Home Guard: Crofton Scrap Book

Crofton Scrap Book: Part of the Crofton Collection

The “scrap book” forms the main bulk of the Crofton collection. This is volume two of the Sir Morgan Crofton’s scap books, with the first covering the First World War. The first few pages of this scrap book continue with Lt. Col. Sir Crofton’s time during the First World War, then the interwar period before starting in 1938 with the Second World War, which continues for some 20 pages.  The rest of the scrapbook was not copied, as part of the project, as it relate to the family.

This article holds the largest number of images of any article on the Portal with some 210 images of the documents held within these 20 pages of volume. These documents and the other documents held in the ledgers, that form this collection, give a unique insight in to the world of the Home Guard during WWII.

Unlike the TV series “Dads Army” it paints a picture of a dedicated, well-organized group of people with well thought through defensive strategies prepared to give their lives in the defense of this area, if the German ever invaded.  It is for future researches and historian to discuss how well these plans would have worked if the invasion had occurred.

The images start with the 20 pages, giving an overview of the material held there.  After these 20 images we take a closer look at the individual documents. Every page of every document included in the book has been photographed and is ordered by [page number]-[document number]: then a description and in some cases a date/year.

If you with to make use of any of these images please use the following credit line:

© NFNPA. Crofton. www.nfknowledge.org

Follow the link below to see the other items in the Crofton collection.

Home Guard: Letter Book 28th (Bay) Battalion Hants HG

Letter Book 28th (Bay) Battalion Hants HG: Part of the Crofton Collection

These are the pages and documents found in Letter book for the 28th (Bay) Battalion. There are a total of 36 images.

If you with to make use of any of these images please use the following credit line:  © NFNPA. Crofton. www.nfknowledge.org

Follow the link below to see the other items in the Crofton collection.

Can you help?
To help the search tool for this site find terms in these pages we need them to be transcribed. If you can help, please login and help us transcribe pages from this amazing collection.
To do this:

  1. Choose the page you want to transcribe so it’s in the view window above or save a copy to your computer
  2. Make a note of the number/caption
  3. Open up a word document and give the transcription a go
  4. Log in to New Forest Knowledge and then add a comment below and paste the transcribed text along with the page number/caption as a title

Each time a page is transcribed it makes the text searchable.  Thank you for your help.

Home Guard: Mr Pidgeon

A range of documents and photographs offered by Mr J Pidgeon

Twice monthly Southern Command Home Guard lists.

List 1 to 9 are massive and show all the initial appointments to Army rank in the Home Guard on 1/2/1942. Before then they had titles like Zone Commander, Company Commander, Section Commander etc. Early editions of the lists dont show which battalion they are, but I have worked that out from other sources. (I have 3 annual Home Guard lists for 1941, 1943 and stand down list Oct 1944)

SC HG lists 47 and 48 show formation of 28th Hants from Southern halves of 8th & 9th Hants

The originals are the copies issued to Major Henry Harold Stephen Bishopp 2 i/c of 7th Hants (Boscombe). The pencil marks by his hand show all the officers of 8th Battalion who transferred from Christchurch to 7th Hants Bn on 1/3/1943 as new E Company. The east side of the Avon at Christchurch remained with 8th Hants until 1/10/1942 when they became A Company (Avon Mouth) of new 28th Hants Battalion. Bishopp has annotated the first 25 issues with 6th, 7th, 8th & 9th Hants but will have minimal New Forest interest. After that they all have battalion details in lists.

Home Guard lists PDF format:

Uploaded on behalf of Mr J. Pidgeon

A whole load of other material relating to the New Forest Home Guard has been made available by the Crofton family. You can explore it all here: Home Guard: Crofton Collection

Home Guard: Photos

St Barbe Museum & Art Gallery Lymington hold a wide range of local interest material.  They have kindly allowed us to scan and upload these photos of the Home Guard units in the Forest.

Can you help us put names to faces at all?

Want more about the Home Guard?
An astonishing collection of documents relating to the Home Guard have come to light from the Crofton family.   The collection of military orders, letters, defence plans and hand drawn maps were lovingly kept in a huge elegant scrap book by Major Crofton’s father, Lt Col Sir Morgan George Crofton Bt DSO. The collection also includes a number of ledgers.
See the Crofton collection here: Home Guard: Crofton Collection

Horses crossing a river

The New Forest area has seen military activity before the outbreak of WWI.

A number of the rifle ranges surveyed as part of the WWII project can be dated back to the Boer Wars, First Boer War – 1880 to 1881 and Second Boer War – 1899 to 1902.  Some were also used during WWI and later, by the Home Guard, during WWII.

2nd Cavalry Brigade – Fordingbridge – c1905
This photo shows horses swimming across a river and is thought to be the 2nd Cavalry Brigade in Fordingbridge crossing the River Avon c1905. Image Courtesy of Lymington.org

Can you confirm these details? Or add more info, write a comment below.

Indian Letters home and WWI censorship

During WWI troops letters home would first go past the eyes of the censors to make sure no secret information was divulged. But other topics in these letters also found themselves being removed including details of the poor conditions, low moral etc.

Some of the letters from the Commonwealth troops added some additional challenges to the censors. Indian troops wrote in Hindi, Urdu or Punjabi and once the troops discovered their letters were being read by the censor they even wrote in code, “Black Pepper” and “White Pepper” referring to the Indian and British troops.

Held by the British Library are rafts of documents from this time including a collection of digitized copies, available to view online of the  “Reports of the Censor of Indian Mails in France”, these covering from 1814 to 1918 and include the censored sections of Indian letters home, to and from England and to other troops serving in the trenches.

New Forest Remembers WWI project volunteers worked their way through thousands of pages of these monthly reports for any references to the New Forest and the surrounding area.

Here is one of the first items found:

Reports of the Censor of Indian Mails in France: Vol 1
IOR/L/MIL/5/825/1
Dec 1914-Apr 1915
291 images available

Page: f.2v, f.3r
“From _ a non-commissioned officer of the 47th Sikhs to _ Sirdar Bahadur & E.A.C. at Amritsar. (Original in Urdu). —–“If it be the will of God I shall some day tell you the whole story. In the mean time I write thus much. On 28th October in the evening, while in the act of charging, I was wounded by the enemy’s machine gun. My company suffered heavy loss & inflicted the same upon the enemy, many of whom were taken prisoner & many killed. Before this too we had had heavy fighting & our troops had proved fidelity to Government, so that our renown was very great.  Well, when I was wounded I came to England & many men of the Indian troops have come to England. Now I am all right again.  My wound healed very quickly. The fighting is still going on just the same.  I hope we shall soon be victorious. _____  So you are all well & happy. But our brothers who are in the trenches have endured sufferings beyond the power of words to describe.  When God grants me to see you again, I will tell you the whole story. I think you will not believe what I tell you ____ of the fighting of our ships & of our fights with the bayonet. I have seen such sights that my wits are still amazed. You generally read the newspapers, but I put very little faith in what is told in the papers. ____ The hospital in which I am was formerly a big hotel.” (Continues of page f.3r)
“The arrangements are excellent, & I am absolutely comfortable in every way.
At first I was at Brockenhurst which was near Mr Lieut. — Governor Dane’s house.  He used to come to see us, & the King & Queen came.  Lord Curzon came too & other officers to high estate come & they look after us very well.”

It is possible that this NCO was staying in either the Balmer Lawns or Forest Park Hotels as these were both commandeered and fitted out as  medical facilities as part of the Lady Hardinge Hospital for Wounded Indian Soldiers. Later for the New Zealand troop’s one was used for officer the other NCOs with all lower ranks being in the main hospital or other locations.

This research, into these reports, has now concluded and you can now download our findings.

We would like to thank the team of dedicated volunteers for their time.

Indian Troops at Ashurst

At the outbreak of War in August 1914 the Indian Government provided a number of units to form Indian Expeditionary Force A.  They were originally destined to serve in Egypt, however, shortly after their arrival they were ordered to France and embarked on the 29th September 1914.  This new deployment became necessary because of the urgent need for troops on the Western Front.  Most of the troops disembarked at Marseilles, which they reached on the 8th October 1914.  The remainder continued to Liverpool where they disembarked on the 16th October.  Two days later they entrained for Southampton and arrived at Ashurst where they pitched camp on the 19th October.

The Indian soldiers who arrived in the Forest in October 1914 where mainly British Army units staffed by British Officers: they comprised the second, fifth and seventh Mountain Batteries Royal Garrison Artillery, and whilst at Ashurst where formed into the third Pack Artillery Brigade.   They were escorted by an Indian Army Cavalry Unit, one of a number known as the Bengal Lancers, and accompanied by the usual camp followers, such as cooks and cobblers.

The reason for the diversion to the New Forest was that the guns with which they were equipped were not considered suitable for the Weston Front.  As such, early in November, their old ten-pounder guns were sent to Woolwich Arsenal and in exchange they were issued two point –inch Qf mountain guns.   While their replacement guns were more powerful they required a team of six, as opposed to four, mules when on the move.

From the 20th October 1914 to the 7th December they trained and familiarised themselves with their new equipment and tactics.   On the 8th December they received their embarkation orders and the following marched too Southampton Docks,  where they boarded ships for France, arriving at Le Havre on the 10th of December, soon after to be involved at the Front.

This contribution was originally uploaded in 2015 by Sally Arnold, we miss you, RIP.

Interpretation panels

Working closely with volunteers and land owners in a number of locations across the New Forest we have been able to produce and have installed eight new interpretation panels.

At Lymington and Needs Ore ALGs we replaced ageing panels produced by Alan Brown some years ago. The new panels build on his work and that of the project to bring the most up to date information to visitors to these sites.

The remaining six are brand new (2014) and in new locations.  We hope visitors to these sites will gain a better understanding of the history and heritage of the sites they are visiting.

Panel locations are at:

 

The New Forest National Park Authority and the project team would like to thank:

Richard Channell
Charles Burnett
Newtown Park Estate

Chris Thomas
Ralph Montagu
Beaulieu Estate

Forestry Commission
National Trust

Graphical design and layout by:
India Rabey, The Way Design

Interpretation panels – Ashley Walk Bombing Range

Inside the brick observation shelter for Fragmentation Target Zone C & D just off Hampton Ridge opposite Amberwood Inclosure, the only accessible freestanding structure remaining from the ranges heyday, you will find one the projects new interpretation panels. We have tried to include and highlight as much as we can regarding the activities that once were conducted here.

The 5000 acres (equivalent to 2833 football pitches) range was ready to use by August 1940. The range was used by aircraft flying from the Aeroplane & Armament Experimental Establishment (A&AEE) at RAF Boscombe Down, nr Salisbury. The range was used for training and testing, all types of munitions fired and or dropped from British aircraft were tested here first, except live incendiaries due to the fire risk.

The range consisted of several different target types including air to ground attack, mock ship targets, aircraft pens, gun emplacement, bomb fragmentation areas and the Ministry of Home Security target (known locally as the Sub Pens) as well as domestic facilities for crew, two small grass airstrips, observation shelters and towers. The range was split with one area for inert ordnance only. The site was also used day and night with one, the illumination target specifically for night raid practice.

This is one of a series of interpretation panels. You can find out about the rest here

You can find a lot more material relating to the range at Ashley Walk by visiting the: Ashley Walk Bombing Range Overview

Interpretation panels – Beaulieu Anti-Tank Island

As you walk along Fire Station road towards the main road through the village (Palace Lane) you may spot the pill box on your right.  On this wall you will find the new panel.

This is one of the projects new panels and we hope visitors to the site will gain a better understanding of the history and heritage of this area.

This is one of a series of interpretation panels. You can find out about the rest here