of a contemporary British OG (Olive Green) pullover with RAF
Sergeant insignia. The shoulder strap is attached with hook-and-loop fastener. Epaulettes first appeared on British
uniforms in the second half of the 18th century. The epaulette was officially incorporated into
Royal Navy uniform regulations in 1795, although some officers wore them before this date. Under this system,
flag officers wore silver stars on their epaulettes to distinguish their ranks. A
captain with at least three years seniority had two plain epaulettes, while a junior captain wore one on the right shoulder, and a
commander one on the left. From 1828, so called
boxed epaulettes (with fixed fringes) replaced the loose fringed versions. In 1855, army officers' large, gold-fringed epaulettes were abolished and replaced by a simplified equivalent officially known as twisted shoulder-cords. These were generally worn with full dress uniforms. Naval officers retained the historic fringed epaulettes for full dress during this period. These were officially worn until 1960 when they were replaced with shoulder boards. Today, only the officers of the
Yeomen of the Guard, the
Military Knights of Windsor, the Elder Brethren of
Trinity House and the
Lord Warden of the Cinque Ports retain fringed epaulettes. British cavalry on active service in the Sudan (1898) and during the
Boer War (1899–1902) sometimes wore epaulettes made of
chainmail to protect against sword blows landing on the shoulder. The blue "Number 1 dress" uniforms of some British cavalry regiments and
yeomanry units still retain this feature in ornamental silvered form. With the introduction of khaki service dress in 1902, the
British Army stopped wearing epaulettes in the field, switching to rank insignia embroidered on the cuffs of the uniform jacket. During
World War I, this was found to make officers a target for snipers, so the insignia was frequently moved to the shoulder straps, where it was less conspicuous. The current multi-terrain pattern (MTP) and the older
combat uniform (DPM) have the insignia formerly used on shoulder straps displayed on a single strap worn vertically in the centre of the chest. Earlier DPM uniforms had shoulder straps on the shoulders, though only officers wore rank on
rank slides which attached to these straps, other ranks wore rank on the upper right sleeve at this time though later on
regimental titles were worn on the rank slides. This practice continued into later patterns where rank was worn on the chest, rank was also added. In modern times, epaulettes are frequently worn by professionals within the ambulance service to signify clinical grade for easy identification. These are typically green in colour with gold writing and may contain one to three pips to signify higher managerial ranks. == United States ==