Discharged from the school on 1 May 1886, two months before his 16th birthday, Charles Dunbar set his sights on joining the military. He enlisted with the
Seaforth Highlanders as a piper on 6 October 1886. He stood only 5 feet 3 inches tall – probably the result of a scanty diet during his childhood – but it was often said of him that he appeared taller than he was because of his stance and demeanor. Fraser's Scottish Annual records that "he was fortunate that the commander of the Seaforth Highlanders at that time was Colonel Guinness, an officer who took exceptional pride in the efficiency of his pipe band". "Colonel Guinness saw once that here was a keen, ambitious, stripling of parts, and although scarcely the age for enlistment, Dunbar being just 16, was allowed to try the piping tests and although these were fairly hard, set as they were for men of from 18 to 21 years of age. Dunbar passed very creditably and was taken on the strength of the regiment and posted to the pipe band. It was a proud day for the slim, fair-haired boy when he went through the 'piper's initiation' and was fitted out with a uniform, a kit and a full sized bagpipe and the ivory-mounted 'feadan' (
chanter) placed in his hands by a kindly pipe sergeant with the words: 'Ye ken, my lad, the auld word, 'learn young, learn fair. Ye're young enough, in all conscience, but gin ye wish to gang far, ye'll hae to wark hard and keep at it. Guid luck tae ye, my boy'." After service in Scotland and Ireland, he transferred to the 3rd
Royal Scots on 1 January 1894 and after just a year's service with his new regiment, he became a candidate for the pipe major's position with the Second Battalion of the
Gordon Highlanders. Selection was by competition – open to Army pipers and outsiders. William Dunbar won in a keen contest and, on 11 February 1895, formally joined the Second Battalion. He was promoted to sergeant piper and assumed the duties of pipe major on 3 March. The regiment was quartered at Maryhill Barracks and was commanded by Colonel Oxley, who was succeeded by Colonel Dick Cunningham, VC. According to the historian Robert Fraser: "This promotion was recognition of his stature within the army as a piper. Already in 1893 he was performing full pipe programmes of marches, strathspeys, and reels. That year he established himself as a piper of the first rank, at Inverness. He had acquired a reputation as an obliging, trustworthy, honest, and able soldier. In May 1895, he completed his second class Army Certificate which gave him a good elementary education He was stationed in Scotland in 1895 and 1896." While his regiment was in Scotland, he met Margaret Dolina Murray, affectionately called "Maggie". They were married on 39 April 1896, in Edinburgh. Their marriage certificate identifies Charles Dunbar as "Pipe Major, Guard in Highlanders, bachelor"; and Margaret Murray as a domestic servant and spinster. The document also lists Charles' father as William Dunbar, general merchant, deceased, and his mother as Alexandrina Dunbar (Miller), deceased; the marriage was witnessed by William A. Murray (Margaret's brother) and his fiancé Mary Hill. Soon afterwards, the Second Battalion was moved to Aldershot where Margaret gave birth to the couple's first son – William Charles Dunbar – on 8 May 1897. That same year, Charles Dunbar played for
Queen Victoria when she visited the camp to inspect the Highlanders.
Boer War Within two years, the new family was on board ship with the regiment to India – where a second son, Colin Murray Dunbar, was born on 3 January 1900 but not before Pipe Major Charles Dunbar was posted away to South Africa to serve in the Boer War, his first experience in action. The Second Battalion was one of the first units ordered to South Africa, where it won numerous battle honours. At the Battle of Elandslaagte on 21 October 1899, Charles Dunbar piped the Gordons into battle. He was wounded in the head but continued to lead the troops onwards: conduct under fire for which he was awarded the
Distinguished Conduct Medal (DCM), a decoration for valor second only to the
Victoria Cross. On three further occasions he was cited for bravery, including at the celebrated
Relief of Ladysmith on 28 February 1900. Whilst still in South Africa, he transferred to the Third Battalion of the Gordon Highlanders on 23 July 1901. Often in action, he earned six clasps for the ribbon of his South Africa medal, each representing a significant battle. At Pretoria, with other Highland pipers, he also won a prize for piping, presented to him by Lord Kitchener. Following the war, the Gordons returned to Scotland and Charles Dunbar and his family took up life in Aberdeen. His reputation as a piper steadily grew. He was an instructor for the Aberdeen Amateur Piper's Society and often played at for parades and marches, and at Highland games. He won the Beatty silver cup, a competition open to pipers of the Highland regiments, and, in 1905, was awarded Good Conduct and Long Service Medals. It was during his time in Aberdeen that he was given the set of silver-mounted pipes which had been bought for him by Colonel Dick-Cunningham, of the Gordons, who had been killed in South Africa. (These pipes, along with their original leather case, and his entire regalia including his uniform, kilt, medals and photos, were deposited on permanent loan with the Argyll and Sutherland Regimental Museum in Hamilton on 7 May 2000, by descendants of Charles Dunbar.) Two more sons were born to Charles and Maggie Dunbar in Aberdeen: George, on 8 January 1906, and Percy Gordon on 10 January 1909. ==Canada==