1783 CE - Dress Act Repealed
excerpt from an article by Searles O'Dubhain and Iain MacAnTsaoir
The Dress Act was repealed in 1783. The plaid now became more of a fashion experiment for the elite of English society. Between the time of the Dress Act and the repeal, many Highlanders rebelled by wearing their tartans anyway. Their reasoning was that since Lord Hardwicke, the man who drafted this law, was dead, that the law no longer applied.
For more information on National Dress of Gaelic peoples, see Cultural/National Dress, by Searles O'Dubhain and Iain MacAnTsaoir.
Sources:
Encyclopedia Brittanica Vol. 15
Scottish Gaelic Studies, Vol V, part II, Chadwick, Nora K.,
Old Irish and Highland Dress, Henry Foster McClintock, 1947
prepared by Iain MacAnTsaoir
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