Kaga simpson
Peacehaven, East Sussex |
16 of 47
Wed 27th Jan 2016 12:17pm
Back in the 1930's. On the back of our front door there were 5 hooks with our coats and scarves on, then it was five coats and five gas-masks, then dad joined the Home Guard and we also had two soldiers billeted on us so it was now three army coats, our school coats and seven gas-masks, then the soldiers moved on and later one weekend we were all at home so now there was dad's army coat, my sister's army coat, my brother's navy coat, and my air force cadet coat, my uncle came in through the back door, looked at the coats, said "Bl**dy hell Arthur, hope 'Jerry' knows where your back door is 'cause he ain't going to get through your front door". |
Local History and Heritage - Home Guard (Local Defence Volunteers) | |
Kaga simpson
Peacehaven, East Sussex |
17 of 47
Wed 27th Jan 2016 12:25pm
Norman, as far as I am aware it was always the Local Defence Volunteers, Home Guard was the nickname. |
Local History and Heritage - Home Guard (Local Defence Volunteers) | |
Midland Red
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18 of 47
Wed 27th Jan 2016 12:29pm
The name was changed in 1940 from Local Defence Volunteers (thought to be uninspiring) to Home Guard |
Local History and Heritage - Home Guard (Local Defence Volunteers) | |
Kaga simpson
Peacehaven, East Sussex |
19 of 47
Wed 27th Jan 2016 12:49pm
Midland Red, really, well I'll go to the foot of our stairs, as we used to say in Coventry, never knew it was official. |
Local History and Heritage - Home Guard (Local Defence Volunteers) | |
Dreamtime
Perth Western Australia |
20 of 47
Wed 27th Jan 2016 1:38pm
On 27th Jan 2016 11:17am, Kaga simpson said:
Janey, re Dads Army, lots of the early sketches were true but twisted for fun.
Mrs Reedy stout, curlers and pinny: Well you tell your sergeant he has another think coming, anyone tries to throw me over his shoulder and he'll get a bl**dy black eye.
I haven't heard that for a long time Kaga 'a pinny' Question |
Local History and Heritage - Home Guard (Local Defence Volunteers) | |
Norman Conquest
Allesley |
21 of 47
Wed 27th Jan 2016 4:16pm
Quite correct MR... proof see here Just old and knackered
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Local History and Heritage - Home Guard (Local Defence Volunteers) | |
Kaga simpson
Peacehaven, East Sussex |
22 of 47
Wed 27th Jan 2016 5:02pm
Norman, I'm not disputing it, we all ways called it the Home Guard, I thought in the background the MOD kept it the LDV
But quite a number of the earlier sketches did actually happen, somewhere, sometime but were changed a little to make it fun.
'Jerry' doesn't like the steel (greatly exaggerated) came back from the 1st World War, not the 2nd, but there was a lot of humour out there in the early days.
Soldiers talked of the 'pull-through' and ladies asked if someone had been ill, that kind of thing. |
Local History and Heritage - Home Guard (Local Defence Volunteers) | |
Midland Red
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23 of 47
Wed 3rd Feb 2016 5:19pm
Here's some photos of the real "Dad's Army"! |
Local History and Heritage - Home Guard (Local Defence Volunteers) | |
Dreamtime
Perth Western Australia |
24 of 47
Thu 4th Feb 2016 12:11am
Fantastic MR, I just have to watch the movie. All those well-known faces. |
Local History and Heritage - Home Guard (Local Defence Volunteers) | |
Kaga simpson
Peacehaven, East Sussex |
25 of 47
Thu 4th Feb 2016 10:15am
Oh here we go again, never did I see anyone look like or dress like Zeta-Jones in 1940, not even the Queen mum, immaculate eyebrows,etc. It did not really happen, she would have caused a riot. I am only going on that one picture, not the film. Even Pat Roc did not look like that, Pat was the airforce pin-up.
Back in those days the people not eligible for call up felt lost, they needed to be part of the war, so yes they flocked to play their part, and there were accidents. Being a hotch-potch of people, you had the normal people who tripped over their own bootlaces, but it did booster the morale just to have them around.
Part of a barrage balloon floated to the ground, a phone call and a full scale turn-out was on.
Woman said to butcher, if that's my meat ration for the week, then you may as well as post it through my letter box. |
Local History and Heritage - Home Guard (Local Defence Volunteers) | |
TonyS
Coventry Thread starter
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26 of 47
Thu 4th Feb 2016 9:52pm
Bear in mind this is a comedy not a documentary! |
Local History and Heritage - Home Guard (Local Defence Volunteers) | |
Kaga simpson
Peacehaven, East Sussex |
27 of 47
Fri 5th Feb 2016 9:37am
TonyS, I hate to see people completely out of the picture, and give false ideas, that are not comic, doesn't she look as though she has just spent the last week in the shelter, and wondering how to give the kids their rations. I guess I'm still living in the past. |
Local History and Heritage - Home Guard (Local Defence Volunteers) | |
Kaga simpson
Peacehaven, East Sussex |
28 of 47
Fri 5th Feb 2016 9:52am
The other thing that comes to mind with me, the comedy was a seaside place, but in Coventry guys would work all day, squash in a couple of hours home guard duty and then go back to the factory and do fire duty, not every night, but enough to make it a very tiring life, so all though comic, let us not forget who they really were. |
Local History and Heritage - Home Guard (Local Defence Volunteers) | |
pixrobin
Canley |
29 of 47
Fri 5th Feb 2016 1:36pm
Well said Kaga. I entirely agree with your sentiments. We get fed a completely sanitised edition of history.
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Local History and Heritage - Home Guard (Local Defence Volunteers) | |
TonyS
Coventry Thread starter
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30 of 47
Fri 5th Feb 2016 2:10pm
I think you both miss the point, this is not a newsreel on Pathe News or a "history lesson", it's a bit of fun.
My father, who was a corporal in Coventry's Home Guard (due to his occupation he wasn't called up), loved this show and looked forward to watching the original every week. |
Local History and Heritage - Home Guard (Local Defence Volunteers) |
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