Showing posts with label Library. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Library. Show all posts

Thursday, 16 May 2024

RADICAL HEROES - INTERNATIONAL BRIGADERS

As noted HERE, just as the Spanish Civil War was "winding down", the Very British Civil War was "heating up". In late 1938, the "International Brigades", then fighting for the Spanish Republic, were disbanded and withdrawn (in a futile attempt by the then President of the Republic, Juan Negrin, to make an end to all foreign intervention in the conflict, and win the support of the British and French Governments). This meant that a lot of British Radicals (in significant part, Communists), experienced in the ways of civil war, then returned to the UK - with consequences well known to all VBCW historians.

In any event, the British Contingent of the International Brigades has been well (indeed, exhaustively) documented - down to the personal histories of each individual fighting with the "British Battalion". THIS PAGE HERE gives wonderful detail of the kind of personalities who were willing to fight, and if necessary, die, for the "Anti-Fascist cause" in the late 1930s:

A posthumous Communist salute from Charles Goodfellow, a Scottish miner
and member of the CPGB from 1921. Killed by shrapnel to the head on Mosquito Ridge,
 Battle of Brunete. He arrived in Spain on 22nd December 1936. MORE HERE

Although consistently describing themselves simply as "Anti Fascists", the International Brigades were in large part organised and financed by the Comintern and, at the Comintern's orders, European Communist Parties. Harry Pollitt, the General Secretary of the Communist Party of Great Britain, did his bit from 16, King Street, the CPGB HQ, and visited the British Battalion in Spain:
British Battalion LtoR - Walter Tapsell with pipe, William Paynter, Fred Copeman, 
Harry Pollitt, George Aitken, George Brown, Bert Williams.

28mm International Brigade from North Star Figures (Crusader). It's not clear whether
these are still available, or have now gone OOP - enquiries to North Star.
Nobody (as yet) seems to make a 28mm "Harry Pollitt" figure.
All you need to complete an "International Brigade" force for the VBCW
 - a generic International Brigade Flag.

Saturday, 30 March 2024

CLASSIC EASTER TV - EDWARD AND MRS SIMPSON

 Some classic TV for the Easter holidays:

A reminder of how British TV "used to do it" - the award winning multi - episode drama produced by ITV back in 1978:

Thanks to the "Sphinx History Channel", all seven (50 minutes) episodes of the 1978 mini series are available on You Tube AT THIS LINK HERE, Screenplay by the incredible Simon Raven, author of the "Alms for Oblivion" series, and with a stellar English cast of character actors, headed up by (and thoroughly enjoying hamming it up as) Edward Fox in the role of Edward VIII. Keep an eye out for Peggy Ashcroft as Queen Mary, Cherie Lunghi as Lady Thelma Furness, Nigel Hawthorne as Walter Monckton, Patricia Hodge as the fragrant Lady Diana Cooper and (released from Doctor Who duties) Patrick Troughton as Clement Attlee !!

Note/Trigger Warning: VBCW readers of a sensitive disposition are warned that this TV series is clearly a work of fiction, rather than a documentary based on real events : unbelievably, Edward VIII abdicates the Throne in order to marry Mrs Simpson, rather than - as of course we all know - taking up arms in the Very British Civil War.

Tuesday, 16 May 2023

JIM'S WARGAMES WORKBENCH AK47 CAMPAIGN

For those who enjoyed the previous post about the classic Ztum-Setum AK47 campaign, or those looking for more inspiration for the Modelling Challenge 2023 - all those VBCW 'Technicals' - a nod in the direction of Jim Jackaman's "Jim's Wargames Workbench" and his long running AK47 campaign (it's been going, off and on, since January 2010) - see HERE.

Always enjoyable, Jim's recent account of the contestants for the "Afro Vision 72 Final" (see HERE) and the resulting "Mbote Pop Band Tragedy" (see HERE) has reached new levels of faux historicity ludicrousness AK47 humour - goodness knows what Terry Wogan would have made of it...

The site of the Mbote Pop Band Tragedy. Photo "liberated" from Jim's blog.

Modelling Challenge 2023 Note: this year's campaign Challenge is now underway, and remember that "if you make it you can play it" at the Autumn Big Game 2023. Having painfully learned via the "Disaster at Dinmore" that the converse is also true - "if you don't make it, it's going to be played against you" - it looks at the moment as if the Presteigne Soviets have taken an early lead...

AK47 Campaign Note: Long Live President Dudu!

Monday, 20 February 2023

THE SIEGE OF DENDERMONDE - CLASSIC WARGAME CAMPAIGN

As a variety of Opposition forces, with the Communists in the van, approach the Government's hastily constructed "Dinmore Hill Line" (the last defensible geographical boundary before Hereford itself), the prospect of the County Capital being besieged (in due time) has occupied some of the 'wilder minds' in Fleet Street.

Just as well then, that Mike Lewis of the "Little Wars 1913" blog is planning a recreation of that classic wargame, as published in "Battle for Wargamers" magazine from December 1976, "The Siege of Dendermonde"....

Mike Lewis' blog contains a link to a PDF, compiled by Henry Hyde, containing a scan of all the original "Seige of Dendermonde" articles - a welcome addition to the Library.

For the PDF and Mike Lewis' plans, see HERE.

And just to prove that a good wargame never quite goes out of fashion, see HERE for the Vintage Wargaming Blog's equivalent entry, also containing Henry Hyde's PDF, dating as far back as June 2010....

Friday, 3 February 2023

TECHNICALS - INSPIRATION (1) - ZTUM SETUM CAMPAIGN

"Technicals" is the theme for the 2023 Modelling Challenge - see HERE. In an online search for modelling inspiration, we came across the old but still fantastic AK47 Ztum-Setum Campaign, organised by the South East Scotland Wargames Club from 2000 to 2003. The campaign itself (set in a fictionalised 1980s Africa) was based on the original edition of Peter Pig's AK47 rules, and modelled in 15mm with Peter Pig figures (and lots of converted vehicles) - while neither in the Hereford VBCW time period nor scale, still lots of inspiration!

Unimog with AA Gun, Ztum-Setum Campaign (Derek Hodge)


The campaign narrative is set out in a full twenty issues of the Ztum-Setum Online News - see HERE - and all the factions are lovingly detailed, with full illustration, HERE

Toyota Pickup with Recoiless Rifle, Ztum-Setum Campaign (Derek Hodge)

Prospective Technical modellers that are short of time may wish to head straight to the Models Section, and the brave or particularly imaginative straight to the Converting Toys for Ak47 section.

CMP with Machine Gun, Ztum-Setum Campaign (Derek Hodge)

Recommended reading!

Monday, 30 January 2023

PONY WARS / PEONY WARS (3) - YOUTUBE

     Being an occasional series on converting the classic convention game, "Pony Wars", to a VBCW variant...

It's a while since we looked at "Peony Wars", the proposed Hereford VBCW variant of the classic "Pony Wars" system as republished by Pete Berry of Baccus Miniatures, and it might be while yet until we've even got a semblance of the number of figures needed to play...

Still, now that Miss Smythe of the Ludlow VBCW Research Centre has discovered "this YouTube thingy" and gone all multi-media, here are a couple of entertaining YouTube videos of Pony Wars games "in action", run by a friendly bunch of Maryland colonials d'un certain age ("Bill's History & Wargame World"): LINK HERE for a first game and LINK HERE AGAIN for the second game. Inspiration for Terrain Tsars and anyone wanting a good view of this classic 15mm convention game....

2 sections  - or 20 figures - of Presteigne Communist Cavalry, who take the place
of "Red Indians" as Pony Wars is converted to Peony Wars. Perry ACW Cavalry
converted with PSC & Warlord plastic WW2 Soviet heads.

Only 280 more Communist Cavalry to go!


PS. It's well worth rummaging around Bill's History & Wargame World, e.g there's a very lovely Rorke's Drift game in 54mm toy soldier style in a number of parts, starting HERE

PPS. Pete Berry's YouTube Introduction to the re-published Pony Wars rules is ALSO HERE

Wednesday, 25 January 2023

ESPECIALLY FOR ROO.........PERRY BROTHERS WARGAMES ROOM - LITTLE WARS TV

We interrupt our flow of really important posts relating to the Spring Big Game 2023 in order to gladden the heart of Campaign Co-Ordinator/Terrain Tsar (and hopeless Perry Brothers fanboy), Umpire Roo. And our wider global audience too, of course....

Anyway, here's the EPIC GAME ROOM Link : a virtual tour of the Perry Brothers own wargames room! Lots of beautifully painted 28mm figures and terrain, plus Americans confused by Ye Olde English Pubs! Enjoy!

PS. Long term followers of the Hereford1938 VBCW Blog will know that we enjoy occasionally hunting down "free but quality" wargame resources on the web (usually old wargame magazine collections) - all gathered together under the "Library" label to the right. Being stuck in 1938, all the resources so far have been on paper - but now there is this YouTube thingy. The Perry Brothers Wargames Room link is part of the Little Wars TV Channel, which hosts a huge variety of free programmes about all sorts of wargames and wargame topics, and is well worth a browse (and you can always join the 65,000 other wargamers who subscribe). So we're filing this under "Library" and are on the hunt for other useful YouTube Channels to recommend (please leave a comment if you already have a favourite). Miss Smythe, the long serving Librarian of the Ludlow VBCW Research Archive, has now been promoted to "Curator" and gone all multi-media....

Miss Smythe - who appeared in the famous "Hotel Paradise" during the late 1930s
under the stage name "Ruth Reid", before joining the Ludlow VBCW
 Research Archive post war, has now gone all multi-media.
Carreras Cigarette Card, photo Murray Korman.

Tuesday, 13 December 2022

WARGAMES DEVELOPMENTS - NUGGET - CHRISTMAS READING

Bob Cordery, he of the "Portable Wargame" rules and Wargaming Miscellany blog, is also one of the long term organisers of the "Conference of Wargamers" (aka "COW"), an interesting (and perhaps, some might say, occasionally eccentric) organisation originally set up by Paddy Griffiths back in 1980. Busy chap, Bob Cordery.

Anyway, the Conference of Wargamers have recently updated their Handbook, and if you're looking for some Christmas reading, all 64 pages of its wargaming goodness can now be downloaded for free at this LINK HERE:

Very interesting discussions of all types of games, from "Tactical Exercises without Troops" (TEWTs), Committee Games, Megagames, to "Matrix Games" - all the things that COW has learned (and played) over the years. Some of them might be applicable to Hereford 1938 (particularly Matrix Games - see also HERE).

And that's not all. COW publishes a journal known as "The Nugget", and has kindly made available (as a free download to non-members) Nuggets Nos. 193 - 336 - see HERE. Obviously and rightly, you have to join the Conference of Wargamers to read the latest Nuggets - but the vast amount of material which has already been made available, free, gratis and for nothing, is a feast of wargaming reading. Some (very random) short selections:

"Nick the Tsar is a splendid little nugget of a game, based on a White attempt to rescue the Imperial family from the dastardly Reds at Ekaterinburg, with the emphasis firmly on fun rather than learning any great insights into the Russian Civil War. Indeed, any game which ends with the injunction to the players from the Umpire : "Now go next door and laugh at the other Russian Civil War game for not having any goat rules" is surely doing something right (though I'm not quite sure what). One of the games attractions is the visual appeal of the 54mm figures and buildings to match. Another is that basic and simple game tools and mechanisms have been subsumed into the look and feel of the period...for example, movement is measured by 'sickle' (from one end of the handle to the other for 'walking', from the end of the handle to the tip of the blade for "running"). If your personal figure is shot, rather than boring old saving dice, you go to a 'revolver chamber' made of six 35mm film containers sprayed brass: in best Russian roulette tradition five have slips saying "Phew, that was close..." and only one has "Aaagh, they got me". No prizes for guessing which one I drew...." (David Bradbury, Nugget 216)

"The Warsaw Pact Political Consultative Committee 1981. A simple but accurate drinking game of the last days of the Brezhnev era. It will be an advantage not to have any skills in RPGs for this game, but those who have them are equally as welcome. No rules, but full briefing and pre-prepared speeches given for all comrades during the opening drinks. Fancy dress optional. (Russell King, Nugget 297)

"A Battle of Monsters. A lawn game loosely based on the Second Battle of Villers Brettoneaux (24th April 1918). Starting with a gas attack and going rapidly downhill from there, this game is absolutely not simply a lame excuse for the fielding of large numbers of 1/32 tanks..." (Tim Gow and Nick Husband, Nugget 319)

In amongst all the fun (usually with matchstick firing vintage diecast artillery pieces) there are lots of serious articles and thoughts on various types of wargaming systems. Very much recommended - and if these editions of "The Nugget" aren't quite your thing, well, you certainly got as much in value as you paid !

Wednesday, 26 October 2022

WARGAMES CAMPAIGNS - ON A DIME

The late Tony Bath's book on wargames campaigning, "Setting Up a Wargames Campaign", remains the seminal text for anyone interested in the origins of 'wargames campaigning', or the best known and longest running campaign in wargames history ("Hyboria"), or setting up "Imagi-Nations" from scratch (and what is the Ecclesiarchy of Ludlow, or the Social Democratic Republic of Bromyard, or the like, if not a kind of Imagi-Nation?), or just practical campaign mechanics:


For those (and this should really only be temporary state of affairs) missing a copy from their wargames library, this encyclopaedic set of links, courtesy of the "Tiny Tin Men" Blog HERE, will provide more than a flavour of Tony Bath's approach, plus lots of Hyborian related material. A great collection! [note 1] As much of the material comes from the old "Battle" magazine, it's also an excuse for us to engage in a little tongue-in-cheek "late 1970s nostalgia":

Wargaming (and fashion) in January 1978. Bleached denim jackets, long hair, V necks
and huge shirt collars. We mean HUGE. Still, magazine cover price - 35p.

A month later. Grammar school speccy loses out to an
extra from "Starsky and Hutch". Said speccy is probably
someone very serious in the City by now - and probably
still painting knights in his spare time. 1970s inflation
appears to have been running just below 15%, for the
cover price has increased by 5 pence in one month.

Another cover, another tape-measure shot. Possibly the height of
wargames sophistication in March 1978 - who knows? Whether he should
escape prosecution for that jumper, though....and as ever, the size of
 the shirt collar alone must count as at least 'medium range'.
 
Anyway, abandoning 1970s nostalgia and hideous fashion crimes, it appears that the modern American army have an acronym (of course they do) for the four essential elements of successful campaigns, known as the "DIME" principle, i.e. 

Diplomatic
Intelligence
Military
Economics

Here in the Hereford VBCW, we manage the Military side with glee. The Diplomatic and Intelligence sides, notwithstanding occasional encouragements to the regular players (hostage swaps, anyone?), are usually dealt with only by the Umpires (see HERE for Ludlow's "foreign affairs expert", the Rev. Duff-Postin, aka "The Talleyrand of the Three Counties", and "Big X", head of the much-feared Ecclesiastical Intelligence Service, or EIS), while "Economics" has generally been reduced to a footnote as "involving too much book-keeping". Mind you, that hasn't stopped the Great British Pound crashing, and the occasional tabletop use of poker chips as currency [note 2]...

Notes

[1]. Rudi Guedens also has some interesting material on Tony Bath and the Hyborian campaign. See HERE

[2]. Just as well, really. Without at least some attempt at economics, the relevant campaign acronym would (perhaps appropriately) be reduced to "DIM".

[3]. The "Library" label on this blog (see below or in the column to the right) has lots of links to other free wargames reading materials....

Wednesday, 17 November 2021

WAR IN 15MM

No, we haven't gone soft. The Hereford VBCW has always been gamed in 28mm, and that's the way it's planned to remain. However, if you've already devoured all the back issues of Donald Featherstone's historic "Wargames Newsletter" as recommended HERE, extracted every ounce of goodness from the classic back issues of "Airfix Magazine" as recommended HERE and polished off the very last pages of the "Wargamers Bloggers Quarterly" as discovered HERE, then it might be time to dabble in some scale heresy and consult Peter Pig's "15 MILL" web publication : see HERE.

Freely downloadable PDFs, published approximately quarterly - now up to Edition 11 (November 2021) - full of modelling information and inspiration, particularly terrain building, pretty army and action pictures, "gamettes" and general wargames humour and enthusiasm. Apart from the regrettably sad error of the diminutive scale, what's not to like?

Sunday, 7 November 2021

VBCW CRICKET (SCORING)

Ever since the Communist forces of Comrade Colonel Professor Winters broke through the Siege Lines of Kington (Autumn Big Game 2017 - see HERE), the forces of His Majesty's Government have been in fighting retreat across the North West of the County of Herefordshire.

Checking the Communist advance at the Battle of Wigmore (Spring Big Game 2018 - see HERE) only after concluding a "dubious alliance" with the Local Defence Forces of Sir Barrington and Lady Deirdre Patchpole, HMG then retired in the face of a flank attack from the "Coalition Forces" of Sir Gilbert Hill and sundry Anglican factions at the Battle of Winforton Pontoons (Autumn Big Game 2018 - see HERE) only to suffer disaster (and the complete destruction of their Regional HQ) at the Second Battle of Shobdon (Spring Big Game 2019 - see HERE). Checking the Communist assault again at the Battle of Mortimer's Cross (Autumn Big Game 2019 - see HERE), but only at the cost of an "even more dubious alliance" with Reichsmarshall Goering and his newly landed Fallschirmjager, the Government forces of Major Everard were then again outflanked by advancing Communist and Anglican battlegroups - and with Bromyard declaring independence and proclaiming itself a Democratic Socialist Republic (or Social Democratic Republic, dependent upon exactly who you talk to in Bromyard and whatever the precise difference), found themselves forced back into an "extended defence" of Leominster, with mixed results (Autumn Big Game 2021 - see HERE). 

Notwithstanding notable heroism by individual Government commanders along the way (and, indeed the loss of quite a few of them, whether by capture, internal firing squad, or heavy shellfire), Government forces have now been forced back into a "close defence" of Leominster, with much desperate fighting anticipated in the near future (Spring Big Game 2022 - to come!) 

Vaguely interesting as this campaign chronology might be (well....), what does this all have to do with cricket, or indeed cricket scoring?

A cricket score provides the perfect means for an outnumbered defending commander (mostly HMG at the moment, until their counter-attack plan comes along) to measure tactical success in the field, notwithstanding (probably, although by no means always) having to conduct a strategic retreat at the end of the day's fighting. Thus, to give an illustration for present use by HMG:

(a). for every opposition soldier "killed" (i.e. removed from play), score "1 run";

(b). for every member of the opposition's HQ Section (excluding runners) "killed", score "a 4";

(c). for every opposition Tank, Big Gun, Mortar/MMG or AT rifle/AT squad (or other non infantry section) "destroyed", score "a 6".

The aim would obviously be, as in cricket, to score as many "runs" as possible.

As to "fall of wickets", this could be, dependent upon the scenario, either: (1). number of moves expired, or (2). number of "table feet" given up to the attacking Opposition forces by the end of the game. Any other measure (short of the magic figure of "10") could be used.

Cricket scoring in this way would also allow defending Government commanders - sometimes spread out over three different tables -  to compare their results at the end of a day's battle (very useful for Lord de Braose, Governor of Hereford, who is said to keep "a league table" of his most successful field commanders). While wholly in the spirit of the VBCW, "cricket scoring" would also allow Government commanders to provide a suitable running commentary to their individual games (Howzat!...Oh, I say!....He's gone!)

For the purposes of this post, however, possibly the best thing about the "VBCW Cricket Scoring" proposal is the opportunity it provides to post some "pretty pictures of 28mm VBCW cricketers", as found on the Net:

"The Team" from Sloppy Jalopy - presently £15

Command HQ - Sloppy Jalopy figures with Wargames
Foundry flagbearer (slight conversion)

Heavy Machine Gun - WW1 Renegade (?) with lots
of modelling skill and greenstuff


"The WF Flagbearers" full team, including a nice headswap conversion for the Indian cricketer

A full cricket pitch, with game in progress. These and succeeding images from Summer Partisan 2014

Headswaps and lovely painting for the Indian Cricket Team

A converted Perry/Renendra ACW Farmstead serves as a Clubhouse

Another view of the Indian Cricketers.

Notes: The "Partizan 2014" cricket ground and figures are all by Pete Barfield ("Panzerkaput"). A full mag article on how it was all put together ("Cricket in the VBCW - Partizan in the Park") can be found in Vol 3/p.26 of the excellent (but sadly discontinued) "Wargame Bloggers Quarterly", still stored and freely downloadable at the Canister and Grape blog - see HERE. Other photos from unidentified sources collected over time - with many thanks to the original creators/photographers.

Tuesday, 4 May 2021

WARGAMERS NEWSLETTER

With "lockdown" slowly easing but still some weeks left to go, John Haines has performed a public service for wargamers (of the older, nostalgic or simply curious variety) by scanning and hosting an almost complete set of "Wargamer's Newsletters", as edited and published by the late Don Featherstone from August 1964 to January 1980. Short of wargames-related reading materials? Then check out THIS LINK


Thursday, 16 April 2020

AIRFIX MAGAZINE GOODNESS

If you're short of something to read in present circumstances, try HERE - an internet archive of classic Airfix Magazines, mostly from the late 1960s through the 1970s [note1]. Articles by Featherstone, Wise, Gush, converting methods (for the limited variety of Airfix 1/72 vehicles and figures then available, but just as applicable for modelling challenges), plus lots of historical information on WW2 and earlier planes, etc. If nothing else, enjoy the prices (in shillings) in the adverts!

[Note1] This treasure trove was discovered by "Mark, Man of TIN" but posted on the Duchy of Tragardland blog. The Tragardland blog is a splendid "18th Century Imagi-Nation" site, while "Mark, Man of TIN"'s own blog has lots of general wargaming nostalgia and Peter Laing 15mm armies. More importantly for the VBCW and our "cheep Chinese plastic" challenges, his alternative "Pound Store Plastic Warriors" blog is without parallel for devotees of wargaming "cheepness"!