|  | Gentleman's Magazine 1853 part 1 p.490 called the Bouge of Court, when describing the costume of  
Riot, tells us that-
 
 His cote was checkt with patches rede and blewe,
 of Kirkeby Kendall was his short demye,
 And ay he sange, "In fayth, decon thou crewe,"
 His elbow bare, he ware his gere so nye.
 It seems to be doubrful, from the commentators Warton and  
Dyce, what article of dress was designated by the term  
"demye;" but both agree that by "Kirkeby Kendall" in this  
passage was intended the colour green.
 So too in Hall's Chronicle, where we are told that king  
Henry VIII. with a party of noblemen, "came sodainly in a  
mornyng into the queen's chamnre, all appareled in shorte  
cotes of Kentish Kendal (a misprint probably for Kirkby  
Kendal) ... like outlawes, or Robin Hodes men," the  
allusion is evidently to the same colour.
 In later writers it is uaually termed "Kendal green," and it 
is frequently mentioned by our dramatists and poets, being  
the recognised dress of foresters.
 In Anthony Munday's play of "Robin Hood, or Robert Earl of  
Huntington," 1601, occurs this passage,
 
 --- all the woods
 Are full of outlaws that, in Kendall green,
 Follow'd the utlaw'd Earl of Huntington.
 Falstaff was attacked at Gad's Hill by "three mis-begotten  
knaves in Kendal green," (1st Part of Henry IV. ii. 4); and  
Ben Jonson in his "Underwoods" attires Greenhood
 
 --- in Kendal green
 As in the forest colour seen.
 From some lines in Hall's Satires it appears also that this  
was the colour worn by agricultural labourers, as blue was  
usually that of serving-men:
 
 The sturdy plowman doth the soldier see
 All scarf'd with pyed colours to the knee
 Whom Indian pillage hath made fortunate;
 And now he 'gins to loathe his former state,
 Now doth he inly scorne his Kendall greene
 Hall's Satires, iv. 6, p.76.
 The most recent account of the Kendal manufactures is as  
follows:
 This town, nearly as late as the beginning of the last  
century, exported largely of coarse woollens to  
America, but the machinery in Yorkshire and Lancashire  
(inter alia) have nearly destroyed it (the trade). The  
Kendal green, superseded by the Saxon green,*  
was produced from a plant with a small yellow flour (sic),  
and producing, when boled, a beautiful yellow extract  
provincially known as woodas or sarrat (the  
genista tinctora of Linneaus), and from a blue liquor 
extracted from woad. These cottons (as such  
coarse woollen were called) have yielded to coarser things:  
floor-cloths, horse-cloths, linseys, and the like. The  
manufacture of carpets has recently become popular and  
flourishing. Hosiery, wool-card making, and horn-comb  
making, as trades, still exist to some extent. - Atkinson's  
Worthies of Westmoreland, 1851, vol.i. p.32.
 The traders of Kendal were formerly associated in twelve  
free companies, which are this enumerated in an ancient  
"boke of recorde" belonging to the corporation of the  
borough:-
 1. Chapmen, Marchants, and Salters; 2. Mercers and Drapers,  
Linen and Woollen; 3. Shearmen, Fullers, Dyers, and  
Websters; 4. Taylors, Imbrodyrers, and Whilters; 5.  
Cordyners, Coblers, and Curryers; 6. Tanners, Sadlers, and  
Bridlers; 7. Innholders and Alehousekeepers and Typlers; 8.  
Butchers and Fishers; 9. Cardmakers and Wyerdrawers; 10.  
Surgeons, Scryvyners, Barners, Glovers, Skynners, ...  
(obliterated), and Poyntmakers; 11. Smyths, Iron and  
Hardwaremen, Armerers, Cutlers, Bowyers, Fletchers,  
Spuryers, Potters, Panners,
 
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|  | this note, with reference to the public room in Kendal,  
called the White Hall: "It seems not improbable that White  
Hall (originally perhaps White Cloth Hall) has taken its  
name from the manufacture of milk-white cloth." But this  
remark is founded upon a misapprehension. The old poet was  
not here describing a colour peculiar to the manufacture, or 
to the archers of Kendale. White coats with St. George's  
cross were worn by all the infantry of our English armies;  
and the White Coats of London - that is, the trained bands  
of the city - are as often mentioned as any others. Mr.  
Nicholson repeats this misconception in p.203, where he  
imagines that "spots might be easily, by poetic fancy,  
magnified into crosses red." In correction of this idea it  
is to be remarked that the white coats were not  
besprinkled with crosses, but every bowman, or  
soldier, exhibited only one cross back and front, displayed  
upon the whole of his body, as may be seen in the  
illuminations to the manuscripts of Froissart and other old  
historians. * This change took place about the year 1770. -  
Nicholson's Annals of Kendal.
 
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