Published Apr 15. 2022 - 2 years ago
Updated or edited Apr 18. 2022

Greenwell’s Glory

The Greenwell's Glory is a very old pattern. Its origin story dates to 1854 in Durham County England where William Greenwell came up empty handed after a day of fishing but captured a dun that he believed the fish to be feeding on to bring to his local shop and fly dresser. The owner created a pattern that was so successful the following day, that they held a little celebration at the shop and someone suggested the name Greenwell's Glory and so it was named.

The original pattern calls for a fly tied with yellow silk waxed and the silk as the body. The wing is from the inside of a hen blackbird and the legs or hackle from a hen feather where the center is black and the outer edges red. Today common substitutions are Starling for the hen blackbird. The hen hackle color is typically called "furnace". Some hackle sellers market a "greenwells" as a color which is a furnace with a lighter shade on the edges than the "red"...so it looks a bit more "golden brown" than "red brown".

There are many variations of this pattern in many books. A common addition is a gold wire rib.

The winging method is often now done with matching slips. I believe, and some very experienced anglers in a soft hackle group I belong to also believe, it was most likely a rolled or folded wing. This means that one primary quill feather is used and a chunk is cut off and folded in half or in 4 and then mounted. Edmonds and Lee specifically mention "bunched" so that is probably more like rolling or simply grouping the fibers together. Some split the wing...I did not bother. Up to you.

Materials used in this video are:

Hook: Partridge SLD fine dry fly hook barbless size 14
Thread: Kimono 301 primrose yellow silk
Wax: cobbler's wax
Wing: Starling primary folded so inside is facing out.
Hackle: Whiting Hen cape - color according to whiting is a brown variant but it has a black center and golden/reddish tinged brown edge.

Originator: 
Submitter: 
Adam Rieger
.

Log in or register to pre-fill name on comments, add videos, user pictures and more.
Read more about why you should register.
 

Please notice that some of the links in the video descriptions may be affiliate, which means that they can link to web shops, which pay the video producer a commission (also known as "affiliate revenue") when a viewer clicks a link and buys a product.
The Global FlyFisher does NOT make any money from these links or purchases!
You can support the Global FlyFisher directly here, if you feel like it.

Since you got this far …


The GFF money box

… I have a small favor to ask.

Long story short

Support the Global FlyFisher through several different channels, including PayPal.

Long story longer

The Global FlyFisher has been online since the mid-90's and has been free to access for everybody since day one – and will stay free for as long as I run it.
But that doesn't mean that it's free to run.
It costs money to drive a large site like this.

See more details about what you can do to help in this blog post.