geo said:
Hmmm.... American civil war. Some units wore french zouave uniforms which had colourful red pants.
If my memory serves me right, most of the units that wore that kind of uniform came from the New York area.....
Again: part marks as many of the New York
Militia Infantry regiments indeed wore red pants hence the nickname of " Red Legged Devils" for the 14th Brooklyn and the "Red Devils for the Duryees Zouaves. But the question still stands.
While on the westerner frontier in the Civil war we had the "The Kansas Red Legs, gained their name from the knee high, red yarn leggings they wore over their boots." This group was formed from "a group of men who were from the Atchison, Kansas area. They were organizedd by Blunt and his staff by Kansas Senator Jim Lane and comprised the 3rd, 4th and 5th Kansas Regiments".(Truth Behind the Names). Though in his letters Blunt claims "During my absence in the field, matters left in charge of subordinates had been running rather loosely in the district. Among other things, an organization had sprung into existence known as "Red Legs," and whatever had been the primary object and purpose of those identified with it, its operations had certainly become fraught with danger to the peace and security of society. The organization embraced many of the most desperate characters in the country, while the inducements of easy gain had allured into it many persons who, in ordinary times, would never have consented to be connected with such an enterprise.(p.239) Notables included "Charles R. Jennison, "Wild Bill" Hickok, William F. (Buffalo Bill)Cody and William S. Tough."(Truth Behind the Names/Gilmore). Interesting enough most of the "communiques to and from them were destroyed during or after the war".(Gilmore) These "Red legs" also featured prominently in the Clint Eastwood fim “The Outlaw Josey Wales” as does Senator Jim Lane. Such were the acts of depredations committed that eventually "Blunt later issued shoot-on-sight orders to the troops sent to Western Missouri to combat the Red Legs."(Castel)
Source:
Blunt, James G. "General Blunt's Account of His, Civil War Experiences": The Kansas Historical Quarterly, May, 1932. (Vol. 1, No. 3), pgs 211- 265.
Castel, Albert,
A Frontier State of War: Kansas, 1861–1865 : Ithaca, NY: Cornell UP, 1958. pgs.152–53,
Gilmore, Don.
Civil War on the Missouri-Kansas Border: Pelican Publishing Co., 2005
Partisans, Guerillas, Irregulars and Bushwhackers "The Truth Behind The Names" http://www.rulen.com/partisan/partisan.htm