The Home Guard

Photo and identification courtesy of Granny Spall
Back Row: ? Goodwin, A. Abbott, J. Last, F. Ablitt, L. Race, E. Davey, E. Allum, ? Goodwin
Middle Row: H. Race, W. Abbott, F. Chilvers, H. Abblitt, C. Abblitt, W. Warnes, S. Forsdyke
Front Row: W. Ablitt, S. Studd, C. Whiting, T. Allum, Capt. George Stedman, S. Buckle, ? Goodwin, W. Chilvers

The following is a list of those known to be in our Stonham Aspal Home Guard.


NameOccupationVillageDate
Abbott, AMember of Home GuardStonham Aspal c 1940
Abbott, WMember of Home GuardStonham Aspal c 1940
Ablitt, Cyril AMember of Home GuardStonham Aspal c 1940
Ablitt, FMember of Home GuardStonham Aspal c 1940
Ablitt, HMember of Home GuardStonham Aspal c 1940
Ablitt, WMember of Home GuardStonham Aspal c 1940
Alexander, TMember of Home GuardStonham Aspal c 1940
Allum, A EMember of Home GuardStonham Aspal c 1940
Allum, EMember of Home GuardStonham Aspal c 1940
Allum, H JMember of Home GuardStonham Aspal c 1940
Allum, R EMember of Home GuardStonham Aspal c 1940
Allum, S WMember of Home GuardStonham Aspal c 1940
Allum, TMember of Home GuardStonham Aspal c 1940
Buckle, SMember of Home GuardStonham Aspal c 1940
Buckles, WMember of Home GuardStonham Aspal c 1940
Chilvers, FMember of Home GuardStonham Aspal c 1940
Chilvers, WMember of Home GuardStonham Aspal c 1940
Cripps, George NormanMember of Home GuardStonham Aspal c 1940
Davey, EMember of Home GuardStonham Aspal c 1940
Finbow, SMember of Home GuardStonham Aspal c 1940
Forsdyke, C SMember of Home GuardStonham Aspal c 1940
Forsdyke, SMember of Home GuardStonham Aspal c 1940
Forsdyke, WMember of Home GuardStonham Aspal c 1940
Freeman, R JMember of Home GuardStonham Aspal c 1940
Garnham, WMember of Home GuardStonham Aspal c 1940
Goodwin, EMember of Home GuardStonham Aspal c 1940
Goodwin, RMember of Home GuardStonham Aspal c 1940
Jeffery, GMember of Home GuardStonham Aspal c 1940
Last, JMember of Home GuardStonham Aspal c 1940
Last, RoyMember of Home GuardStonham Aspal c 1940
Race, HMember of Home GuardStonham Aspal c 1940
Race, LMember of Home GuardStonham Aspal c 1940
Spall, RMember of Home GuardStonham Aspal c 1940
Stedman, GeorgeMember of Home GuardStonham Aspal c 1940
Studd, RMember of Home GuardStonham Aspal c 1940
Studd, SMember of Home GuardStonham Aspal c 1940
Thurlow, TMember of Home GuardStonham Aspal c 1940
Turner, R SMember of Home GuardStonham Aspal c 1940
Warnes, WMember of Home GuardStonham Aspal c 1940
Whiting, CMember of Home GuardStonham Aspal c 1940

If you have any stories or more information on our "Dad's Army", please share them with me. I would love to hear from you. Suzie


After the fall of France in 1940, when Germany, almost unchallenged, poured into the country. Anthony Eden (War Minister), asked all male civilians between the ages of 17 and 65, who had not been drafted into the services, to start a new fighting force called The Local Defense Volunteers (LDV). This was later to be renamed by Winston Churchill as The Home Guard.

There was to be no medical examination and as long as you were male, between the stated ages (which was not strictly adhered to) and capable of free movement, then you were urged to enrol at the local Police Station.

Within a day, over 250,000 men had volunteered and by the end of the month 750,000 men had put themselves forward. The Home Guard comprised 1.5 million local volunteers who were otherwise ineligible for military service, and this number never dropped below 1 million.  After December 1941, male civilians could be called up to join the Home Guard.

Most men would work all day at their full time jobs and then in the evening commence their Home Guard duties.  These duties could consist of:

  • Manning aircraft batteries
  • Patrolling waterways, railways, coastlines, factories and aerodromes
  • Clearing up debris
  • Searching rubble for people who were trapped
  • Building pill boxes
  • Defence lines of anti-tank obstacles, barbed wire barriers, road blocks
  • Placing obstacles in fields to prevent enemy aircraft landing
  • Practicing guerrilla tactics
  • Removal of signposts
  • Target practice
  • Bomb disposal

Debenham had a garrison of 99 Home Guard (89 Class I and 10 Class II). This force was organised into:

  • Keep garrison - 64
  • Mobile reserve - 17
  • Defended locality (Stowmarket Road) - 18

The Home Guard were disbanded on 3rd December, 1944, with a parade in London of 7,000 men.

During WW2 the National Service (Armed Forces) Act made all men between 18 and 41 liable for conscription.  The exception were those in a Reserved Occupation.  These included railway and dock workers, miners, farmers, scientits, utility workers, agricultural workers, schoolteachers, students, police, engineers, the clergy, bank & insurance company employees, doctors and company directors.

  • Full list of Reserved Occupations Download pdf file
  • Many men in reserved occupations, frustrated at not being allowed to join up, joined the Home Guard or ARP.