officer wearing a duffel coat aboard a destroyer on convoy protection duties, 1942 Toggle-and-rope fastenings have been in use since ancient times,
in China among other places. The Duffel cloth has been manufactured since about the 1450s in Belgium and since the 1550s in The Netherlands (
Leiden). The initial influence of what became the duffel coat, might have been the hooded Polish military
frock coat, which was developed in the 1820s. It had the unusual features of a toggle closure and an integrated hood, and by 1850 had spread through Europe. In the 1890s the
British Admiralty purchased the coat in quantity for the
Royal Navy from multiple manufacturers, where it was referred to as the "convoy coat". The navy issued a camel-coloured variant during
World War I, most probably also made from
Melton wool. The design of the coat was modified slightly and widely issued during
World War II. It became known under the nickname "
Monty coat". Large post-war stocks of low-cost military surplus coats turned the duffel into a ubiquitous item of British civilian clothing in the 1950s and 1960s, especially among students. The firm Gloverall purchased large quantities, and in 1954 started producing their own version using leather fastenings and
buffalo horn toggles with a double-faced check lining, and many other modern versions copy some or all of those features. ==Today==