Welcome to Loot.co.za!
Sign in / Register |Wishlists & Gift Vouchers |Help | Advanced search
|
Your cart is empty |
|||
Showing 1 - 2 of 2 matches in All Departments
This summary report on the British Home Guard concludes that the force was just as vital and an important arm of the total defense of any country as any of the other forces, such as the Army and Navy and the Civil Defence Forces. The Home Guard was composed of volunteers who carried on civilian jobs and also were active in the defense of their country. The document contains an introduction detailing history of a need for a force like the British Home Guard, a section on tactics and training, law and organization, and the pitfalls of the force.
This is a high quality reprint of the original 1941 report by staff of the The Massachusetts Committee on Public Safety. In early 1941, when the threat of a German invasion was still by no means out of the question, even an invasion of America was not unimaginable. As a result, at the request of the U.S. War Department, two representatives of the Massachusetts Committee on Public Safety traveled to England to research the origins and development of the British Home Guard. Established in 1940 and originally named the Local Defense Volunteers, the Home Guard was both an early warning force and the last line of defense in case of a German invasion. British Home Guard, which was classified during the war, provides a detailed study of the organization, training, and armament of the Home Guard; its role in guarding against parachute troops (bringing about the nickname "Parashots"); and its potential as a guerrilla and sabotage force in the event of a full-scale invasion. Often viewed in retrospect as a "Dad's Army" of the elderly, this report makes clear the gravity with which an all-out German attack was viewed at the time, as well as British plans to "set England ablaze" via sabotage and irregular warfare if such an attack succeeded.
|
You may like...
|