In 1879, Thomas Burberry invented gabardine, a revolutionary waterproof material that soon outfitted Polar expeditions, leading the British army to commission a coat for WWI soldiers, which would trickle down from officers to civilians and become what we now know as the trench coat.
In 1989, 110 years later, my father walked into the Burberry flagship store in Picadilly, London, and left with, among other things, a classic beige trench coat from the brand.
In 2026, 147 years since Thomas Burberry’s lightbulb moment, I find myself packing that very same coat for my travels.

Among wardrobe heroes, the trench coat is a decorated veteran. In the 1940s, it starred alongside Humphrey Bogart in Casablanca, where it came to spell mystery and noir cinema. In the 1960s and ’70s, thanks to Audrey Hepburn in Breakfast at Tiffany’s, and then Meryl Streep in Kramer vs Kramer, it stood for the ultimate in city sophistication. (Around the time my father bought his, Gordon Gekko’s boxy version stormed the screens in the Michael Douglas starrer Wall Street.)
Over the years Burberry itself has experimented with the form of the trench coat in multiple ways. Fast forward to the early aughts when former creative director Christopher Bailey sent out iterations using lace, studs, and leather. Then came Riccardo Tisci’s moodier, more rock and roll era at the brand and now Daniel Lee’s heritage-forward, slightly grungy vibe, which focuses on oversized tailoring and softness in silhouette. With the exception of the ‘chav’ period in the late ’90s and early aughts—where the Burberry check became associated with tabloid excess and tacky monogram mania—the trench coat continues to endure.










