Wednesday, 31 March 2021

WARGAMES ATLANTIC FRENCH RESISTANCE - and 28mm PEAKY BLINDERS

Back in this post, we looked at the French Resistance figures recently - and practically simultaneously - produced by Warlord Games (in metal) and Wargames Atlantic (in multi-part plastic). Jolly useful for "civilian resistance" figures of various types in the VBCW. Here is a shot of an assembled and partially undercoated group of Wargames Atlantic figures:

The good news is that Warlord Games multi part plastic figures are compatible with the Wargames Atlantic multi part plastic figures, so there is lots of scope for conversion. Given that these represent the 1944 French Resistance, the Wargames Atlantic weapons options are full of German SMGs, with only a few rifles, which is not quite the done thing for Herefordshire 1938. However, the three figures in the front row of the photo above are (literally) "armed" from the Warlord Games Blitzkrieg Germans set (the grey components), which provides lots of rifles and different "carrying options".

The other triumph of the Wargames Atlantic set, as noted in the previous post, is the sheer number of heads available. Sixteen wear a sidecap, very useful for BUF/BUF Auxiliary figures. There are eight bowler hats, eight fedora hats, sixteen flat caps, and the remainder of the 112 heads wear berets (in differing styles) or are bare headed. Of the flat caps, half are pure "Peaky Blinder" style, while the remainder are less pronounced in shape and peak. Definitely "gold dust" for the VBCW figure converter:

The Peaky Blinders model the Wargames Atlantic flat caps

although the convertor may want to hunt out some suitable
'long coated' figures before adding the Wargames Atlantic
'flat caps' - and not forgetting Arthur's Lewis LMG...
Birmingham has a direct rail link to Hereford, and is only a short train journey away (90 minutes). It can now be only a matter of time before the Shelbys appear in Hereford's VBCW....

SAINSBURYS GOES VBCW

Well, not quite. But for those living in the UK, Sainsburys have produced, as part of their "Easter retail offering", this rather interesting "Grass Table Runner": 

Grass Table Runner (with Bunny Ears Easter motif)

For those of a 1938 mindset, quite why anyone would wish to decorate their dining table with an artificial grass "table runner" is unimaginable. An aspidistra in the corner of the dining room, perhaps, but really.....
Unrolled "table runner" on a standard GW battlemat
Nevertheless, the artificial grass certainly deserves to be rolled out on the wargames table. 4ft long and 1ft wide, the "table runner" is plastic backed and can be converted easily (with nothing more than strong scissors) into four acceptable "arable fields", or such like: 
A BUF Section ignore the well rolled lawn of a GW Battlemat
and choose to plough through an arable field.
Just £4.99 on Sainsbury's shelves at the moment, probably to be discounted after the Easter holiday. Worth having a hunt for on the next visit to the supermarket....

Monday, 29 March 2021

EUREKA MINIATURES HOME GUARD

Following this post on the latest French Resistance figures usable for VBCW, hard on their heels comes the new Eureka Miniatures "Home Guard/Ex Diggers" (100 Club) range, which again has some very useful VBCW possibilities. Some close up photos, straight out of the packet:

WWT080 - Home Guard with Rifles


WWT081 Home Guard Lewis LMG and Loader


WWT085 Home Guard Officer

WWT082 - Vickers MMG and Crew

WWT083 - Home Guard with Beer Bottle Bombs

Brilliant stuff, particularly the beer bottle bombers! For the purposes of the "Went the Day Well" VBCW rules, you'd have to find an additional figure for the rifle armed infantry, plus an additional figure for the Vickers MMG (heavy weapons having a crew of 3), but otherwise you have a ready made infantry section of ten, including the LMG and officer (best suited to Local Defence Volunteers in the VBCW?) with heavy weapon support and a serious(?) anti-tank capability. The extra figures shouldn't be a burden, as the Eureka figures are a standard sized 28mm and should fit in with most other VBCW ranges.

Now, the eagle-eyed will have noticed that one code has been missed out above, namely "WWT084". Eureka list this code as "Home Guard in Hessian Sack Ghillie Suits", but Hereford VBCW gamers will instantly recognise them as particularly well-trained "Mommets":

WWT084 - Ghillie Suits or Herefordshire Mommets?


The Twiggy Mommet movement is Herefordshire's unique contribution to the VBCW, invented by JP right at the beginning of the VBCW campaign. A collection of independent rural protestors, usually armed with forks, scythes and the occasional musket or rifle, they are wont to intervene in events when they consider that the "people's rights" are being trampled upon, or some authority has committed some particularly egregious injustice. That said, they do move in mysterious ways, disguising their identities with sack hoods and marking their "territory" with - or giving warnings by means of - scarecrows or (of late) rabbit icons.

The origins of the Twiggy Mommet movement can be found on JP's original blog HERE

Amongst other things, the Mommets have used their rural skills to become particularly adept at sapping and mining (it may be that some of the Twiggy Mommet movement are "free miners" from the Forest of Dean) - these "Mommet Molemen" and their tunnels played a significant (if unseen) part in the County Golf Cup (Spring 2017 Big Game). It may now be that they are willing to deploy specially equipped Mommets as snipers......don't get close to a rabbit icon!

[Note] Eureka Miniatures Home Guard/Ex Digger range don't yet appear on either the parent Eureka Miniatures site, nor the Eureka Miniatures UK site. However, a quick email to the very helpful Nick Simmerson at the Eureka Miniatures UK website will produce results....please mention that Hereford1938 VBCW sent you along!

Thursday, 25 March 2021

VBCW Section Attack

Following this recent post ("VBCW Villages"), Tradgardmastre published a post on his own blog with photographed extracts from a similarly beautifully illustrated 1930s/1940s book titled "Britain's Modern Army". Here is the illustration of a section attack after it was run through Photoshop:

It may sometimes be noted that while this illustrates a textbook section attack, it has 'the enemy' doing nothing but sitting there waiting -  not a usual occurrence on a VBCW tabletop.....More illustrations on Tragardmaster's own blog HERE.

Monday, 22 March 2021

HANDLEY PAGE HEREFORD

While the Hereford1938 campaign has been rediscovering the Vickers Venom and even 'disinterring' the Elstree Mongrel day bomber from the VBCW vault, the RAF aircraft most closely associated with the County has been awaiting its own blogpost - the Handley-Page HP53 Hereford "heavy bomber":

Handley Page HP53 Hereford

The Hereford was a variant of the better known Handley Page HP52 Hampden, a twin engine bomber developed by the RAF and Air Ministry from 1936 on, alongside the Armstrong Whitworth Whitley and the Vickers Wellington. Full details HERE. While the Hampden was powered by Bristol Pegasus engines, the Hereford had in-line Napier Dagger engines. A first prototype Hereford flew in June 1937. A production order was placed with Short Brothers and Harland in Belfast, for 100 aircraft, and the first production aircraft flew on 17th May 1939. However, the Napier Dagger engines were its downfall:

"They tended to overheat when used to take off from the grass runways common in the RAF at the time, then cool down too much in the air. Engine failure was too common, and even when the engine worked it was both noisy and high pitched! When the engines worked, performance figures were similar to those for the Hampden, but the engine problems meant that the Hereford never became operational. A small number were used by training units in 1940, but many were converted back to the Hampden standard by swapping the Dagger engines for the more reliable Bristol Pegasus radial engines." [note 1]

None of this, of course was known to modellers at the time. Here is the Hereford on the cover of  the January 1939 edition of "Model Airplane News", a US publication - four months before it went into actual production - and in wholly realistic VBCW colour scheme:


The Hereford in that famous RAF camouflage scheme  - "all over orange"

Although no major kit manufacturer has produced a model of the Handley Page Hereford, Airfix produced a Hampden 1/72 kit in 1968, with relatively regular re-issues over the years until 2010:

Airfix Handley Page Hampden

The February 1969 edition of Airfix Magazine carried an article by Alan W. Hall detailing how an Airfix Hampden could be converted to a Hereford, with a painting and squadron guide:








The conversion was principally centred on re-modelling the shape of the engine nacelles, from the round radials of the Hampden:

Bristol Perseus engines being checked on a Hampden HP52

to the narrower and squarer nacelles of the Hereford:

On the ground - the best place for the Napier Dagger engines of the HP53

which conversion was achieved, back in 1968, by the careful carving of balsa wood, then coating the nacelle shape(s) with "a thick solution of talcum powder and clear dope....left to dry....and then rubbed down with fine sandpaper until smooth"!!

Unfortunately, even the last (2010) production run of the Airfix Hampden now seems rather rare, and prices are therefore ridiculously high. If you're not into talcum powder and dope conversions, the alternative is an equally highly priced kit of a 1/72 Hereford occasionally available from the specialist producer,Valom:


It may therefore be some time before the Handley Page HP53 is spotted in the skies above VBCW Hereford. That may not produce too much difficulty (although some regret) as the Hereford's better known brother, the HP52 Hampden, ultimately proved to be highly vulnerable to German fighters. It was removed from daylight operations as early as December 1939. In short, it seems that the Hampden, likely many 'early war' British bomber designs (cf. the Battle, blogposts passim), was just a bit rubbish and was ultimately to be replaced (along with the Whitley and Wellington, from 1942 on) by the Lancaster. Absent a 1/72 Hereford, the VBCW just seems to be five years ahead of the alternative timeline.

[note 1]: Rickard, J (22 March 2007), Handley Page H.P. 53 Hereford, http://www.historyofwar.org/articles/weapons_hereford.html

Friday, 12 March 2021

Duke and Duchess of Sussex

 When alternative timelines collide:

via Grant Fettis, via Never Mind the Billhooks

Monday, 8 March 2021

SPRING (WELL, EARLY SUMMER) BIG GAME 2021 - DIARY DATE

The virus/lockdown basically wiped out 2020 for the Hereford campaign - the Spring Big Game 2020 ("Assault on Newquay") had to be cancelled a week or two before it was due to take place because of the first lockdown, and then our plans to send a "Hereford Away Team" to Tym/Tom's "Evesham Remembered" Event for the Autumn Big Game 2020 also had to be cancelled because of the second lockdown. And then a mooted (if late) Spring Big Game 2021 (to be held on 1st May) had to be put back in storage when HMG announced its "caution first" plans for easing lockdown on 22nd February....

Nevertheless, as this is the VBCW, Herefordshire is not downhearted! As presently planned, all restrictions will have disappeared with effect from 21st June 2021, and so we've planned a Spring (well, Early Summer) Big Game 2021 to take place at the Burley Gate Village Hall on:

SATURDAY 3rd JULY 2021 (10am - 5pm) 
For our first game back, your kind-hearted campaign umpires considered that people would simply want to bring along their VBCW Force (as organised according to WTDW rules), whack it down on the table, and start blowing things up. Hope you're in agreement! So the scenario will be an "all play all" game with no regard for the usual allegiances (a little like our County Golf Challenge Game, for those who took part in that, or see HERE) and no 'campaign complications' etc. etc. - well, other than a downed Handley Page bomber and a secret cargo that could change the course of the entire war......

More in due course..... 

Wednesday, 3 March 2021

VBCW Villages

As the BUF "Mailed Fist" Battlegroup advances along the Tewkesbury - Ledbury road (blogposts passim), these are the kind of village defences that they fear:

Mined roads and trees are a sure sign of an active (and unsympathetic) Local Defence Force....


...while local Villages can be defended by all sorts of modern inventions....

Tuesday, 2 March 2021

VBCW Civilian Resistance Figures

The French Resistance appears to be the current "flavour of the month" with 28mm figure manufacturers. Warlord Games produced an exhaustive line of Resistance figures just before Christmas, complete with artillery (a 75mm gun), heavy machine gun, mortar, anti tank gun (and AT rifle) - everything that one needs to make an entire "WTDW" Platoon:

The basic squad figures


The support group with its useful Mortar & MMG


All the figures on parade, with the 75mm gun, AT gun and AT rifle "in shot"

Wargames Atlantic have also weighed in with a boxed set of multi-part plastic 'infantry', available as of 1st March:


The boxed set consists of 8 identical sprues, each containing sufficient parts to make 4 figures, with quite a few parts left over (see the sprue above, with 14 'heads' for the 4 available figures). All of them, however, are male figures - accompanying females would have to be metals sourced from Warlord - but on the plus side, they are compatible with Wargames Atlantic's previously released WW1 German and French plastic sets.

A lot of these figures, with minimal conversion and omission of the obvious anachronisms such as Schmeisser sub machine guns, would be suitable for VBCW "Civilian Resistance" figures of various types - whether BUF Auxiliaries, Red Guerillas, LDVs or whatever. Vive le VBCW!

Monday, 1 March 2021

TOP NAZI IN HEREFORDSHIRE

Some may consider Reichmarshall Hermann Goering's unauthorised intervention in Herefordshire's VBCW to have been somewhat, ...ahem...., far-fetched. But history is sometimes stranger than fiction, and while the Reichmarshall presently resides in the comfort of the Castle House Hotel, Hereford, at least one of his colleagues also acquired some real life familiarity with the Marches. This from pps. 117 - 118 of "Herefordshire & Worcestershire Airfields in the Second World War" by Robin J. Brooks [pub. Countryside Books, Newbury (2006)]:

“[in the late evening of Saturday, 10th May 1941] having baled out of his Messerchmitt Bf. Me110D and been captured by a local farmer some way from his intended destination, Dungavel House, the home of the 14th Duke of Hamilton (premier peer of Scotland), Rudolf Hess was transferred to Maryhill Barracks in Glasgow and then onward to the Tower of London. [He] later spent some months under psychiatric care at Mytchett Place near Aldershot in Hampshire, and finally, in June 1942, he was sent to Maindiff Court Hospital, Abergavenny, where he spent the next three years…..”

and:

“….On 6th October 1945, orders were received that Hess was to be tried at Nuremberg. Four days later, accompanied by Major D. Ellis-Jones of the Royal Army Medical Corps, he arrived at Madley airfield (in Herefordshire) prior to being flown to Brussels and then on to Nuremberg. A tight security cordon was thrown around the airfield as Hess was temporarily taken to an office in the control tower while arrangements were made for his flight. The senior air traffic controller at Madley, Flt.Lt. Tony Badman, was in charge of making these arrangements and allocated a Dominie for the first leg of the journey. With all the legal requirements satisfied, the aircraft left Madley at around 11.00 hrs to arrive in Brussels before lunch. Hess complained that it had been a rough flight and that he felt a little ‘queasy’. Upon landing at Nuremberg, Hess was handed over to the relevant authorities.”


Maindiff Court Hospital, Abergavenny

Madley Airfield. An essential plan for the Herefordshire VBCW.

Notes: Maindiff Court remains in use as a psychiatric hospital to this day. Madley Airfield is no longer in existence, albeit part of the site is still used as Madley Communications Centre, a BT earth satellite tracking station. More on Madley Airfield can be found HERE, courtesy of the ever excellent Ewyas Lacy Study Group (who also had the airfield plan above).