Amazon defense corps and other odd units
New character generation rules
Cthulu by searchlight.
The Home Guard were established On May 14 by the the newly-appointed Secretary of State for War, Anthony Eden. Tuning in to the 9 o'clock news on the BBC Home Service the people of Britain heard the Secretary of State warn of the dangers of the new warfare being encountered on the continent and in particular the threat from parachute troops which the Germans had dropped far behind the front lines.
"Since the war began the Government has received countless inquiries from all over the kingdom from men of all ages who are for one reason or another not at present engaged in military service, and who wish to do something for the defence of their country. Well, now is your opportunity. We want large numbers of such men in Great Britain, who are British subjects, between the ages of I7 and 65. . . to come forward now and offer their services. . . . The name of the new Force which is now to be raised will be "The Local Defence Volunteers". . . This name describes its duties in three words. . . . This is a part-time job, so that there will be no need for any volunteer to abandon his present occupation. . . . When on duty you will form part of the armed forces. . . . You will not be paid, but you will receive a uniform and will be armed. . ."The rush to the recruiting offices was immediate and overwhelming, before Eden had finished his broadcast, the first Volunteers were arriving at their local police stations, and by the afternoon many were unable to process all the volunteers. The constabulary were unprepared for such enthusiasm; in one Kentish village the local bobby turned out to deal with what he took to be a mob of illegally armed civilians descending on his station and ordered them to hand over their weapons, this was a harbinger of trouble to come. By That night the first LDV (Local defense volunteers) were out and about.
Eden had expected the scheme to be well received but never in his wildest dreams had he assumed that within 6 days the LDV would number over 250,000 men, and the police quickly ran out of enrolment forms. By the end of August their numbers had swollen to 1.5 million. At first the the Home Guard were controled by GHQ, but as thier numbers grew the administrative burdon become unbearable. On the 30 of may control was passed directly to the war office. It was envisged that the LDV would form only company sized units, although later the more populus areas formed battalions. Controled from zone HQ.
No one knew what to do with those which had been filled in, as they were to be handed over to a 'properly appointed' commander. No such commanders existed. A solution was found, the lord lieutenants of the counties were called in and, in concert with the senior army commanders in their areas, set about appointing retired officers as area, zone and group organisers, charged with selecting commanders for their different localities or confirming the choices already made by individual units.
The Germans immediately stigmatised the LDV as 'francs-tireurs', outside the protection afforded by international law, and under international law HAD to be shoot on sight. A fact the volunteers took great pride in.
On 14 July 1940, Churchill first referred to the new citizen army as the 'Home Guard', and the name stuck.
The qualifications required were minimal, as one veteran of the First World War recalled, the Home Guard was the.
'complete answer to the "old sweat's prayer"'.There was no medical examination - recruits were required only to be.
'capable of free movement'Experience with weapons was not deemed essential, with the inevitable consequences. The upper age limit was 65 but this was not strictly observed; the oldest member of the Home Guard was well in his 80`s having seen action in the Sudan campaign of 1884-85. And many of the early recruits were veterans of the First World War.
Anthony Eden had promised the Volunteers that
�you will receive a uniform and will be armed'.but at first the only item of uniform was an armband marked LDV, later on HG. Although later proper uniforms were issued. It was also impossible at first to arm the LDV with anything like effective weapons, for what remained in the nation's armoury was needed by the regular troops, so the enthusiastic but untried platoons of militia found themselves equipped with all manner of unlikely instruments of war.
Saloon cars, and goods vans were transformed into armoured vehicles with the addition of a few strategically placed sheets of boilerplate and chicken wire to repel German grenades.
The first Home Guard patrols were mounted by the Worthing Battalion of the Sussex Home Guard on the night of 14/15 May. On the 17th of May Eastern Command issued an order for patrols to be carried out by 1500 Volunteers in Sussex and Kent.
As invasion fever gripped the country the LDV dutifully manned roadblocks, river crossings and country footpaths. Obstacles boasting descriptive names like "Dragon's Teeth" and Hairpins" were established in an effort to deny the German armour use of the main roads. In the fields steel girders, old cars and wooden poles were placed to reduce the space available for glider landings.
With so many men armed with unfamiliar and deadly weapons (even to themselvs) perhaps more accidents than those that occurred could have been expected, although posibly not. enthusiastic but untrained Volunteers were more of a menace to their fellow-citizens than the enemy, and thr roadblock became a new and potentially lethal hazard for motorists to negotiate.
On the night of June 2, for example, four people were shot dead in separate incidents for failing to notice or stop at LDV roadblocks. Another Home Guard unit stoped their own milkman on his rounds and forced him to turn back and fecth hie papers. In another incedent a Home Guard sargent shot dead a GPO inspector visiting a local post office. At the hieght of the battle of britain a Polish ace was shot repeatly by Home Guard after parachuting out of his aircraft, despite the fact he was on fire and pleading for help (in Polish!). Despite these incedents it must be said that the early days of the Home Guard were characterised by mostly comic rather than tragic events.
Even the police were not immune to Home guard exccese`s, and it was nessecery to come up with a compromise that basicly and officialy told the Home guard they were still subject to Police authority. Although in a move garrented to cause confusion, the police remained liable to questioning by the Home Guard.
Inevitably the Home Guard's engagingly? amateurish approach was forced to submit to more orthodox military discipline, to the consternation of many, especialy some old officers now serving in the ranks (according to one vetran one home Home Guard unit had 6 retired generals in it, all in thier old uniforms acording to one vetran). At the beginning of August 1940 its units were affiliated to county regiments, partly to undermine the German claim that the Home guard were 'francs-tireurs', and the proccess of integration with the Army begun.
In the summer of 1940 training had largely been left to the individual initiative of local commanders. The most notable freelance effort was the training school at Osterley Park run by Tom Wintringham, a Communist who had commanded the International Brigade�s British (13th) batalion in the Spanish Civil War.
Wintringham was a passionate advocate of guerrilla warfare, and brought with him from Spain a trio of Spanish miners who taught Volunteers how to destroy tanks. Five thousand men, passed through Wintringham's school between July and October 1940, after which it became �War Office No. 1 School' for the Home Guard. Concerned with it`s leading lights communist links (and advocacy that the Home guard would form the nucleas of a post war "citezens" army) Witeringham and his cohorts were moved on. Eventually four War Office schools were established, from which 'travelling wings' were dispatched to train units all over the country. These schools went on to train regular troops, and even the commandos in irregular warfare. despite the excellent training programmes, the Home Guard was still capable of reducing the most serious maneouvres to surreal slapstick.
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In February 1941 a formal system of ranks was introduced with commissions for officers. At the end of the year conscription brought an end to the purely voluntary nature of the Home Guard. With the introduction of army disciplines came army bureaucracy, and Commanders were buried under an avalanche of red tape.
From 1942 the Home Guard also provided valuable training for sixteen- and seventeen-year-olds who entered its ranks before their call-up.
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In the summer of 1943 there were 1100 Home Guard battalions, a total of 1.75 million men. The influx of teenagers from early in 1942 had reduced the average age to under thirty, and the proportion of 'old sweats' had dwindled to 7 per cent. The Home Guards' dress and weaponry were now almost identical to that of the regular Army, the only major differance the red shoulder flash bearing the legend "Home Guard".
The Home Guard was Over 2 million strong in 1944, of whome nearly 150,000 were serving in AA batteries.
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In 1940 an 'Amazon defense corps' was formed by ladies in Worthing Surrey, Apparently intending to serve as front line nurses, although they were not formaly recognised as part of the Home guard. Other informal, and unoficial units of women were formed from time to time. The Upper Thames Valley patrol for example used women as boat crew as early as 1940. In 1943 the government finally submitted to pressure to permit women a more formal role in the Home Guard, and permitted their services, in a limited capacity. The so-called 'Nominated Women', later renamed 'Women Home Guard Auxilliaries'. Although officially these women were only supposed to take a supporting role, and non combative roll, in practice some women were taught how to handle a rifle and use military equipment. By 1944 there were 32,000 Women Home Guard Auxilaries (not to be confused with the Auxilery units, see below).
A number of hunts formed cavalry troops, even being trained to fire from horse back. Part of the exmor mounted platoon rode byclcles. There was at least one other bycycle platoon, in Gloustershire.
In London a unit of Rollerscaters was formed, to act as 'runners'. There were also a number of Pidgen units formed, also for use as communications units.
The Home Guard formed a number of waterborne units to patrol Britains inland waterways. They used a wide variety of pleasure craft, often armed with MG`s, alltough not all were so well equipted. The first such unit formed seems to have been the Upper Thames valley patrol, formed within days of Eden`s broadcast.
There were also a number of dog teams formed, altough I am not sure as to their purpose. Presumable to round up spys and sabatures and aircrew.
And lets not forget the worlds only miniature armoured train, ran by the Romney, Hythe and Dinchurch railway. Credited with a lest one german aircraft.
The Home Guard was never put to the ultimate test against the German Army, probobly a good thing. At the time of greatest danger, in the summer of 1940, its effectiveness would have been very limited, and the Home Guard may have perhaps even been a hinderance. This is especialy true of some of the more unusual units, boats were of limited use, and often of dubious offensive value. Although it comprised a million men under arms, its static nature meant that only those units in the Southeast could have rendered any immediate assistance to the Army, if sealion had taken place as planed, and the others could not be moved south without seriously undermining the regular armys mobility. However, at this time of national peril it was the Home Guard's very lack of mobility which proved an invaluable asset.
The regular Army was in desperate need of training, but this could not be achieved if it was committed to the defence of Britain's coastline, factories, public utilities, airfields and thousands of 'vulnerable points' (VPs). The Home Guard�s availability for these duties released thousands of troops for training and relieved the Army of a strain which might have proved intolerable. By the end of June the Southern Railway's LDV units alone were patrolling at nearly 500 VPs in its system, four times as many as those guarded by the Army. Its very lack of moblity also meant that the invaders would have found every village and town hall a strong point. Although If the Germans had resorted to reprisals agaist the civilian population (as they had in Belgium in WW1) the question has to be asked would the Home Guard have been as keen. Or would the colonel "Blimps" have considerd discretion the better part of valor.
On a social rather than a military level, Home Guard duties, however taxing after a day's work, provided much-needed companionship for men whose families had been evacuated. And in the urban areas the Home Guard was a focus for a wide-range of social activities and sporting activities.
The Home Guard also served as a back-up to the Civil Defence services and the anti-aircraft arm.
The Home guard was disbanded on 31 December 1945, it was revived again in 1951, only to be placed on a reserve basis in 1955, and the Home guard finaly ceased activity in 1957
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The Auxillery units
At the same time as the home Guard were established so was an organisation known as the auxillery units. an offshoot of section D of SIS that was formed in 1938, only one of these early units has comme to light. Formed in feb/May 1940 at Eastborne. They were organised into three batalions 201(Scotland),202(Midlands), and 203(south) Home guard
In May 1940 Colonel Gubbins formed the first of the Auxillery units, their members veted by the local police. They wore standerd Home GHuard unifroms, the only distingushing feature their battalion shoulder flash. However it must be said that these units had no official existance, and were just a cover. Meaning of course that under international law they were not solders and subject to summery exacution.
In Augaust 1940 Coleshill house became both the central HQ and training center, it was not far from swinden. When arriving new recruits went not to the house, but instead to the local post office. The post mistress would then phone Coleshill house to arrange pick up. Theses units were trained by veterans of the Spanish civil war, and some saw them as the future of war, a true citizens army (this in the end led the army to remove most of the Spanish war veterans). The school later went on to train the SAS and SOE.
How effective the "Aux units" would have been is open to doubt, although dedicated and well trained, a few men (patrols were 6 men strong, with only a few patrols to a county) they would have at best been a brief nusience. Also again German reprisals would have undermined the 'Aux' units morale.
This part of the site contains information to alow you to create and play Home Guard characters. These are rather old rules and I have not seen the latest edition of Call of Cthulu, so I aploligise for any inconsistances.
Home guards should use all normal rules for character creation, especialy the rules for age.
The rules for profesions and education skill points should be used. The player should pick a profession for his character, and add to their allowed skills, Rifle and Pistol. apart from this its all about the same.
If a character is over the age of 18 and under 41 then the player must choose why his character is not in the army.
Players being only psycotic gun bunnys will want to kill things. And to satisfy this blood lust there follows the weapons stats. And boy are they in for a treat.
Most recruits, in the early days, were armed with hastily improvised hand weapons, often an entrenching tool handle sporting adapted infantry bayonets. Assegais brought back from the Zulu Wars, golf clubs, truncheons. One unit even issued packets of pepper
�to interfere with the vision of any persistent unwelcome visitor'were all issued.
Some units were indeed armed with pitchforks and a few with broomsticks (with of course kitchen knives attached), but this was not as common as commonly supposed. Others were armed with all manner of old and ancestral swords, and a 'cutlass platoon' was formed in essex 24 strong and under the command of a former naval rating. A "pike" was issued in September 1941, when the threat of invasion had long passed and the majority of Home Guard units were substantially better weapons, this was quikly relagated to stores with the level of contempt it deserved.
To be issued with a melle weapon the character must make one luck roll per weapon, in what ever order he wishes. He can always have a packet of pepper
| Weapon | Base chance | Damage | range | HP`s |
| Assagie | 25% | 1D8+db | Touch | 20 |
| Axe | 20% | 1d8+2+Db | Touch | 15 |
| Improvised club | 20% | 1D6+db | Touch | 20 |
| Improvise Spear* | 15% | 1D6+db | 1.5 yds | 15 |
| *Any number of unlikly improviations, such as the clasic Broom handle with a kithen knife atached, or the entrenching tool handle and bayonet combo. | ||||
| Pepper | Throw % | stun | 1 Yrd | 1 |
| Pike* | 15% | 1d8+Db | 3 Yds | 20 |
| *This also includes salvaged and home made Pikes prior to 1941 | ||||
| Small club | 15% | 1d6+Db | touch | 15 |
| Sabre/Cutlas | 15% | 1d8+Db | Touch | 20 |
| Spear | 15%(throw % if thrown) | 1d8+Db(1d8+1) | 1 Yrd(see throw rule) | 13 |
Of course you will all want guns, and as defenders of the crown you have some quality kit.
Rifles Machine Guns Heavy weapons Return to Index
The Home Guard was cursed with an assortment of odd, old and home made weapons of dubious effectivnes and safty. This was especialy true in 1940 when almost anything was considerd exceptable, no matter how unsafe.
To be issued with a firearm the character must make one luck roll per weapon, in what ever order he wishes.
Modifiers
| Each subsquent roll | -10 |
| Ross, M-1917, P-14 prior to September 1940 | -10 |
| SMG prior to September 1940 | -10 |
| MMG, Sten gun prior to 1942 | -10 |
| LMG prior to September 1940 | -10 |
| Rifles prior to June 1940 | -10 |
| Heavy weapon prior to June 1940 | -20 |
The following are the most common calibres of pistol, they should (unless stated otherwise be revolvers).
With the total stock of rifles in britain at the time of the LDV`s formation around 70,000+, and with the addition of around 20,000 handed into police stations, improvisation was the order of the day. In Manchester several rifles last fired in the Indian Mutiny were salvaged from the Zoological Gardens. In the props room at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane, a long-forgotten cache of 48 rusty Lee Enfields was unearthed and pressed into service. Others came readily equipped with personal sporting weapons, and fowling pieces, as well as flintlocks of unknown design or vintage. several sporting guns were also taken from the gun room at Sandringham.
The folowing weapons can be used unchanged form the basic rule book.
| Weapon | Caliber | Base chance | Damage | Base range | Magazine | Attacks | HP`s | Malfuncion |
| Martini-Henry | .544" | 25% | 2d6+6 | 80Yds | 1 | 1/3 | 12 | 90 | The Martni Henry rifle was the British armys first bolt action rifle. A few were drawn out of museams during the early days of the LDV. Surprisingly ammunition was scarce. |
| M-1917 | .30" | 15% | 1d6+2 | 120Yds | 5 | 1/2 | 8 | 90 |
| The "Springfield" rifle was a WW1 vintage US army weapon, based on the British P-14. It also sufferd from the same probloms of poor reliability and handaling. Its non standard caliber also made it unpopular with the British. | ||||||||
| P-14 | .303" | 15% | 1d6+2 | 120Yds | 5 | 1/2 | 8 | 90 |
| The P-14 rifle was a WW1 vintage British army weaopn. Built in response to the percived (by some "experts") weakneses of the Lee-Enfield. The P-14 however sufferd from probloms of poor reliability and handaling, which made it unpopular with the British, and although highly accurate it was soon taken out of service . | ||||||||
| Rook Rifle | .22" | 25% | 1d6+2 | 30Yds | 1 | 1 | 9 | 99 | This reprsents any number of low calibre sporting guns. |
| Ross | .303" | 15% | 1d6+2 | 120Yds | 5 | 1/2 | 8 | 90 |
| The Ross rifle was first made for the RCMP during the last years of the 19C century. At the outbreak of WW1 it was issued to both the Canadian and British armys. It however sufferd from probloms of poor reliability and handaling, although it was highley accurate. In the hands of an expert these defects were no problom, but in the hands of an orinary solder caused no end of trouble, and it was soon taken out of service. | ||||||||
| Rusty Old Lee-enfield | .303" | 25% | 2d6+4 | 90Yds | 10 | 1/2 | 8 | 90 |
| This represents any number of ex-service rifles, such as those from druy lane, culled form various and diverse sources. | ||||||||
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The home Guard were issued with all manner of old and non-standerd LMG`s. Most were well passed their service life. It seems that starting in 1942 (this is an estimate) the Home Guard started to recive American .30 cal MMG`s, and .30? cal Vikers (rechamber?). around the same time the Home Guard begain to be issued with Sten guns. The first tommy guns arrived in 1940, first issued to the 'auxillery units', as were the Stens (in fact the `Aux units` recived the Sten before thr regular army) they later became standerd issue.
The following weapons can be used unchanged form the basic rule book.
| Weapon | Caliber | Base chance | Damage | Base range | Magazine | Attacks | HP`s | Malfuncion |
| .30 Lewis | .30" | 15% | 2d6+2 | 90Yds | 97 | Burst | 12 | 90 | This is the US version of the Lewis LMG of WW1 vintage. Optional rule, The lewis was so large it gave protection to most of the upper torso grants 1 point of armour on a luck roll. |
| Lewis | .303" | 15% | 2d6+4 | 90Yds | 97 | Burst | 12 | 90 |
| The Lewis gun was the first LMG to enter service in WW1. It was a very heavy and not overly reliable design. Optional rule, The lewis was so large it gave protection to most of the upper torso grants 1 point of armour on a luck roll. |
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| Hotchkiss Mk I & MkII | .303" | 15% | 2d6+4 | 90Yds | 30 | Burst | 10 | 90 |
| This is the British version of the French LMG of WW1 vintage. | ||||||||
| Savage-Lewis | .30" | 10% | 2d6+2 | 80Yds | 47 | Burst | 10 | 90 | This is the version of the Lewis gun manafactured in the US by the Savage arms Co. Designed for use in American aircraft in WW1 it was Retro vited with a basic fore grip and stock for use by the Home Guard in the ground role. |
| Sten gun | 9mm | 15% | 1d10 | 80Yds | 32 | Burst | 10 | 90 |
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The Home Guard became home to all manner of Heath Robbinson contraptions, many of them official issue, some homemade. This was due to the cronic shortage of artilery and AT weapons after ther evacuation from Dunqurk.
As a stop gap Churchill, against the advice of the army command, accepted as part of lend-lease a shipment of old French 75`s. These were issued to some Home Guard units although without limbers, they were to be driven into action on the backs of lorrys.
The Northover projector was typical weapon of the type of weapon issued to the Home Guard. It consisted of about half a dozen components and looked like a section of drain pipe on legs. The aim of the device was to propel grenades or other ammo by using a small explosive propellant charge. The projector was operated by pulling back a cocking handle which, when released by the trigger, would release the firing pin on to a percussion cap placed on the propellant charge.
The grenade used in the Northover projector was the green cap SIP grenade or No. 36 Grenade, although milk bottles filled with white phospherous were also issued (with the obvious rsult), and are still found hidden to this day.
There were some 'home made' variations of the Northover projector. Some had the legs removed and were placed on wheeled carriages to make transportation easier. A slightly more elaborate version was designed by two members of the Buckinghamshire Home Guard. They produced a Northover 'Revolver' Projector which had a five-chambered revolving magazine. Another enterprising unit converted theirs to an AA? weapon, with one suspects more optimisom then sense.
Under the auspices of the petroliam warfare department Fougasse appeared, buried under sandbags at the roadside. This was an oil drum which was ignited by pulling a string it spewed out a flaming mixture of oil and petrol. Thus, it was hoped, ambushing any unsuspecting enemy patrol.
The folowing weapons can be used unchanged form the basic rule book.
| Weapon | Caliber | Base chance | Damage | Base range | Magazine | Attacks | HP`s | Malfuncion |
| .Boys ATR | .55" | 15% | 3d6+4 | 90Yds | 5 | 1 | 15 | 95 |
| Blaker bomberd | 14Lb(20Lb) | 10% | 4d6/4Yds(4d6/3Yds) | 200Yds(100Yds) | 1 | 1/3 | 10 | 50 |
| This can also be used to represent any number of improvised mortars, and old cannon. | ||||||||
| Nothover projecter | 2.6" | 15% | 4d6/4Yds(WP 5d6/5Yds) | 50Yds | 1 | 1/3 | 10 | 50 | The White Phospherous bomb will also produce a cloud of smoke 1d6 Yds in diamater. |
| Smith gun | 3" | 10% | 4d6/3Yds | 80Yds | 1 | 1/3 | 10 | 90 | The Smith Gun was invented by the chief engineer of the Trianco Engineering Company as a private venture sometime in 1940 and offered to the British Army as an emergency gun for issue to the Home Guard. At first the gun was refused by the Ordnance Board, but by June 1941 it had been accepted into Home Guard service. To fire the gun it was simply turned over onto one of its wheels, which then acted as a firing platform. |
| Stickey bomb | Grenade | Throw%* | 4d6/3Yds | See Throw rules | 1 | 1 | 10 | 00 |
This weapon was considerd so unsafe, that even in 1940, the Ordanance board refused its exceptance into the regualr army. So it was issued to the Home Guard instead. The theory was to throw it at enamy tanks and it would stick to them, in practice it was either placed on the target or stuck to the user. *When used the thrower must make a luck roll, if he fails the grenade has stuck to him and goes of. |
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Cthulu by searchlight.
Last updated 16 December 2004© S. Slater MMI