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Wolverhampton
and World War II
The Home Guard
In May 1940 the government
asked for volunteers to form a force to help defend Britain against
the increasing risk of an invasion. The force would be known as
the Local Defence Volunteers.
Within days over 250,000 volunteers had come forward nationally.
The roles of the LDV
were:
Observation and information
Prevention of movement by the enemy (blocking roads and stopping
enemy use of vehicles, etc.)
Guarding
vulnerable locations and patrolling local areas.
In Wolverhampton
over 1,700 volunteers registered in the first
week. The force was put under the local command of Colonel WJ Beddows.

Extract
from Express and Star, 22nd May 1940

Click on
the image to enlarge
22nd
Battalion, Wolverhampton Company South Staffs, Home Guard, 1945
(Y9/TWE/1)
Local companies
including Boulton Paul, Goodyear Tyre & Rubber Company and John
Thompson Engineering formed other LDV units. The 34th Company was
responsible for the Bilston area: it had several bases including
the factories of Joseph Sankey and Stewart's and Lloyds, two of
the area's largest industrial firms.
At the same time a Tettenhall
group was also formed to cover the area of the Tettenhall Police
District: Seisdon, Orton, Penn, Tettenhall Wood, Wednesfield, Willenhall,
Kingswood, Codsall, Oaken and Brewood.

Extract
From Express and Star, 2nd July 1940
Initially
the LDV's role was observation as they were not trained to fight.
They were armed with only their own weapons : shotguns, sporting
rifles and pistols of different sizes, even sticks. Patrols were
carried out on foot or by bicycle. No uniforms were supplied - the
volunteers wore an armband marked LDV.
In June 1940, the Commanding
Officer of the Tettenhall LDV force, Captain Parkes, went to Walsall
and collected a number of cases containing 850 rifles for the Wolverhampton,
Brewood and Tettenhall groups. The rifles, from the United States,
dated from the First World War and had been packed in grease for
the last twenty-one years. According to The Record of the 24th
Staffs. (Tettenhall) Battalion Home Guard (page 39),
the grease was solid and it took ten days to get the rifles serviceable!
On
23rd July 1940 the LDV changed its name to the Home
Guard. Official military training was introduced. A handbook,
Rifle Training for War, was rushed into print. It went through
five editions in a month.

Extract
from Express and Star, 23rd July 1940
In addition
to defending its own area the Tettenhall troop provided a guard
one night a week for several months to relieve members of Boulton
Paul's own Home Guard company.

Click on
the image to enlarge
Boulton
Paul Home Guard, c.1943 (Y9/DOW/1)
As the war progressed,
with still no invasion, there was time to improve the training and
the weapons of the Home Guard. By 1943 it had become a well-armed
and properly trained force, quite capable of holding its own against
an enemy.
Some weapons - such as
the Nuttall Flame Thrower - were not strictly standard military
issue!

The
Nuttall Flame Thrower, The Record of the 24th Staffs. (Tettenhall)
Battalion Home Guard (page 95)
The Nuttall
Flame Thrower vehicle (named after its designer) consisted of a
forty-five gallon drum fitted to an Austin 7 car chassis towed behind
a vehicle. The weapon was capable of throwing a flame seventy-five
feet for three minutes!

Click on
the image to enlarge
Goodyear
Home Guard Gun Crew, c.1943 (Y9/GOO/1)
As
Allied Forces began to have successes in Europe the risk of an invasion
of Britain was significantly reduced. Consequently the Home Guard
was "stood down" on 3rd December 1944.

Extract
from Express and Star, 1st December 1944
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©
Copyright. Wolverhampton City Council, 2002
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