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  1. ChrisM

    Military Cross & Military Medal holders of Birmingham

    Great to see all this information in one place, Viv! Are any of their descendants members of this Forum........? (So many of their surnames, including a couple of the unusual ones, are familiar). Chris
  2. ChrisM

    Perry Barr Home Guard: Warwickshire Regiment.

    Lt.-Col. A. C. Baker A Great War veteran. He served in the RAF. (IF he were aircrew, and it is an "if" of course, it's surprising he didn't display his wings. Most HG officers with a RFC/RAF background did). Chris
  3. ChrisM

    Memory holes in personal history.

    I'm sure you are right, MWS. Memory is a treacherous thing and it's sensible always to be conscious of that. Chris.
  4. ChrisM

    Memory holes in personal history.

    That's an interesting question, especially for a history forum. I think we all have holes in our memory, wholly blanked out and probably for no good reason. Also of other things, often quite trivial, which again. for no good reason, HAVE survived. I walked to school, every day, for...
  5. ChrisM

    Perry Barr Home Guard: Warwickshire Regiment.

    The detailed story of this Battalion - one of two which consisted entirely of City Transport employees, the 31st and 32nd Warwickshire (Birmingham) Battalions - is online. (I don't like regularly putting links to my own website on the Forum but, for the convenience of anyone interested, this is...
  6. ChrisM

    Home Guard

    I have been asked, off-line, whether there is a national memorial to the 1206 Home Guards who died whilst performing their duties, like several who have been mentioned here recently. I am not sure whether they are specifically mentioned in the Home Front memorial at the National Memorial...
  7. ChrisM

    Home Guard Motor Patrol Boat Ladywood

    And a rake of LMS coaches in the background. That should identify the location. Chris
  8. ChrisM

    Home Guard Motor Patrol Boat Ladywood

    Thanks for that, Viv. What would be nice would be to read some further reports on how effective this sort of thing was. And whether it was maintained throughout the war. There are one or two other places where this happened – in particular the Thames River Patrol – and I have seen recently...
  9. ChrisM

    Home Guard

    There were medals for bravery and other distinguished conduct, Pete. Several examples of the George Cross/George Medal, many of those to Brummies; and a number of others, including awards of the B.E.M., King's Commendation, M.B.E. and O.B.E.
  10. ChrisM

    Home Guard

    Thank you, Viv, that is a new one for me. I think it also escaped the gaze of Michael Minton in whose excellent book "Heroes of the Birmingham Air Raids" there doesn't seem any mention. These men were members of 23rd Warwickshire (Birmingham) Battalion whose area of responsibility included...
  11. ChrisM

    Home Guard

    Thank you for your kind words, Pete. For the select band of members who follow the subject of the Home Guard, it might be useful to have a guide as to what I have available for Birmingham, all of which is accessible online (and some of which is there through the generosity of members of this...
  12. ChrisM

    Home Guard

    Pete, Even though there was almost no acknowledgement of the fact, virtually all the information in that article was based on original work that I had done and published in my HG website, including the images which had been entrusted to me by correspondents. So let's cut out the middle man...
  13. ChrisM

    Home Guard

    I'm sorry, I seem to have missed these two posts at the time, Paul. I should like to put a note commemorating Howard Fisher and his life and sacrifice in the Birmingham section of the staffshomeguard website, if that's OK with you. Before I do so, do you have readily available any further...
  14. ChrisM

    Alexandra Theatre - Simple Simon Pantomime 1947

    I went to a number of pantomimes and Christmas events at around that time, and earlier. I was 11. Normally at the Theatre Royal or the Alexandra, sometimes the Rep. But if I went to this one, I don’t remember anything about it. Possibly because it didn’t seem to have any famous names in it...
  15. ChrisM

    The Home Guard Children’s Christmas Party, 1943 – Streetly

    I have seen some pictures of a Home Guard man coming out of our Parish Room in Streetly, in Foley Road. To be honest, I'm not completely sure whether this was the day of the party. Or another day when the Home Guard were there. But I think it could have been the party because other pictures...
  16. ChrisM

    The Home Guard Children’s Christmas Party, 1943 – Streetly

    It's Saturday evening and I'm sitting at our dining room table. I am seven. I've got a blank sheet of paper in front of me and a pen in my hand. Mum has just told me, as she always does, to write neatly, watch my spelling, don't make any blots, and especially, DON'T KNOCK THE INK BOTTLE OVER...
  17. ChrisM

    Home Guard - Crashed Heinkel Bomber Hales Lane Smethwick

    Thanks, Clowe. The reason that I ask about initials is that there are no less than about a dozen "G. Davieses" listed in the 1941 HG Officer's List for Western Command of the Home Guard (covering most of the Western counties of the U.K.) and none sounds an obvious contender. The list...
  18. ChrisM

    Home Guard - Crashed Heinkel Bomber Hales Lane Smethwick

    Any chance of your sharing them with Forum members, please, Clowe? Do you know if Gilbert Davies had any other initials? I have quite a bit of information online about the 12th Worcestershire (Warley) Battalion which includes a number of images and the story of the Danilo Platoon's involvement...
  19. ChrisM

    Water : Birmingham's water supply

    This practice continued well into the 20th century - I remember a house in Streetly built in ca 1915 with one just outside the scullery door. And surely a time to be re-invented, in these ecologically aware and climate warming times! Far tidier than water butts for garden watering and, because...
  20. ChrisM

    WW1 Decoration Record Card Interpretation

    Yes, sorry everyone, the C. Hodgetts we have been discussing is definitely the wrong one. It emerges that my "C" is Cyril, b., I think, around 1894, again in the Black Country but now Cradley. It now seems possible that he didn't even serve in the Great War - he was a chain maker and this may...
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