army a few years ago and they had also just started the soldier conditioning review. (seated med ball throw, deadlift, 2km run, broad jump, sprints and pull-ups. The Victorian pull-up standard is higher than the modern army standard.

  • @christopherruff4001
    @christopherruff4001 2 місяці тому +10

    Got to keep fit and hydrated for sure! Hardest bit of pretend soldiering I’ve done is to represent a Royal Artillery Soldier at the Brandywine Battle Reenactment. We had to run a 3 pounder field gun up hills, over tree roots and undulating ground in full kit with slung muskets in hot weather! Felt like we did something at the end of the day! Crew of 6-8 artillery men. Absolutely must be fit otherwise your dead…

    • @stuartjarman4930
      @stuartjarman4930 2 місяці тому +1

      Been there, done that, with the 1st Virginia Regiment of the Continental Line. 3 pdr Verbruggen brass light infantry gun, tube and carriage weighed just over 500 pounds. Our commander was an ex USMC Master Gunnery Sgt.!

  • @johngetty3839
    @johngetty3839 Місяць тому +1

    Fascinating stuff! Excellent info.

  • @timvandenbrink4461
    @timvandenbrink4461 Місяць тому +1

    Very interesting, thanks!

  • @YesYes-xb6he
    @YesYes-xb6he 2 місяці тому +5

    Brown Bess was 5kg/10.5lbs while being 1.5m/almost 4' long (both without bayonet fitted). Simply doing a couple of hours of drill with it would give you a pretty decent workout.

  • @beatonthedonis
    @beatonthedonis 2 місяці тому +4

    My parents grew up on non-mechanised farms with no running water or electricity. They were carrying water from the age of six, walking animals miles to pasture and back up and down mountain roads, picking and processing crops by hand, and climbing trees and swimming in rivers in their free time. Urban children in the 19th century were far more active than their counterparts today, but still way behind their rural contemporaries.

    • @cattysplat
      @cattysplat Місяць тому +1

      I bet their parents thought they were soft too, due to atleast some industrialisation.

  • @williampacter7399
    @williampacter7399 2 місяці тому +1

    Great podcast. More on military fitness please Redcoat

  • @Chudders1982
    @Chudders1982 2 місяці тому

    Fascinating video and a subject that greatly interests me also. Keep up the great work

  • @michaelcullen6375
    @michaelcullen6375 2 місяці тому +4

    I was in the USN in the 1970-1980. Spent some time at Corinado Naval Station in California. There was some sort of NATO exercise going on and I met a group of Royal Danish Marines. In order to stay in the unit they do a physical qual. It's called the Viking Raid. 30 min rowing machine followed by a series of free weights 5 mile run and then more rowing. Those guys were as tough as they come.

    • @fazole
      @fazole Місяць тому

      That's close to my crew team training in college! We had exercise days and rowing days. 15 mins in the rowing machine, 15 mins push ups. sit ups, dips, pull ups. Then run hills...carrying a team member on your back or carrying logs. 4-6pm, 5 days/wk.

  • @ak9989
    @ak9989 2 місяці тому +7

    I see your ZOULOU movie poster😮. I have a HUGE,I mean huge Zulu movie poster that show zulus and British soldiers fighting on it. It's around 7 feet long. It's original to the movies release😊

    • @redcoathistory
      @redcoathistory  2 місяці тому +1

      Wow that sounds amazing...My wife would kill me if i brought that home! :-)

  • @dannyhernandez1212
    @dannyhernandez1212 Місяць тому +1

    Great video!!

  • @marksheen4873
    @marksheen4873 2 місяці тому +2

    Very interesting as always, thank you

  • @tomtaylor6163
    @tomtaylor6163 2 місяці тому +5

    I was US Navy in the 1980s. In Basic training as I remember we did push ups,sit ups, and these things called 8 count body builders which were a combined jumping Jack and push up ,and the mile run which I think was around 8 minutes but as a group. As a group you did push ups and sit ups maybe 75 each. I know the Navy has different requirements from the Army even in those times. 10 pull ups even today is tough for many

  • @brenwoodard9956
    @brenwoodard9956 2 місяці тому +13

    I'd love to see more of these. I seem to remember seeing something about one of the early post Napoleonic Royal Navy sword manuals including what was essentially the first stretching or warm up exercises. I'm currently in, I work at a desk and train hard when I can get away from that.

    • @redcoathistory
      @redcoathistory  2 місяці тому

      That's interesting, thanks for sharing. If you find a link or name of the book please share. Thanks

    • @roverboat2503
      @roverboat2503 2 місяці тому +1

      Yes I've seen that as well. Can't remember the name of the book but I remember it had diagrams of standard cutlass fencing positions and as you say, limbering up exercises. I have also seen photos of Victorian era sailors in squads carrying out what was essentially PT with cutlasses.

    • @keithagn
      @keithagn 2 місяці тому

      A great video! Really enjoyed it; I've been a slug all my life so I very much doubt I would even do well in 18th century army 😅 Thanks for the video!

  • @hotmechanic222
    @hotmechanic222 2 місяці тому +1

    Another great video, keep up the good work!!

  • @01karmacop
    @01karmacop 3 дні тому

    Great content

  • @chrisjones2224
    @chrisjones2224 2 місяці тому +6

    There is a book adapted from a Cavalry officers daily diary during the peninsula War, the amount of time spent every day in trying to find food for the Men and horses is amazing, ot to mention the lack of accommodation, the plans that are made are often compromised by numerous factors from getting there late and finding another unit has taken advantage to it being totally unsuitable.
    He also mentions the many casualties that drop out of the forced marches and are left to be taken prisoner or die from starvation/heat or cold, and don't forget as portrayed in 'Sharpe' many of the stragglers that suffered along with the troops were the camp followers.

    • @chrisjones2224
      @chrisjones2224 Місяць тому

      Lt Col William Tomkinson, Diary of a Cavalry Officer in the Peninsular war.

  • @robertthomas3777
    @robertthomas3777 2 місяці тому +3

    Great topic. So interesting.
    🦘🇦🇺👍

    • @redcoathistory
      @redcoathistory  2 місяці тому

      Glad you enjoyed it, thanks a lot. Any other stories from military history you'd like me to cover?

    • @robertthomas3777
      @robertthomas3777 2 місяці тому

      @@redcoathistory no mate.
      Love the info, topics, detail and surprises.
      🦘🇦🇺👍

  • @hidupsehat5205
    @hidupsehat5205 2 місяці тому +1

    I’ve actually always wondered about this, very interesting

  • @awineandfoodnerd
    @awineandfoodnerd 2 місяці тому +1

    This was a great video. A perfect mix of history, great research and information, and humor. Would very much like to see more on this topic…because, like you, I can’t seem to find much about it. And I agree…I think these pre-Victorian soldiers were just built different.

  • @ed7650
    @ed7650 2 місяці тому +10

    Watsons pier, an Australian book, describes an exchange between a British and Australian officer in ww1 where the British explains the lead in training saw British men increase in height and weight one joining because they didn’t have the same physical environment as men from the bush

    • @Matt_Alaric
      @Matt_Alaric 2 місяці тому +1

      How does training increase height??

    • @anthonyhulse1248
      @anthonyhulse1248 2 місяці тому +1

      @@Matt_Alaricthey were stretching? 🤣🤣🤣

    • @sharkwolf7788
      @sharkwolf7788 2 місяці тому +11

      ​@@Matt_Alaric I believe it wasn't so much the training, but for a lot of recruits at that time, the army was the first time in their lives they were getting three square meals a day, every day. Poverty in Britain back then was extreme in some places.

    • @ed7650
      @ed7650 2 місяці тому +3

      @@Matt_Alaric Less training more diet. Going from a pittance of food to regular meals, regular sleep etc as a late teen.

    • @gracecollins8415
      @gracecollins8415 2 місяці тому +3

      They were young and still growing combined with good food and exercise.

  • @pincermovement72
    @pincermovement72 2 місяці тому +3

    More to the point are the fighting retreats like Corunna and the first Afghan war although only one survived , it’s one thing marching to a destination then fighting a battle with staged feeding posts but a fighting retreat under constant attack and impending death like in Afghanistan , living off the land to me is the most impressive.

  • @owensae45
    @owensae45 2 місяці тому +2

    My uncle joined the KOSB's at the start of WW2. Guys who could not hack it on the marches were made the Battalion cooks, storemen etc. Hence his joy when the Army Catering Corps was formed in 1943, and the food was cooked by people who were not failures, there were big improvements.

  • @elbichoamarillo
    @elbichoamarillo Місяць тому

    that was fun - and informative:)

  • @JamesGibson-iz9el
    @JamesGibson-iz9el 2 місяці тому +5

    Look into the winter march of the "104th New Brunswick Regiment of Foot" from Fredericton NB to Kingston Ontario during the War of 1812.

    • @redcoathistory
      @redcoathistory  2 місяці тому +1

      Thanks, do you have a source you reccomend?

    • @anselmdanker9519
      @anselmdanker9519 2 місяці тому +4

      ​@@redcoathistory
      Merry hearts make light days: the war of 1812 memoirs of Lieutenant John le Couteur, 104th foot. Edited by Donald E Graves.

  • @weenedonpetrol
    @weenedonpetrol 2 місяці тому +6

    An interesting question Chris. My father was brought up in a Presbyterian orphanage in the 1920s and 30s and served through the whole of WW2. I think he was amazingly strong and fit. I remember one incident in the 1970s. I’m disabled a couldn’t walk very far. We were having a kick about in the park and were on our way back to his car. I dropped the ball over a 4 foot metal railing surrounding the park. He couldn’t send me back for it as you would with a non-disabled kid. After telling me off for being careless (naturally), Dad just put one hand on the top of the railing a jumped straight over it. I was about 12/13 at the time which would have made him around 50. I wonder how many 50 year old men could do that these days?

    • @redcoathistory
      @redcoathistory  2 місяці тому +1

      Thanks for sharing the story. He sounds like a tough man! I am 45 and I couldn't do that. Take care and keep in touch.

  • @wyattpatterson2123
    @wyattpatterson2123 Місяць тому

    I would definitely enjoy another video on military fittness, that was very interesting

  • @BuntaBall40
    @BuntaBall40 2 місяці тому

    Another great video mate

  • @daverankin2246
    @daverankin2246 2 місяці тому +6

    National servicemen in the SA Defence Force had the 2.4.
    2.4 Km (1.5 miles) in max 12 minutes. Done "staaldak, webbing, geweer" (helmet, patrol webbing and rifle) long pants and boots.
    Done monthly. As our training was very physical, this wasn't a major problem.
    Our war in SWA/Angola finished in 1989, so now we'd need to retrain to allow for arthritis and bifocals 😂

    • @redcoathistory
      @redcoathistory  2 місяці тому +1

      Very tough standards. Thanks for sharing. Those SADF lads were certainly tough. I'd be interested in current SANDF standards are similar. Do you know?

    • @daverankin2246
      @daverankin2246 2 місяці тому

      @@redcoathistory I'm not certain. Many standards have fallen, but there are also many pockets of excellence and some excellent soldiers who are a credit to their uniform.
      I'll have to say undecided 😀. At least until I have more information.
      As an SADF "ou man" (veteran) I'm probably not an impartial commentator.

  • @alanredmond88
    @alanredmond88 2 місяці тому +3

    Hello, Im, I guess, a modern New Zealand farmer. Unnecessarily specific, and silly though it may be, I do have a personal observation, in that my grandfather (1950s/1960s) used to do things a fundamentally different and more physical way than we do. While i can only guess that no specific person was stronger back then, it might be that on average they may have been more fit, and/or fit for service. For example, I believe German in WW1, which was becoming more urbanised, struggled to send its mobilised men to the front at the beginning of conflict, despite the fact that they were the instigators, and had vastly higher paper reserves than the allies. They struggled to march the distances required. So I guess, rather than national pride, it might be a combination of urbanisation, and training that produces the best base template soldiers? And then motivation, pay, food, etc..?

  • @kyalebrooks
    @kyalebrooks Місяць тому

    Love this video buddy! I’m still serving, 14 years in. I still go to the gym once a day but sadly not all do of their own accord.
    We’re always told about the generations before and how fit they used to be. But 10 pul ups to join! That great strength!! I think it’ll would count 95% of my troop out sadly…
    Great watch! Thanks Kyale

  • @eric-wb7gj
    @eric-wb7gj 2 місяці тому +5

    TY 🙏🙏. Previous generations would walk everywhere, and have a more manual labour lifestyle, so fitter generally. Worn out earlier though to. As disease could take you in a couple of days, then it was more important that at the required time, you could still fire a musket/rifle, than be fit.

  • @Ludwig_Cox
    @Ludwig_Cox 2 місяці тому +6

    10 pull ups is actually quite difficult for the average man, i don't believe the were really strict on the requerments at the time because nowadays the average men you hardly do 1 pull up haha

    • @redcoathistory
      @redcoathistory  2 місяці тому

      I'd certainly be interested to know if they used the same form we do today.

    • @Putseller100
      @Putseller100 14 днів тому +1

      Yes, but give it 1 week of effort. Perhaps it will not be 10 but it will be a lot more than one! People like to underestimate themselves. Or just as bad, think they have to remain at the level they currently are at.

  • @MasterShaneHylton
    @MasterShaneHylton Місяць тому

    I have researched this subject for the last 10 plus years. I can say confidently that you are barely scratching the surface.

    • @redcoathistory
      @redcoathistory  Місяць тому +1

      You are correct. . .It's a 10 minute YT video mate - not a 50,000 word thesis. Please share your research so we can all learn as I would love to know more.

  • @graemer3657
    @graemer3657 2 місяці тому +1

    I loved this video

  • @ak9989
    @ak9989 2 місяці тому +3

    I'm a US Army combat vet and yeah I would make it in the 1800s military easily. I pole vaulted, cross country runner, football, baseball and track in high school 4 years😅

  • @packhorsetriumph5319
    @packhorsetriumph5319 2 місяці тому +3

    very interesting video buckaroo

    • @redcoathistory
      @redcoathistory  2 місяці тому +1

      Thanks a lot. Any other stories you'd like to see me tackle?

  • @jordanw9204
    @jordanw9204 Місяць тому +1

    I'm in Royal Marines Training, you should give that a look, it's an absolute hang out

  • @jaspernewcombe7502
    @jaspernewcombe7502 Місяць тому

    Nice video. More videos on miltary fitness would be sweet

  • @nigden1
    @nigden1 2 місяці тому +9

    I'd prefer British military history to be describing distances in miles, and weight in pounds,
    but good stuff nonetheless.

    • @redcoathistory
      @redcoathistory  2 місяці тому +4

      Apologies, Sir. I'm afraid I grew up with metric not imperial so I am not used to talking in feet and inches etc. I'm glad that you enjouyed the video though. Thanks for the comment.

  • @gijoe508
    @gijoe508 2 місяці тому +5

    I’ve read in various veterans accounts from late WW2 in the US that you were required anywhere from 9 to 21 pushups to pass the PE test. Makes me thing some standards were fudged to get the bodies needed.

    • @redcoathistory
      @redcoathistory  2 місяці тому

      Any good sources you'd reccomend?

    • @fazole
      @fazole Місяць тому +1

      In late 44 the training was cut substantially. They also were drafting older men, up to 35 yo for infantry.
      George Wilson, in his memoir "If You Survive", relates as a 1Lt company commander in the Ardennes, the new replacements barely knew how to operate and maintain their rifles and some were actually crying in their foxholes BEFORE seeing combat. It may seem strange, but they sent those crybabies to the rear to avoid lowering morale. So the crybabies survived and the brave often did not.

  • @richardnorris1897
    @richardnorris1897 Місяць тому +1

    British Military (Infantry) final training test requirements to pass out throughout the 1990’s and 2000’s:
    A Mile and half run: 09:30 or less
    8 mile combat fitness test (CFT) in full kit: 1 hour 30 minutes.
    10 pull ups
    5 rope climbs
    60 press ups (in 2 minutes)
    40 sit ups (in 2 minutes)
    This would have also included various log runs, stretcher races and steeple chaises around Catterick Garrison

  • @bumble2able
    @bumble2able Місяць тому

    Subscribed ☺️ Great content 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻

  • @beefsuprem0241
    @beefsuprem0241 2 місяці тому +3

    That 7 min mile is pretty much the same as the run time when I was in, the 2000s.
    For a male under 30 it was 10:30 for 1.5 miles
    09:30 (minimum) for 1.5 miles for airborne.
    Impressive at the time in whatever god awful footwear they probably had.

    • @willems7454
      @willems7454 Місяць тому

      Hi tec silver shadows! The shin splint makers. However they were better than the unnamed green things I got in 96.

  • @kleinweichkleinweich
    @kleinweichkleinweich 2 місяці тому +4

    what about the ultimate endurance test for NCOs?
    looking out of a window on the parade ground without thinking for 2 min straight

  • @gutterfightsecrets
    @gutterfightsecrets Місяць тому

    this was cool. I had always wondered about this

  • @vincent6203
    @vincent6203 День тому

    I would of made it (as a 30 year old man) but just about. It's amazing to hear how fit our ancestors had to be. A lot of my family have been in the army, and so I'd love to see more videos like this if you make them.

  • @zulubeatz1
    @zulubeatz1 Місяць тому +9

    In History at college, we were taught that the introduction of free Milk and school meals for the poor children in Britain was because recruits for the Crimean war were unable to be trained as soldiers because of malnutrition.
    My recruits course was a hell of a lot harder than those modern ones featured. I ended up bloody, in tears and soaked through! Passed though. Passed out literally lol.

    • @DanielMountain-nz7xb
      @DanielMountain-nz7xb Місяць тому +2

      Was that not the Boer War or the Great War? State schooling in England wasn't in place during the Crimean War.

    • @zulubeatz1
      @zulubeatz1 Місяць тому +1

      @@DanielMountain-nz7xb The Boer war, actually yes I was mistaken. It was a long time ago I was at college !

    • @richardsimpson3792
      @richardsimpson3792 Місяць тому

      @@zulubeatz1 It could be argued that the British military was actually responsible for the start of our Welfare State. Even in WWII there was huge attention given to children's diet and exercise. The aftermath of this was still apparent in the 1960s... our primary school had regular visits from a school dentist in a Land Rover towing a caravan equipped as a dental surgery and we had a tooth lady come once. year to make sure we knew about tooth decay and how to brush properly.
      They don't do that any more...but they do have 'mindfulness' lessons and learn that girls can be boys if they want to.
      All about priorities.

  • @timcheeseman2956
    @timcheeseman2956 Місяць тому +3

    The fitness isn't just about the ability to move in the field but also maintaining a good state of health to be able to recuperate quickly and as fully as possible from wounds and injuries and get back into the fight

  • @translunar1
    @translunar1 2 місяці тому +1

    Our end of training tests for the Guards Combat Infantryman course, when I passed out of the Guards Depot in 1986 we had the BFT, CFT(8 mile march in 2 hours) and March and Shoot, which I forget the standard, but it consisted of a march, followed by assault course and then shooting, but I do remember Sir John Moore was such a trend setter in military circles and he had his ideas written down in Colonel Fullers book in the 1920's, called Sir John Moore's system of training.

  • @theultimatetowerofterrorre301
    @theultimatetowerofterrorre301 Місяць тому

    Nice video!

  • @windyworm
    @windyworm 2 місяці тому +7

    After passing selection the boss would say "Don't think you're supermen, you are now as fit as the average soldier in WW1 after they'd had a few weeks of decent food". Both feet solidly back on Terra Firma.

  • @Mis-AdventureCH
    @Mis-AdventureCH 2 місяці тому +11

    Any information on what they were fed during the training period during the gymnasium period?
    Regards Crawford's forced march, I'd like to see the roster at the start of it and present for duty at the end.

    • @redcoathistory
      @redcoathistory  2 місяці тому +3

      Nothing specific - though I know they had tonnes of potatoes!

    • @Mis-AdventureCH
      @Mis-AdventureCH 2 місяці тому

      @@redcoathistory Would be interesting to see quartermaster reports, especially tallies for beef and mutton.
      No way those kids put on build without protein.

    • @jonathanhicks140
      @jonathanhicks140 2 місяці тому +2

      I believe that it was a pound of bread biscuit & a pound of fresh or salt beef or pork per man. So not aimed at today’s gluten intolerant vegan keyboard warriors…..😂😂

    • @Mis-AdventureCH
      @Mis-AdventureCH 2 місяці тому

      @@jonathanhicks140 After the Crimea, they tried to reduce the salted rations, especially in garrison. Cardwell Reforms 1868-74. They also established canteens in garrison which offered expanded opportunity to eat better.
      I've been trying to dig up actual quartermaster returns, but that's going to be a slog.
      It def wasn't veeeegan. 😄

    • @petehoskins1267
      @petehoskins1267 2 місяці тому +1

      Unfortunately John some of us who have Coeliac Disease have to be gluten free. It’s not a choice believe me. Cheers.

  • @gearbox3773
    @gearbox3773 13 днів тому +1

    Mario reform of Roman army: training with twice weigth for gladio and schield. Then 40 km marching a day with around 30kg equipment and building a temporary fort for the nignt.

  • @robhaldane3347
    @robhaldane3347 2 місяці тому +2

    The cut after the declining to run the mile was hilarious.

  • @demonorse
    @demonorse 2 місяці тому +3

    Zulu impi's allegedly ran to battle, even the old guys.

  • @camrenwick
    @camrenwick Місяць тому +2

    When I was a soldier (1975-1985) we had to do a BFT (Battle Fitness Test), which was a 15 minute run/march and then the same distance again in under 11 minutes (if I remember rightly. Easy for good runners, but difficult for others. But the conditions centuries ago must have been extremely hard.

    • @eddyd8745
      @eddyd8745 Місяць тому

      Your memory needs a little refresh. BFT Basic Fitness Test, CFT Combat Fitness Test.

  • @kelvinogden4073
    @kelvinogden4073 2 місяці тому +2

    Joining the guards depot in 1989 as a 16 year old was pretty tough and after 26 years of service I reckon those guys had it a lot harder time than we did. Legends 👍🍺

    • @redcoathistory
      @redcoathistory  2 місяці тому +1

      26 years! a long career, sir. I appreciate you sharing your thoughts, Sir.

  • @terrydeath3514
    @terrydeath3514 2 місяці тому +2

    I’m ex British army , in my time in the army , there was BFT which was a squaded 1 .5 mile run followed by a 1.5 mile best effort , must be completed in under 10.30 minutes . The next text was a CFT , 8 miles in 2 hours carrying webbing helmet and rife total weight 44lb . ICFT 1.5 mile run in 18 minutes carrying the same as kit as the CFT

  • @jimboase5005
    @jimboase5005 2 місяці тому +1

    Very interesting video. Thanks for the information; I wrongly thought that there was very little gym work in the Victorian era army.

    • @redcoathistory
      @redcoathistory  2 місяці тому +1

      Thanks - I also hadn't realised until I found a couple of articles on line and was fascinated to learn more.