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#1
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I think this machoine is being assembled for the Civil Defence. It is in the batch of shots of a Civil Defence solo and sidecar-combo school.
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#2
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This was a CD DR training school. Note the nice line-up of machines!
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#3
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Quote:
Most of those machines have Royal Navy serials on them
__________________
Richard 1943 Bedford QLD lorry - 1941 BSA WM20 m/cycle - 1943 Daimler Scout Car Mk2 Member of MVT, IMPS, MVG of NSW, KVE and AMVCS KVE President & KVE News Editor |
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#4
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Certainly looks at least 3 are RN
Regarding GXU : My understanding is GXU was reserved for vehicles purchased via the Office of Works for the Home Office (Min of Home Security) I have the following of the GXU block as Royal Enfield 350cc for the NFS. GXU 112 - 169 ; 307 - 333 ; 765 - 868 ; NFS vehicles were finished to BS 381 tint 32 Dk Ad grey. In some photos they look very light this is to do with the type of B&W film employed. In the WW2 emergency servies set up the NFS was the major user of DRs, columns of vehicles moving hundreds of miles with numerous DRs in attendance. TED |
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#5
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Jan, War Department Census Numbers were allocated to vehicles that were purchased, requisitioned, gifted to, or whatever and acquired by the Ministry of Supply for the War Office & Air Ministry, and by the Admiralty for the Royal Navy & Royal Marines. Up to 1940 these had to have civilian registrations and the Census Number was just that! From 1940, no tax disc was required, and the requirement to register vehicles (in the Middlesex County Council in practice) was abandoned in favour of reliance on the WD Number.
The Ministry of Supply with the Ministry of War Transport also acquired vehicles of all types for Government users, such as staff cars for official use, Air Ministry staff, Salvage Corps, local authorities, police, fire services, et al. These had civilian registrations either in Government-allocated batches by the Middlesex County Council, or by London County Council, or regional local authorities. In addition there were various ambulance authorities, church and religious groups, Ministry of Food, etc. vehicles that were often military types with civilian or military tyres but carrying civilian registrations. |
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#6
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I count perhaps three with 'RN' on the tank and four with civvy registrations. Given the standard uniforms were they donated m/cs? There are more shots in the series and it seems that an official visit was made to a CD HQ and the training school.
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#7
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Quote:
Interesting photo of a mixed bunch of machines, thanks
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Richard 1943 Bedford QLD lorry - 1941 BSA WM20 m/cycle - 1943 Daimler Scout Car Mk2 Member of MVT, IMPS, MVG of NSW, KVE and AMVCS KVE President & KVE News Editor |
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#8
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Hope these interest
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#9
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If you look closely at the pic Jan provided you will see that there is a number painted on what appears to be a black tag with white paint aside the column. It begins wit 2142xxx, hard to make out.
Back to my original question; has anyone ever seen the WD tags as affixed by VRD on any cmp they have come across???
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3RD Echelon Wksp 1968 M274A5 Mule Baifield USMC 1966 M274A2 Mule BMY USMC 1966 M274A2 Mule BMY USMC 1958 M274 Mule Willys US Army 1970 M38A1 CDN3 70-08715 1 CSR 1943 Converto Airborne Trailer 1983 M1009 CUCV 1957 Triumph TRW 500cc RT-524, PRC-77s, and trucks and stuff and more stuff and and....... OMVA, MVPA, G503, Steel Soldiers |
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#10
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Regarding census numbers you say WD census number ----------allocated for vehicles ...........for the War office, Air Min & Admiralty ?? was this statement a generalisation ?? WD numbers on RAF & RN vehicles ??? TED |
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#11
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Firstly, the Treasury Exchange Requirements Commmittee papers make very good reading as it relates to provision of imported vehicles and spare parts for them for the forces, including in Egypt, and the UK. These were initialy handled by the War Office and Air Ministry but the MofS took over that function during 1940. However the ERC also handled requests for vehicles from other departments and local authorities, including one I remember for Dodge trucks for the London County Council for salvage work. The
The MofS had to compete for essential dollars with other departments etc. on the Committee and the minutes make very interesting reading as it shows how the requests for vehicles came through the system, including certain well-placed individuals who liked to push through their demands through civil servants. "Whom you know not what you know". I was interested to note your clarifications Ted...clearly there is another element to the procurement procedures that I was not aware of. The MofS in theory had overall responsibility for supply for vehicles and parts and machinery and this continued of course post-war (except for the Navy in theory who seem to have attempted to retain their independence). It would seem that orders by other departments had to go through committees so that they could be combined if required, and also the MofS handled disposals on paper to government departments or essential users of former service vehicles and machinery. The MofS also processed all Demands for overseas orders for the UK forces and Commonwealth forces. The payments though were handled through the agreed system via the High Commissions and the Treasury. And I do apologise...'WD numbers' is something I tend to use in conversation with those who would not know what Census Number was... WD series, Air Ministry series and Admiralty series! ![]() One question keeps niggling me, and I would be interested to know the answer. Did the Scottish Office and any vehicles procured for government departments in Scotland through the Government departments carry Edinburgh registrations as against Middlesex CC ones? Also that Scottish hospitals had imported Canadian / US chassis bodied as ambulances registered in Scottish local authorities. Were m/cs therefore delivered north of the border registered accordingly? Last edited by David_Hayward (RIP); 13-06-08 at 13:07. |
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#12
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It does seem that factions in the MofS and ERC had their own opinions: the MofS and probably other purchasing departments had their own agenda such as deciding that they wanted such-and-such equipment from say the USA. However the ERC held the hand-bag with the dollars in it, and there was often a very close scrutiny with some heated arguments about "Is this purchase with Dollars really ncessary?". Then again there were arguments about US supply versus Canadian...Canadians take our Pounds but the Americans can supply under Defence Aid then Lend-Lease. I shall have to dig out my ERC minutes and start a new thread in the future. |
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#13
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Committees, committees, committees! numerous committees are mentioned in the report I quoted. Away from the military it was a miracle the civilian services were ready for war when it came. ARP was a local authority responsibility, however for the mass of fire fighting kit the HO envisaged to be required, standardisation had to prevail, they and the OoW also knew to produce all this stuff in the time they perceived as being availible, action was needed not words. Strange there were dissenters even in those dark days there was a least one London borough that took no part in ARP and everything for them was run by HQ 5 region.
The Imperial Defence committee and various others were involved. plus the ERC as hose had to be imported initially from France then from the USA. Lots of legislation had to be passed to enable central gov to pay for all the emergency fire equipment, and then issue it into the care of local authorities. However it all happened and just in the nick of time. Initially vehicles used by the ARP/CD rescue services, ambulance and casualty services, anti -gas org etc were found by the relevant local authority hence the butchers vans and builders trucks suddenly taking on new roles. Time progressed several bulk orders for rescue vehicles were placed by the HO and from the info contained in the report I quoted, such orders would again have been through OoW. These included the Austin K3 (and lesser quantity of Bedford OW) column rescue tenders (GUU and GXA and GLY reg). also smaller batches of Fordson WOA2 light rescue vehicles operated by the GPO and CD services, other light rescue trucks were based on Austin K2 and Fordson WOT3 GS trucks. The CD rescue and Salvage service also had batches of International tippers and Cranes imported from the US. see attached . All the aforementioned were registered in the familiar LCC blocks. In any order placed by the HO (unless an item was to a specific one off requirement), a portion of any order would be for Scotland. Scottish Office reps sat alongside the HO reps at all the relevant committees. This would cover all the vehicles we have mentioned so those sent north bore the LCC reg- just as vehicles in the post 1948 AFS/CD org did. So this would be the case for motor cycles allocated to CD/AFS/NFS north of the border. Ambulances came from a variety of funds. Many were converted cars , vans etc and continued to carry their existing reg number. THe war organisation of BRC and St Johns (funded through donations) were able to order (I presume via MoS) a large number of the familiar military pattern Austin K2 , these were used in convoy mainly to move military casualties from ports to railway stations then from the destination station to war hospitals etc. These had LCC blocks of reg numbers. post D Day they operated ambulance convoys from the CCSs to Mulberry running in France with LCC reg numbers. Another organisation operating LCC registered K2s was the AMERCAN AMBULANCE GREAT BRITIAN org, funded by a USA charity called the US Field Service these vehicles again bore LCC blocks of reg numbers. I have never found evidence of central buying of Ambulances; If the vehicles in question were donated to a particular town or city or funded by a local authority I would expect a local registration, It seems throughtout the war, the provision of ambulances remained a local authority responsibility hence they would normally carry a local reg number. Again this practice was to be seen in post 1948 new buys of CD ambulances , thery frequently bore a registration reflecting county or borough of allocation. Time to close TED |
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#14
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This was the first time that I saw a "normal" picture with the rare "model CO" (not the "WD/CO", only 100 of these model CO's have been built, in two contracts of 50 each for the Royal Navy). I had only seen it in official Royal Enfield publicity pictures before... Jan (To Chris Vickery: sorry for hi-jacking your thread Chris... )
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"And now it's your turn to get up off that couch and go into the deserts, go into the mountains, go under the lakes, rivers, and seas and search for history. You'll never find a more rewarding adventure!" (Clive Cussler) 1940 Royal Enfield WD/C 1942 Royal Enfield WD/CO |
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#15
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It is handy to have access toi so many photos! The shots are available to purchase as prints or scanned images at very reasonable rates from my contact. They were possibly originally from MOTOR CYCLING or THE MOTOR-CYCLE.
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