Showing posts with label People. Show all posts
Showing posts with label People. Show all posts

Monday, 11 July 2016

Local News

(OOC: Apologies for the lack of updates in VBCW Herefordshire. I’m busy with my Frostgrave stuff at the moment, having pretty much painted everything I need for VBCW. However, this post by erstwhileVBCW gamer ‘Leadboy’ requires some kind of retort…)

Who is the ‘Scarlet Lady’?

Decent law-abiding listeners throughout the county have been shocked and scandalised by the recent output from a traitorous radio station, the ‘Bishop’s Broadcasting Service’.

Transmitting from rebel-held Ludlow, their so-called news program claims to have uncovered the identity of the ‘Scarlet Lady’ – an unfortunate young woman, who is rumoured to appear in a number of photographs from the collection of the late gadabout, Colonel Patrick Mustard.

These frightful derrogutypes, the rebels claim, are of none other than Lady de Braose, supposed wife of our dear Governor!

Until now this noble Baron has refused to lower himself and answer such ludicrous claims, but at the urging of his press secretary, has released the following statement: “What utter rot! It just goes to show how desperate these fellows are, to cast aspersions on a man’s wife, especially when that man is not actually married! Silly b-s!”

Indeed, as everyone in proper Herefordshire society knows, Baron de Braose is a confirmed bachelor, who’s only mistress is his job!

Manuscript still in Rebel Hands

The salacious memoirs of the aforementioned Mustard is still thought to be in rebel hands, being last seen in the grubby oil-stained hands of a socialist rabble-rouser.

As is the habit of these unscrupulous reds, excerpts have been leaked to the more disreputable organs of the press (see above), however most of these have been dismissed as the perverted workings of an unbalanced hack by experts.

Many however are still taking this work of fiction seriously, and have expressed an interest in securing the manuscript. Shady deals are thought to have been made, although the authorities have disavowed any involvement, merely warning individuals against making private agreements with such unpleasant characters.

Fighting Near Aconbury

After a period of calm, fresh fighting has erupted around the Aconbury front around the Hereford-Ross road. Our correspondent Mr. Morrison has phoned in this report from Shell village:

A BUF lorry carrying fuel had broken down and been hidden in a barn near Shell village. The BUF/Royalist forces were tasked with recovering the fuel. The Anglican League forces were ordered to sweep the village and farm for rumoured hidden fuel supplies. Both sides were under strict orders NOT to destroy the fuel.

Unknown to both sides the ruined village was occupied by the remnants of the Shell LDV, who had been decimated in a previous battle after being deserted by their Anglican allies. Now nursing a bitter hatred of both sides they were determined to fight to the last to defend their village against all-comers.

 As the Hereford Small Traders advanced into the village on the Anglican left flank and Lord Scudamore’s Loyal  Legion did likewise on the Royalist right both suffered casualties when ambushed by the Shell LDV, who knocked out an Anglican armoured car with grenades.

In the centre the BUF reached the barn, where they were inadvertently joined by Lord Scudamore’s Legion seeking cover, and the Gas Street  Irregulars seeking loot. With 75% of the King’s men in the barn the Anglican commander, unaware the barn contained the vital fuel, decided it made too tempting a target for his mortar team to ignore. As spectators held their breath the mortar scored a direct hit, but to the disappointment of the onlookers the bomb turned out to be a dud and failed to explode!

Meanwhile the avaricious tendencies of the Gas Street Irregulars had left the Royalist left flank held by only the BUF Company Sergeant, who now faced the Archenfield Young Farmers and an armoured car advancing along the road through a wood. In an act of seemingly suicidal bravery he charged the Farmers, who failed their morale test and fled. He then survived a machine-gunning attempt by the armoured car and charged it in return. The raw crew also failed their morale test and drove off.  Sgt.’ Mad Wullie’ MacFeeble has been recommended for the Cross of St.George (Iron Class).

A desperate charge towards the barn by the Forest of Dean Free Miners and the Bishop of Hereford’s Suffragen Militia was met with a hail of fire from the BUF HMG and artillery, and repulsed with heavy casualties.  The Shell LDV were finally wiped out by the Royalist cricketers of Lord Smedley’s Gentlemen’s Second XI, and the game ended with the Royalist/BUF forces triumphant, having had the best of luck. If only that mortar shell had exploded...........!

Mr. Morrison was also on the present during a BUF punitive expedition against malcontents on Windy Ridge:

Both sides were tasked with investigating suspicious lights from the church tower and checking the village for spies. The BUF had also assembled a demolition team to destroy the Bishop’s Broadcasting Corporation transmitter on Windy Ridge, which was guarded by the Archenfield Young Farmers.

A cautious approach by both sides uncovered a number of malcontents and deserters lurking in the woods and houses, some of whom surrendered quietly but a few decided to fight and put up a ferocious resistance, causing casualties on both sides, before being eliminated. This diversion basically bogged down the whole centre of the battlefield.

On the Anglican left wing the Forest of Dean Free Miners were driven back from the church by the Cheltenham Ladies College and Gas Street Irregulars, who occupied the tower, but found nothing untoward.

On Windy Ridge the firepower of the BUF supported by an armoured car forced the Archenfield Young Farmers to fall back, but time ran out before the demolition of the transmitter could be carried out.

Kington on the Verge!

Welsh nationalists holding the market town of Kington are on the verge of surrendering, a military spokesman has revealed:

“With the railways cleared of rebel saboteurs, we have been able to transport heavy siege guns from Royalist bases in the West Midlands, and are currently using them to great effect against the Taffies,” he said.

There can be no doubt that Joubert’s men and our brave Territorials have their tails up now, and soon they will have liberated Kington and, with the rebels in full flight back across into Wales, will have secured the border within days!

Ex-Bishop Attacked!

An attempt has been made on the life of the former Bishop of Hereford, currently staying in the city at a guest of Baron de Braose.

At 3 a.m. last Wednesday, an intruder broke into the ex-Bishop’s lodgings in the Green Dragon Hotel and lunged at the stricken cleric with a kitchen knife. Thankfully the noise alerted a section of de Braose’s personal guard, who were also staying at the hotel. These stalwart fellows managed to apprehend the would-be assassin before he could fulfil his gruesome intent.

A man, thought to be a crazed anarchist agitator escaped from nearby Burghill Asylum, is currently being held under arrest at Hereford city gaol.

In order to protect the former Bishop, orders have been given to fly him to an undisclosed location for his personal safety. Captain Arrowsmith’s air flotilla is currently on standby at Hereford Racecourse in readiness for this transportation.

Society News

Sir Barrington Patchpole, QC, is delighted to announce his engagement to Lady Deirdre Ffaines-Muir of Wigmore Manor.


The couple, both long-standing widowers, are believed to have developed a close attachment during their work with the Landowners’ Protection Association, branches of which they both lead.

Thursday, 18 December 2014

Seasons Greetings From the Lady of the Manor


Lady Deirdre Ffaines-Muir would like to extend to you her most warmest felicitations of the season. Pictured here with her two faithful spaniels, Samson and Delilah, Lady Deirdre is currently residing at her country residence near Wigmore.

As patron of the Herefordshire Townswomen's Guild, Lady Deirdre is well-known for her charitable works, and for her active participation in the local branch of the Landowners' Protection Association.


The villages in her estate have recently become even more festive than is usual for this time of year, for they have been galvanised by the arrival of Lady Deirdre's ward, Miss Nemone Mortimer-Wagstaff.

This 'statuesque' young lady, pictured here under the watchful eye of head gardener Albert, is quickly becoming the most eligible 'bachelor-ette' of the county after coming of age and being presented to The King, for she is the only surviving person in the British Isles able to claim a direct bloodline to the Mortimer family - that once powerful dynasty of Medieval Marcher Lords.


This correspondent predicts that many a potential suitor will soon be sending their visitor cards to Lady Ceirdre's residence, in the hope that Miss Mortimer-Wagstaff and her loyal following in this part of the county will deem him an acceptable love match!

More smashing figures from 'Mason's' Blind Beggar Miniatures range!

Thursday, 15 May 2014

Presenting Miss Bonnie Taylor


Ladies and gentlemen, may I present to you Miss Bonita 'Bonnie' Taylor; Morale officer for my Welsh Nationalist faction.

Miss Taylor was born in Patagonia to a poor but hard-working family of Welsh settlers. Her father, a Methodist preacher, brought her up with the traditional Welsh songs, stories and poems that his father had taken with him to Argentina, as well as tales of the desperate conditions that compelled him to emigrate.


An imaginative and strong-willed girl, Bonnie quickly identified with the land of her forefathers, performing the traditional songs with gusto. When the cause of Welsh Nationalism became intertwined with the stirrings of civil war in Britain, she stepped up her already lively correspondence with various literary and academic figures among the Welsh diaspora and espoused a free Wales to anyone who would listen.

Desperate to support the cause, Bonnie yearned to do her bit in Wales, but being a mere preacher's daughter, felt unable to do so. This changed when she found herself betrothed to a local rancher, a well-off but rough and uneducated man who had little time for her old songs. At the same time, a trickle of men began to leave the area to fight for the embryonic Welsh Nationalist militias.


Seizing her chance, Bonnie slipped away one night with a group of volunteers and armed with nothing more than her lusty voice and her great-grandmother's cawl recipe, found herself on a steamer bound for Britain.

Some say that any true-blooded Welshman will happily charge into the very teeth of death just for a chance to hear that voice or taste that cawl. Others maintain that dashing into those fiery jaws is a distinctly preferable option!

 

The miniature is a camp follower from a Perry Miniatures camp set, with a hat and shawl of Greenstuff.

Wednesday, 22 January 2014

My Family and The Great War

Sorry for the lack of VBCW goodness folks, but I have a very good reason for not updating recently.

As mentioned in my last post, I have started researching and documenting my ancestors' role in the Great War, and have started a blog called My Family and The Great War.

Here's the introduction to my new blog:-

In 2013 I started researching my family tree, a very addictive hobby that included me taking an evening course on the subject. This addiction soon spread to my wife, who also began to look into her ancestry. With the help of numerous distant relatives, record offices and the plethora of ancestry websites out there, we were able to build quite a sizeable family tree, but eventually got as far as we could go.

However for me this project took on a fresh impetus in the latter months of 2013 when announcements began to circulate regarding the various initiatives planned to mark the centenary of the start of World War 1 in 2014.

I knew that my paternal granddad, Walter Price, served in the Great War, and was determined to discover more about his history. Through my research I had also discovered that his brother John also fought, and died, in the conflict. He too deserved his place in the history books.

Further digging unearthed other great-aunts and uncles with a connection to the war, as well as the service records of my wife’s grandfather and great-grandfather. Soon I was bothering various experts on specialist internet blogs and forums for guidance and was amazed by their helpfulness; I began to amass quite a lot of information, as with each question answered, many more were raised.

In order to keep track of what I had unearthed, and to record my progress, I have started this website. I have made a page for each relative I am researching. These can be found on the right-hand side of this website and contains all the information I have been able to find. When new data comes to light I will update the relevant page, as well as record the fact in a separate blog entry, so that those who are following this will be informed. You can also follow my progress with updates by email.

Also on the right are a list of links to websites, blogs and forums, the members of which have been extremely helpful and generous with their knowledge. I would like to thank them all, as well as any distant cousins and the like who I have incessantly harassed during the course of my research! 

My aim is twofold: to leave a historic legacy for my children, so that they, and indeed any other relatives and interested parties can learn of our families’ part in the Great War; and secondly to commemorate the sacrifices made by my ancestors and honour the lives of those who, from the farms of Herefordshire, the fishing fleets of Grimsby and the hills of New South Wales, ‘did their bit’.

Monday, 9 December 2013

Dramatis Personae

I've been pleased and impressed to see how the Herefordshire Big Games have generated a degree of role-playing among the participants, with many characters emerging from among their miniature leaders. With another bash on the cards next March, it is high time that we got to know some them, along with the movers and shakers in the county...


PRO-GOVERNMENT

William de Braose, Interim Governor of the Marches

William de Braose

A rather shady character of dubious background who has used the civil war to further his career.

Although titled Governor of the Marches, de Braose's power only extends to the areas of Herefordshire under Royalist control.

Jealous of the influence of the BUF (although nominally a member himself), de Braose is having to tread a fine line between the interests of Mosley's government and that of the King (who is attached to via his friendship with the King's equerry and, rumour has it, a number of loans to His Majesty).

De Braose's main job is to keep Herefordshire as a buffer zone between the Anglican League and the Welsh nationalists, and Royalist Worcestershire. However this is being complicated by the infighting between various Royalist and BUF commanders which will eventually force De Braose to pick a side and intervene with all the resources (and small private retinue) his considerabe personal fortune can provide...


Sir Peter Mandie-Benjamin, 1st Baron Benjamin of Foy

Baron Foy (centre)
More information

A prominent government supporter and ardent right-winger, Sir Peter was recently made a life peer under the title Baron Benjamin of Foy and promptly set up shop in the local manor, much to the chagrin of de Braose.

However Baron Foy's plans to seize the initiative and launch an attack on the Anglican League stronghold at Ross from his fiefdom failed when a combined Anglican League and Welsh force succeeded in cutting off the Foy isthmus, and the BUF/Royalist forces therein.

This allowed anti-government forces to take control of most of south Herefordshire and leave a bottled-in Foy and his Royalist allies to fight among themselves.


Captain Alexander Campbell, BUF

Commanding officer of one of the BUF units currently trapped at Foy. The kilt-wearing Campbell, of Oughtawashmurr House, Scotland, has been engaged in a war of words with rebel leader Sir Gilbert Hill, at one point challenging the wheelchair bound aristocrat to a boxing match and calling his secretary Miss Sweetmeat a 'tart'. This ungentlemanly behaviour has drawn the ire of Royalist commander Brigadier Lord Robert Grover, who regards Campbell and his men as an 'ill-bread Scotsman and his irksome Cockney bully-boys.'

In his own words, Campbell describes himself thus: 'The Robert The Bruce infant school, Fort William taught me all I need to know, those skills being honed in the Palestine Police in the recent troubles. If any Sassenachs want a lesson pay me a call.'


Captain Arrowsmith, BUF

A BUF officer who played an active part in the Ledbury campaign, but was in Italy during the Foy debacle. Consequently he is one of the few BUF officers in the county who is currently at liberty.

Rumoured to be a close friend of Mussolini, Arrowsmith has a reputation for brutality among his enemies and has a penchant for burning and/or blowing up buildings, veering his tank off the road and running over his opponents.


Brigadier Lord Robert Grover, The Duke of Farnham's Household Defence Force

Lord Robert (centre)
Officer of The Duke of Farnham's Household Defence Force (the Duke is his uncle) and a cousin of the Baron of Foy.

Currently trapped in his cousin's estate, Lord Robert has taken out his frustrations on BUF commander Captain Campbell.

In fact it could be said that he shows more sympathy for the rebel Sir Gilbert than his BUF allies, who he sees as a nothing more than a necessary evil in the fight against Bolshevism.



Stokkies Joubert, Commanding Officer Kings Own African Legion

Stokkies Joubert commands a unit of South African volunteers who have come to England to fight for their King, forsaking the open veldt for the damp hedges of Herefordshire. Joubert and his men have had a pretty tough time of it as of late, especially during the defence of Strangford, the result of which sees them also trapped in Foy.


Eustace Spode, Commander, King Offa Legion of Blackshorts

Eustace Spode, third from left
More information

Eustace, nephew of the powerful 7th Earl of Sidcup and Blackshort leader Roderick Spode, was exiled to Herefordshire after an unfortunate misunderstanding in a gentleman's convenience in London. Here he was tasked with establishing a Blackshort presence - a task which achieved with remarkable success.

Although theoretically subordinate to the BUF, the Blackshorts have been largely kept at arm’s length, patrolling along the county borders with a degree of autonomy.

As such they were not present during the battle of Foy and as such are one of the few remaining pro-government units still locally at Mosley’s disposal.


Sir Jonathan Porridge and Sir George Moonbat, leaders of the Malvern Hills Conservators.

The Malvern Hills Conservators are the guardians of the Malvern Hills and, while ostensibly Royalist, will fight anyone who tries to encroach on their territory. This includes the BUF, with whom they have developed a bitter rivalry in the area.

At one point the MHC even allied themselves with the Anglican League in order to drive the BUF out of the Malverns and more recently clashed with the Blackshorts.

Miles Straitt-Jackett

Born 1879, only son of Lieutenant-Colonel Edward 'Loopy' Straitt-Jackett and the Hon. Felicia Straitt-Jackett (nee Warming-Knightley).
Educated at Mr. Thrashem's Academy for Young Gentlemen.
Joined Army 1897. Served in Sudan, Gold Coast, Basutoland, Matabeleland.

Despite never hearing a shot fired in anger Major  Straitt-Jackett served with distinction during World War 1, commanding 13th (Colonial) Field Kitchen Unit stationed in Bulawayo.  He was present at the Tsetse Valley Incident when a crowd of rioting Native miners were subdued by volleys of plum duff hurled by his cooks, for which action he was awarded The Order of the Yellow Buffalo (2nd Class).
A good friend of the renowned Major Denis Bloodknock, Major Straitt-Jackett joined the B.U.F. in 1935, in the mistaken belief it was a book club.
Interests : Cricket, Lepidoptery, Taphophilia. He also has a large collection of cheese labels.


ANTI-GOVERNMENT

Brigadier Gideon Langnecke, Military leader of the Herefordshire Anglican League

Brigadier Langnecke
More information

Since the capture of the previous Anglican League leadership, Langnecke has stepped into the breach as the first professional military man to command the faction.

His fist act was to abandon the disastrous campaign to encircle the entire county and pull back to defensive positions at Ross-on-Wye.

By luck or judgement, Anglican Forces have since established themselves in the south of the county and managed to encircle a considerable number of their enemies at Foy. However they have paid a heavy price for this success and Langnecke is now forced to rely more on his Welsh nationalist allies than many of his men feel comfortable with - a reliance that will continue until the Anglican League can bolster their meagre resources for the next confrontation.


The Bishop of Hereford

The Bishop of Hereford
More information

Original leader of the Anglican League in Herefordshire and the man responsible for declaring the county against the King.

After initial successes against the government, the Bishop cooked up a half-baked scheme to install a pretender on the throne - a move which alienated him from the national Anglican League leadership and bought the full fury of the Royalists upon him.

He was captured during the disastrous Severn Valley campaign and held at Madresfield, but later managed to escape, only to be recaptured again at the second battle of Ledbury before he could re-join the Anglican lines. Currently a guest of the Governor of The Marches, his status and indeed future is uncertain.


The Reverend Henry Meredith

A fiery Welsh vicar, the 'Bishop of Ross-on-Wye' took command of the remnants of the Herefordshire Anglican League after their defeat in the Severn Valley campaign. With a mix of firebrand rhetoric and personal charm he managed to bring the faction into some semblance of order and stabilise their front.

However he then overreached himself by attempting to link up with anti-government forces in the Midlands and encircling the whole of Herefordshire. His forces got as far as Ledbury, where they held on grimly before being forced to retreat back to Ross-on-Wye.

His military reputation in tatters and with Brigadier Langnecke waiting in the wings, the reverend split himself off from the Anglican League and began a preaching tour of the Welsh border areas, where he was captured by the BUF during a skirmish with the Welsh nationalists.


Capt. Teddy ‘Bear’ Jerningham, Anglican League officer

Before the civil war started Teddy (Bear to his friends) was the personal private secretary to Tory grandee, Sir Archibald Conrad Borrowmere and hoped to become an MP himself. Teddy watched first-hand the collapse of the government and the rise of Mosley.

Teddy was an outspoken critic of the new government and how it went about making new powers for itself and the King.  After a run in with Lord Cirencester and his ‘Political Intelligence Unit’ Teddy was forced to make a run for the country, along with his ‘man’ Purves and the two dogs. Helped by an old friend Hugh ‘Bulldog’ Drummond Teddy made to Staffordshire, here He joined the Anglican League.

Teddy had no military background, but loved the countryside, and country pursuits. Teddy loved nothing better than to be out hunting, fishing or shooting. These pastimes have helped Teddy in his new career. Beagling was Teddy’s favourite sport and he always kept a couple of beagles even when living in London, these dogs, Dynamo and Sprocket are now the platoon mascots.

Teddy spent his early civil war career as a gypsy moving from one unit to another. Now He is part of the Malvern Shock Battalion, like most civil war units not a battalion at all, but 3 under strength companies. The battalion has a tank called Bertie’s Ruin, this is normally short of ammo so is used as a threat or to bully locals. The battalion moves up and down the Welsh border, where the villages are now laws unto themselves and the big manors are the private fiefdoms of their owners.

After his failure to cross the river Wye, Teddy is on the lookout for a couple of boats so He is better prepared next time. Teddy still keeps in touch with his old boss (now in hiding) and other friends from parliament. He knows that Lord Cirencester and his ‘Political Intelligence Unit’ are still after him.


Anthony William Hayle, King of England

King Anthony (centre)
More information

One-time conman and crackpot, Hayle claims to be the descendant of Sir Richard Hayle, an illegitimate son of Henry VIII and through this lineage claims to be the legitimate heir to the throne.

Wisely keeping his head low at the outbreak of civil war, Hayle was forced to flee to Anglican territory when Royalist forces occupied Hereford.

Here he and his small band of eccentric followers currently form a somewhat embarrassing auxiliary to the anti-government forces.


Miss Jennifer Ryding-Hudd, Commissar, the Joseph Arch People's Column

Ryding-Hudd (left)
More information

Also known as 'Little Red Ryding-Hudd', this debutante-turned-agitator is the political head of the Joseph Arch People's Column, an offshoot of the People's Assault Column tasked with bringing the revolution to rural Herefordshire.

Under the military command of Comrade Commander Fred Gibbons, the column failed in their attempt to capture a strategic rail junction near Little Hereford in the north of the county as part of the grander scheme to cut off Royalist Herefordshire.

They are currently holed up somewhere near the territory of their allies the Worcester Loyalists at Tenbury Wells.


Sir Gilbert Hill, The Golden Valley Invincibles

Sir Gilbert (seated)
More information

Sir Gilbert Hill is a land-owner and gentleman farmer from just north of Pontrilas.

While a respectable figure in the local area, he cuts a somewhat different figure over the border into Wales, where he runs a number of ‘legitimate’ interests via a gang of ‘business associates’, posing as Welsh Nationalists.

Sir Gilbert has forged a sizeable satrap in the Golden Valley and has raised his banner in revolt against the King and Mosley.

His forces played a sizeable part in the battle of Foy and his star is in the ascendant – much to the chagrin of the neighbouring gentry.


INDEPENDENTS

Sir Barrington Patchpole QC, Leader, Landowners' Protection Association

Sir Barrington Patchpole (centre)
More information

Sir Barrington Patchpole, QC, is the nominal head of the Landowners' Protection Association - an umbrella group that represents the interest of the landed gentry in Herefordshire.

While some landowners see the group as a cover to create their own marcher lordships and mini empires, the LPA's main aim is to pool their resources to defend their lands from all and any interlopers.

In the main this means bandits and raiders from across the Welsh border (along which most of the territory protected by the LPA is situated) but also from other factions who might be tempted by the stocks of food and ammunition garnered in the various estates and farms under the LPA's wing.


King Twiggy Mommet

A Twiggy Mommet scarecrow
More information

Titular leader of the Twiggy Mommet protest movement and descendant of Rebecca and Captain Swing, King Twiggy is believed by folklorists to be an imaginary figurehead, rather than an actual person (although that has not stopped the authorities from putting a price on his head).

Disguised as scarecrows, the movement gives the rural populace an opportunity to vent their anger at the privations of civil war with a degree of anonymity - breaking down roadblocks or vandalising property in the name of King Twiggy.

Across the factions many an unpopular officer or official has woken up to find a sinister scarecrow placed in his garden as a warning of his conduct, while in extreme cases a strange band of straw mannequins can be seen shambling across the battlefield.

Tuesday, 19 February 2013

It's The Bishop!


Making a rather ignominious appearance at the 2nd Battle of Ledbury was the Bishop of Hereford, who declared Herefordshire for the Anglican League at the outbreak of the civil war. After initially holding back Royalist incursions into the county, he inadvisably attempted to set up a pretender to the throne, claiming him to be the supposedly deceased Prince John, earning himself the ire of the King.

The Bishop’s forces were eventually defeated in the Severn Valley campaign (one of the first Big Games at Evesham), and he was captured and taken into custody while Herefordshire fell largely under Royalist control.

Clad in a modest black robe, the Bishop proved a quiet and contemplative prisoner, leading a simple confinement of prayer and study, earning himself a transfer from the Tower of London to a more comfortable exile at Madresfield House, Malvern.

It was here that pressure was put on him to return to Hereford as a reformed man, where he was to gain his freedom by arranging for the treasured Mappa Mundi and Chained Library to be transferred into the ‘protection’ of the King’s private collection.

However the government car he was travelling in mysteriously crashed en-route, smack in the middle of what was soon to become the Second Battle of Ledbury. Uninjured, the Bishop fled the scene and his captors, hiding in the privy of a nearby farm until he could make his way to the Anglican lines. Unfortunately the farm was occupied as headquarters of the besieging Royalists, and his presence was eventually discovered.

Assumed to have been recaptured, his current whereabouts and status are unknown…


(The figure is a Perry Miniatures Carlist War priest, with Westwind head and TAG helmet.)

Dr. Lisle Carr, the real Bishop of Hereford 1931-1941


Charles Lisle Carr (1871 – 1942) was an Anglican clergyman who served as the second bishop of the restored see of Coventry before becoming the 107th Bishop of Hereford in 1931.

He was born in Alnwick, Northumberland and was educated at Liverpool College, and St Catharine's College, Cambridge, to which he was elected a Fellow in 1934. After university he took Holy Orders at Ridley Hall, Cambridge and embarked on a varied clerical career that took him to many urban locations.

Carr was curate of Aston juxta Birmingham, 1894–97; Redditch, 1897; Tutor of Ridley Hall, Cambridge, 1897–1902; Vicar of St Sepulchre, Cambridge, 1901–02; Vicar of Blundell sands, Liverpool, 1902–06; Rector of Woolton, Liverpool, 1906–12; Vicar of Yarmouth 1912–20; Archdeacon of Norfolk, 1916–18; Archdeacon of Norwich, 1918–20; Vicar of Sheffield, 1920–22; Honorary Canon of Sheffield Cathedral, 1920; Archdeacon of Sheffield, 1920–22; Bishop of Coventry, 1922–31; Bishop of Hereford, 1931–41.

In 1905, Carr became part of 'The Group Brotherhood', originally a trio of young like-minded evangelicals who had become alarmed by the tensions between and alienation of different camps in the anti-ritualist, anti-high church evangelical movement at the time. Campaigning for a more positive, thoughtful and relevant attitude among evangelicals through a series of informal gatherings with sympathetic friends. Annual conferences were also held, and, after 18 years, the group had become structuralised with an elected committee.

During his tenure as Bishop of Hereford, Carr participated in an initiative from the Bishop of Chelmsford, who launched a grand appeal in the 1930s to help fund the building of new churches in the populous section of his diocese adjacent to London’s east end. The Bishop’s fund reached £300,000, £6,000 of which was raised by the diocese of Hereford towards the costs of £11,000 for the building of a new church at St George's, East Ham, replacing the temporary structure.

In honour of the funds raised in Hereford, the church was renamed 'St George and St Ethelbert', and Carr laid the foundation of the new church on 9 May 1936. Handing over the first instalment to the bishop of Chelmsford – a cheque for £3,000, Bishop Lisle Carr remarked, amid laughter: "I may say that this is the largest cheque I have written in my life".

Carr continued with words that, in the make-believe universe of VBCW, may prove to be rather apt: "I venture to ask all the people who will enjoy this church that now and again they will remember their friends in Hereford and pray for those in that diocese, where, in the loneliness of country parishes, isolated among our hills, where communications are bad and difficult, the beacon of God is still strong among us. Pray that He may give us spiritual life, as we shall continue to work and pray for you."

Carr retired in 1941, dying later that year.

Monday, 1 October 2012

The Man From the Ministry


I present to you Sir Julian Jinks, Minister of Agriculture and Fisheries. This high-ranking member of the BUF is based on Jorian Jenks, real-life agricultural advisor to Mosley’s BUF (before his internment during WWII), environmentalist and pro-organic farmer.


In my little VBCW alternate universe, Julian Jinks followed a similar path during the run up to the abdication crisis, and when the BUF came to power, was knighted for his services and became a valued member of Mosley’s cabinet.

The miniature is a Black Tree Designs WW2 personality figure and will be used either as a BUF senior commander or an objective marker.

Friday, 14 September 2012

Little Red Ryding-Hudd



Please allow me to introduce Miss Jennifer Ryding-Hudd, debutante-turned-revolutionary. An ardent armchair socialist since her early teens, Jennifer absconded from her wealthy family to join the socialist uprising after becoming something of a cause celebre (giving a clenched fist salute whilst being presented to the king no less!)


She fled to the Midlands and joined the People’s Assault Column, where her infectious enthusiasm for the revolutionary cause quickly earning her a position as morale officer for the Joseph Arch People’s Column, among whom she can be found, clutching the latest edition of the Morning Star.


Here she is conversing with the commanding officer, Comrade Commander Fred Gibbons, while in the background another comrade proudly waves the columns banner (the eagle-eyed among you may recognise this mini – a repaint of an earlier standard bearer who has obviously switched sides!)

Tuesday, 17 July 2012

The Commissar Close Combat Police (CCCP)

Time to take a look at the far left of the spectrum...


Comrade Commissar Fred Kite re-inspected the curt order in his hands as the tug boat that had delivered the message made its way out of the dock; contemptuous of the long range artillery shells that burst around it, sending plumes of brown Mersey spray into the air.

‘Our brothers toiling in the fields and must be liberated from the despotic yoke of the bourgeois landowners and educated in the truth of Socialism,’ he read under his breath, his Cockney accent, betraying his past as a Shop Steward in the capital, as clipped as his moustache. ‘The following is a list of comrades who have come to the attention of the Comintern and have proven themselves worthy with their revolutionary zeal and loyalty to the Communist Party.’

He looked at the names – all young lads he noticed: Archie Buttress, who at 14 year of age had to be dragged kicking and screaming back to his suburban home after running away to join the International Brigade; Terry McQueen, apprentice toolmaker turned trade unionist and arsonist; Peter Dobson-Browne, expelled from Eton after repeated scuffles with Fascists in the East End – the list went on, all known for their passion for Communism and ferocity in the trenches around Liverpool.

‘You are to gather these comrades and form them into a cohesive unit. Your mission is to take them into the countryside where the revolution has yet to take hold or Trotskyist traitors make mockery of the party line. Through their rhetoric you are to educate the masses, through their vigilance you are to educate backsliding socialists, through their actions on the battlefield you are to educate the enemy.’

Comrade kite turned to the cargo manifest clipped to the order: revolvers, pump-action shotguns, tommy guns, grenades – close-up and bloody stuff. ‘Actions indeed…’ he mused.



The figures are mainly old Grenadier prohibition-era cops, with a slightly converted Black Tree Designs Adolf Hitler doubling for Comrade Fred Kite!


Tuesday, 15 May 2012

‘Turned out nice again hasn’t it?’

(The following to be read with clipped BBC pronunciation to the stirring notes of the British Pathé theme tune)

The sleepy town of Hereford has awoken to the jolly melodies of that star of radio, stage and screen George Frimby, who has returned to his native soil to do his bit!

Following a successful career in entertainment, the Herefordshire Hollerer has joined the local Hereford City LDV as morale officer, bringing his trademark banjolele and prop lamppost with him.  Far from the music halls of London, the Tupsley Troubador is now entertaining the troops with his cheeky numbers, such as ‘With My Little Stick of Dynamite’, ‘Work Camp Laundry Blues’ and ‘When I’m Breaking Windows’.

[Clip of Frimby singing ‘Loitering ‘round the Lamppost’ to a group of bemused militiamen]

‘Our George’ got into a bit of trouble a while back, after his latest song, ‘Grandad's Flannelette Blackshirt’, was deemed too risquĂ© by the authorities. And so at the risk of being labelled politically subversive, Frimby has returned to Hereford to make amends and will be accompanying his fellow defenders of Britain into their next battle – go get ‘em George!

(George Formby miniature by Eureka)

Wednesday, 25 April 2012

Hereford’s King of England


More Mutton Chop Miniatures love now – having bought the excellent Colonel Porter pack, I couldn’t for the life of me think how to fit the figures into my little world of VBCW Herefordshire. I thought they deserved to be more than being just part of another militia group, but wasn’t sure how to build a faction around them.

Then I remembered the story, already briefly touched upon in this blog, of Anthony Hall, Hereford’s own pretender to the throne. I was suddenly struck how this quixotic character could be merged with the pugnacious and somewhat seedy screen persona of Will Hay, the comedy actor who inspired the Colonel Porter figure...

Anthony Hall: pretender to the throne

William Hall at Birmingham's Bull Ring in 1931
Anthony William Hall, a former Shropshire policeman, believed himself to be descended from an illegitimate son of Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn. He also maintained that that the real James I of England had been murdered as an infant and his remains lay in a coffin in Edinburgh Castle. His place was taken by an "impostor and changeling", James Erskine, whom he dubbed "goggle-eyed Jim". In light of this, Hall maintained that his family should have inherited the Crown when Elizabeth I died in 1603.

Born in London in 1898, Hall grew up in the Herefordshire village of Little Dewchurch. After serving in WWI as an ambulance driver, where he was gassed at Ypres, Hall served in the Shropshire Police from 1919 to 1927 before leaving for Canada in disgrace. At one time or another he was also an export trader and author of a vehicle law manual, and inherited a fortune after the death of his father, enabling him to pursue his claims.

Thus asserting that the current monarchy was a sham and that he was a direct descendant of the ‘real’ monarchical line, in 1931 Hall asserted his claim to the throne in an open letter to King George V. “The whole world has been hoodwinked for 328 years,” he wrote. “You have no connection with the British Royal Family. You are an outsider. Therefore leave the country. I claim the Crown.”

Under the banner ‘a New King, a New Country’ he then began to tour the Midlands, making nightly speeches at Birmingham’s Bull Ring where he lambasted the ‘German’ occupants of Buckingham Palace. His speeches ranged from calling for George V to be dethroned via the law courts to challenging the King to a duel - at one time telling a large crowd of sympathetic Depression-era Midlanders that he would be the first policeman to execute a monarch! Police reports at the time noted: “In referring to the King of England, Hall states that he would have no hesitation in shooting him as he would a dog. The King was a German; a pure bred German and had not right to rule this country.”

His activities eventually became a cause of concern for the authorities, with King George's private secretary, Sir Clive Wigram, asking the Home Office for Hall to be sectioned. ‘King Anthony’ was remanded in custody, but the two doctors who examined him refused to certify him insane. "It is true that he is eccentric and wrong-headed, but he is not so obviously demented or insane that he could be dealt with without recourse to court proceedings” lamented Sir Clive.

With the Palace pressing for Hall to be dealt with (providing that the King’s involvement was kept secret) he was eventually arrested and tried for using ‘quarrelsome and scandalous language’. He was fined £10 and bound over to keep the peace with a surety of £25 or the alternative of two months' imprisonment with hard labour. Following this he held a final rally at the Bull Ring, before ceasing his activities for good.

He later went on to work at the Royal Ordnance Factory in Rotherwas and died, leaving no male heirs, in 1947 aged 49. He is buried St David's churchyard at Little Dewchurch.

Anthony William Hayle, the VBCW equivalent


Anthony ‘Will’ Hayle, a disreputable character who at one time or another worked, or posed, as a headmaster, policeman, teacher, fireman, ship’s captain, solicitor, stationmaster, and prison governor, briefly came to prominence during the early 1930’s after aggressively and colourfully asserting his claim to the throne of King George V in a series of lecture tours throughout the Midlands.

Claiming to be the direct descendant of Sir Richard Hayle, an illegitimate son of Henry VIII, Will was forced to cease his antics after his latest venture, the selling of ‘royal’ titles and honours, collapsed when a ‘Marquis of Shepton Mallet’ attempted entry into the House of Lords. Following this, Hayle retired to Herefordshire to breed sheep.

However the outbreak of civil war and the resultant calling into question of Edward VIII’s suitability to rule, prompted Hayle to renew his claims - especially after the Bishop of Hereford set a precedent with his failed attempt to depose the King in favour of the pretender ‘King John’. Once again reasserting his right to the throne, ‘King Anthony I’, his equerry ‘Duke’ Harbottle and Albert, Lord of the Privy (“you’ll get the ‘Seal’ bit when I’m king!”) narrowly avoided arrest by the Royalist authorities now controlling the county and, with a small band of eccentric, oddball or generally roguish followers, fled to the Anglican League enclave at Ross.

Here the ‘true and rightful King of England’ continues to press for recognition as the rightful heir to the throne, touring Anglican-held areas and espousing his claims (whilst gratefully accepting any and all donations). Hayle and his band of armed retainers are something of an embarrassment to the Anglican League, but in these desperate times any ally, however eccentric, is a valuable reinforcement.

Tuesday, 17 April 2012

The Weasley Whateleys

Deep in the sparsely populated countryside of north Herefordshire, a particularly dark and dingy ravine hides a scruffy and neglected hamlet known as Little Dunwich - home of the Whateley clan.

The Whateley clan - all figures by Mutton Chop Miniatures
Described over the centuries as an inbred bunch of rum coves, wrong ‘uns and queer sorts, the Whateleys have produced generations of vagabonds, wastrels and petty criminals, kept under some sort of order by the local authorities but never quite brought to justice for their wrongdoings, earning them the nickname of the ‘Weasley Whateleys’.

Remove any semblance of order and the Whateleys thrive.

The civil war has brought plenty of opportunities for criminality, skulduggery and general mischief for this extended family of reprobates, led by patriarch ‘General’ Wilberforce Whateley. Theft, extortion and blackmail had been their trade in recent months, until the opportunity came along for a bit of gun-running.


Ever the opportunists, the Whateleys had discovered a significant arms cache, left behind by retreating Anglican League forces after the Severn Valley campaign. ‘General’ Whateley let it be known that these weapons would be available for purchase by the highest bidder – who unfortunately for them turned out to be a BUF agent working for de Braose, the interim governor of the Marches.


Rather than arrest these would-be arms dealers, de Braose saw a solution to a problem, for the local battalion of the Three Counties BUF desperately needed new recruits. Knowing a slippery character when he saw one (indeed someone was heard to remark that it takes one to know one), de Braose acted quickly: locking up several female members of the Whateley clan before the menfolk could act. He then issued an ultimatum – the women would be kept safe if the men agreed to fight for the BUF with the weapons they had found.


‘General’ Whateley had no choice but to agree, and thus the Little Dunwich Militia was formed, fighting alongside the BUF for King and country – at least until the Whateleys can weasel out of their predicament and turn the tables on de Braose, for as a local saying goes, it never pays to cross a Whateley…

Wednesday, 11 April 2012

A Very Personal Retinue

I've cobbled together some figures to use as a brigade command group for my fascist/royalist forces. They represent the personal retinue of the interim governor of the Marches, William de Braose.

Figs are (L-R): Standard bearer (Musketeer BUF officer with Westwind head and repositioned arm), SMG (Crusader Miniatures Wild West character with TAG Tommy gun), de Braose (Mutton Chop Lord Cirencester), LMG (Artizan pulp), Signaller (converted Artizan French Foreign Legion with Westwind head).


While we're on the subject of command figures, I've also done some for my Hereford LDV and Anglican League forces.

The Wargames Foundry Victorian clerk will act as batman to the mayor, while the Artizan pulp 'Ekrem' has been converted into a signaller.

And now the Anglican League's entry into Rear of the Year 1938, this standard bearer - a converted Artizan French Foreign Legionnaire with Westwind head.

Finally, what's up doc!?

Some medics for various factions. All figures are Warm Acre scientists, excpet the chap with the pipe, who is from Hasslefree.