Tuesday, 26 January 2010

Airfix advertisement, 1968

Where it all started for many of us


John Tunstill's Miniature Warfare ACW Campaign in Ireland Part 3

With apologies for the wait, here is part 3.


Saturday, 16 January 2010

John Sharples' Rules for Medieval Warfare 1977


I found these one page rules inserted into my copy of the Hinchliffe Guide to Wargaming. Although I do not know for sure, as both were printed in 1977, I suspect they were released together. Thanks again to John and to Ian Hinds of Hinds Figures and Hinchliffe Models for permission to reproduce them here.

Wednesday, 13 January 2010

The Hinchliffe Guide to Wargaming May 1977

The Hinchliffe Guide to Wargaming was a small grey covered booklet published by Frank Hinchliffe in 1977. Ny copy also has a one page insert of a set of Rules for Medieval Warfare by John Sharples.

Ian Hinds of
Hinds Figures Ltd, who now owns Hinchliffe Models, has kindly given his permission for me to post the booklet here, and John Sharples has agreed for his rules to be posted. They will be next.



























Monday, 11 January 2010

The Scandinavian Wells, by Harry Pearson


Thanks to Harry Pearson for writing this piece for Vintage Wargaming about a little known (take deep breath and wait for comments) Swedish wargames pioneer.

HG Wells’ classic Little Wars was the first book aimed specifically at people who wanted to fight battles with toy soldiers. The second came from a rather unusual source. Ossian J D Elgstrom (1883-1950) was a Swedish ethnologist, author and artist who may well be the only wargamer ever to have competed in the Olympics (admittedly it was in the “mixed painting” art event at the Berlin games of 1936, and he didn’t win a medal, but even so…).

Elgstrom specialised in richly illustrated books on the myths and folklore of the far north, but as the rest of Europe edged towards the catastrophe of World War One he took a break from collating the legends of Greenland and Sapmi and penned Hur Man For Krig Med Tennsoldater (A Manual For War With Tin Soldiers).

Albert Bonniers, a prestigious Stockholm publisher who might best be described as the Swedish equivalent of the UK’s Penguin, published the book in the autumn of 1914 as part of a “pocketbook” series which also included volumes of Tibet, Prince Otto fo Denmark and the childhood of Erik Menveds. The cover price was 2 krona. Two years later Elgstrom’s work was translated into German and published, as Wie man mit Zinnsoldaten Krieg Fihrt, in Liepzig. Germany’s own early wargame book, Karl Floericke’s Strategie und Taktik des Spieles mit Bleisoldaten appeared around the same time.

Some years ago I came across a rather battered and coffees-stained copy of Hur Man For Krig Med Tennsoldater in a vintage toyshop in Stockholm’s Gamla Stam. It has hard covers, is about the size and thickness of one of the old Ladybird books and is illustrated throughout with drawings and plans of what must be the most eccentric and wonderful wargames paraphernalia ever invented. Sadly my knowledge of Swedish is not sufficient to translate the main text, but the wild originality of Elgstrom’s approach can easily be gleaned from the illustration on page 11, which shows how to make a machine-gun (“kulspruter”) using 7mm hollow glass rod and a wooden box filled with dried peas.

Other fabulous devices include the “gummislang kannon”, which might best be described as a mini ballista firing rods fitted with wire heads to simulate “direct bomabardment with shell”, and the “bombkastare” a sort of tabletop siege engine made from wood, a steel strip and a jam jar lid which flings a lethal-looking missile fashioned by sticking cocktail sticks into a cork to simulate “indirect bombardment” presumably by howitzers.


Amazingly Elgstrom manages to top even this extraordinary contraption when, a few pages later in a section headed Minor I Terrangen, he demonstrates how to construct a tabletop landmine using a spring-loaded steel strip released by a fuse made from saltpetre paper (available, the text explains, in photographic shops at a cost of 25 to 30 ore per packet). Take that Lionel Tarr!

Following chapters on how to build a fort and make barbed wire and trench systems the book concludes with what appears to be an account of an action between North Army and South Army, some notes on compiling a wargame journal and an illustrated list of figures – tin flats – available from the Swedish makers Santesson and Ohlsson both of whom had shops in Stockholm at the time.


What sort of readership was Hur Man For Krig Med Tenn Soldater aimed at? My guess would be that like Wells, Elgstrom was covering the popular “children of all ages from 9-99” demographic. The model making required is certainly too complex for young children and at one point the author appears (as I say my grasp of Swedish is limited) to suggest that a suitable army might consist of 500 figures, 12 cannons and 7 machineguns, quite a collection for even the most privileged youngster.

Sadly many aspects of the book remain obscure. Did Elgstrom approach the publisher with the idea, or were Bonniers looking for a Swedish answer to Little Wars and commissioned him to do the job. Who did Elgstrom – living in Norrviken at the time he was writing Hur Man – wargame with? Did he continue with his hobby, and if so what refinements did he make to the manifold warmachines he had invented? Alas we may never know.

Harry Pearson

Wednesday, 30 December 2009

Humbrol Authenticards Series 2 #3 pictures




Thanks to Mike for these pics of the missing Series 2 card for British Napoleonic Infantry. I have added them to the original post.

Wednesday, 23 December 2009

The French Invasion of England in 1810, Part 4, by Harold Gerry

(A campaign game played by the Mid-Herts Group; for strategic rules see June "Newsletter").

The West Country, May 9th-14th. At Taunton, on the afternoon of the 9th, the French had just begun to take possession of the captured town when their cavalry, scouting along the Bristol road, reported a new English force entrenched just across the River Tone, blocking the road effectively. There was consternation in the French camp. The militia army driven south¬wards out of Taunton, although shaken, would recover its spirits within a day or two unless it could be relentlessly pursued. But the main English army in the West was also one day's march from Taunton, but to the westward, so such pursuit was out of the question.

The new force discovered was one of the reserve armies composed of militia, which one of the English commanders from another area had sent down into the West Country to render what assistance it could, and somehow the two commanders locally had not been informed. So the Taunton general had fought and lost his battle without realising that this second English force (about 4 regiments) was only about 2 hours' march away. (The player originally dealing with the West Country had had to hand over, for business reasons, to temporary assistants at this stage of the campaign, and a most realistic "fog of war" descended on all this area as a result).

At length the French decided that a trap was closing in on them, and marched north-west along the road to the Bristol Channel. The main English army tried to cut them off by marching over secondary roads, but, having force-marched the day before as well, had at length to give up and call a day's rest.

The French thus escaped, but the British profited from the halt to re-group. Some units went back towards Salisbury, as London was still anxious about Portsmouth, which area was not too strongly guarded. A force of about 16,000 of all arms (1 figure = about 50 men) hurried after the French, who were now covering a temporary base at Minehead.

Unknown to the British, the local French commander had just sent word to Paris that he was retiring on Launceston and Falmouth (both now fortified) and that there was now no hope of breaking through up to the Severn Valley to raise the Midlands as originally planned. The British were still obsessed with the possible danger to the Plymouth base (the initial French landings at Falmouth and Lyme Regis were intended to confirm the British in this fear, to draw the British westwards whilst the main French thrusts went into the Midlands from West and East).

So in fact the Western stage of the campaign was now almost over. Nothing further of significance would take place. The French used any available shipping to ferry troops over to Wales, which they had suddenly realised must have been very denuded of troops in order to reinforce the fighting in Somerset. But the British, naturally, knew nothing of all this as yet, and could not withdraw too many units from the West Country in case the next major landing of French reinforcements was to take place near Plymouth. The base must be held at all costs.

To cover their embarkation, the French with about 8,000 men, stood to fight along the line of the small river and woods at Dunster, in North Somerset. Nearly two hours of daylight were left. (It was established by dice throw that the English forces had overtaken the French, and further dice fixed the number of game-moves possible before dark).

The French units were mostly concealed from view, (and therefore not laid down on the wargame table), the terrain being very broken, with many woods. The English commander was forced to attack "blind", and this possibly led him to direct his thrusts mainly at the area between village and sea, where he could at least expect no very complicated surprises. He could have attacked more recklessly had he known that about a quarter of the French army were at Minehead bay embarking on shipping to cross to Wales to re-open the campaign there. The French at Dunster were outnumbered nearly 2 to 1.

The English left was intended merely to contain any French opposite them. In the centre, four militia regiments moved directly on the bridge and village, with instructions to attack repeatedly and regardless of losses, whilst all the cavalry and the best regular infantry tried to envelop the French line from the sea side. The militia ran into the expected skirmishers' fire from the woods on the East bank, but one unit sufficed to deal with this, whilst the others advanced determinedly. But each regiment as it approached into grape range and long musket range lost over a quarter of its strength to the concentrated fire from the houses and barricades opposite. The attack came to a stop, two of the regiments routing. But the defenders realised their luck would not hold much longer. A rifle militia regiment had just cleared the hedged field area downstream, and was moving up the river to engage the batteries and muskets from the more advantageous rifle range (12" as compared with 6" for muskets).

On the English right, the flanking force had just crossed the small river, in some disorder, when they were charged at a nicely judged moment by a cuirassier regiment. The leading English cavalry unit routed, and carried with it the second, which was in the river. "Never mind, the Guards will stop the rot", opined the C. in C., that unit being next to have its morale tested. To his disgust they broke also, and the entire column of seven regiments was pushed back from the river, due to the narrow frontage. (The Guards threw four morale dice, needing a 5 or 6 on one at least; they threw 4, 2, 2, 1). By the time the unshaken rear units could move up to the river, it was too late to re-mount the attack.

Then the somewhat incompetent English commander found he had scored a partial success after all, but with the part of his force of which he had expected nothing. His left wing had simply plodded forward warily to the river, their cannon preventing the French guns opposite from doing the same execution which had happened at Dunster town. The French, afraid of losing the batteries which had been their main battle-winning asset so far in the campaign, limbered up and escaped out of range, and English light companies supported by an infantry brigade in line took the hills where the main road south to Exeter left the Dunster area. Unknown to anyone on the English side, this was to have been the French route back to their smaller supporting forces in Devon and Cornwall. So when they retired next morning, before dawn, the French had to take the long route through Minehead and Barnstaple.

The English Western army followed slowly, to within a few miles of Launceston, disposing a screen of troops about the north and east sides of the town by the even¬ing of the 14th. At about this time bad news from Wales began to arrive, and some of the Welsh militia regiments were marched off to the Bristol Channel to reinforce tie small forces in South Wales, where the next decisive part of the campaign was going to take place.

TO BE CONTINUED


I regret the map accompanying this article of the Battle of Dunster is so faint I can not reproduce it here.

This article appeared in Wargamer's Newsletter #102, in September 1970.

Tuesday, 15 December 2009

Strawberry Nets and Periscopes

Chris Rogers' article was published in Wargamer's Newsletter 102 from September 1970.

Monday, 7 December 2009

Humbrol Authenticards Series 1

Coming out in 1975, the first series of Authenticards covered mainly World War II aircraft and markings, along with some tanks and a couple of Great War scout aircraft. The series is reproduced in the posts below.

Humbrol Authenticards Series 1 # 1 Supermarine Spitfire I, Vb and Vc




Humbrol Authenticards Series 1 # 2 Hawker Hurrican I, INF and IID




Humbrol Authenticards Series 1 # 3 De Havilland Mosquito NFII and FBVI




Humbrol Authenticards Series 1 # 4 bristol Beaufighter IF and VIF




Humbrol Authenticards Series 1 # 5 Sopwith Pup




Humbrol Authenticards Series 1 # 6 SE5 and SE5a