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  #1  
Old 10-06-08, 22:41
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Richard, thanks for that. I don't know if anyone knew or knows of Tony Beadle, formerly of American Car World, Triumph World, Porsche World? His father worked for the Ministry of Supply from 1940 and was based I think at the AEC works in Southall. He covered the Vauxhall boxing plant cum repair works in Hendon, and various other west London contractors. It seems that the M of S inspected vehicles supplied under Contracts or Demands, and I can imagine that if a vehicle was not accepted by the Inspector after driven off the line, it was not taken into stock and thus allocated a number. Up until 1941 this may not have occurred simply because the demand was so great....delivery was all-important and rectification could be done later. After that there was a luxury of being able to get rectification work done in the factory before delivery. I can also imagine that the VRDs were swamped in practice by defects and this led to the call for remedial work to be carried out at source.

Going back to spring-autumn 1940, the Southampton CMD was regrettably not immune from the delivery of defective vehicles, and apart from vehicles delivered to Bordon being sent back for rectification work, major problems were experienced with axles that required input from the RCOC in Aldershot to sort out. The return of vehicles from the RCOC depot meant that they were subject to the Luftwaffe's blitz on Southampton 30 Nov/1 Dec and thus lost. The Salvage unit at Bordon then came into its own...which is another story!
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Old 10-06-08, 22:52
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Jan, that motorcycle has a London County Council civilian registration, dating it seems to late war (GXU started August 1943 and ran in theory to November 1946). Other m/cs that had civilian registrations included the St John Ambulance and Red Cross, and Auxiliary / National Fire Service. I wondered if the number you mentioned was a stock number for the frame?

Note also the Road Fund Licence holder with no visible, so far as I can see, tax disc. It may have been exempt as being on His Majesty's Service under the Defence of the Realm Regulations. Fire, Police and Ambulance vehicles were also 'exempt' (actually as now I think they had to be taxed but had a 'nil' charge) but for different reasons as they were emergency vehicles. Or it was required to be taxed but at the nil rate and removing the disc eliminated any dating of the photo.
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Old 10-06-08, 23:02
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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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Old 10-06-08, 23:04
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This was a CD DR training school. Note the nice line-up of machines!
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  #5  
Old 10-06-08, 23:07
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Originally Posted by David_Hayward View Post
This was a CD DR training school. Note the nice line-up of machines!
David,

Most of those machines have Royal Navy serials on them
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  #6  
Old 10-06-08, 23:26
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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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Old 10-06-08, 23:16
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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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Old 10-06-08, 23:20
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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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Old 10-06-08, 23:28
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Originally Posted by David_Hayward View Post
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.
David,

Interesting photo of a mixed bunch of machines, thanks
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Old 13-06-08, 01:17
ted angus ted angus is offline
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Originally Posted by David_Hayward View Post
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.
David, regarding non military users: vehicles for the Home Office(Min Home of Security) and Scottish Office [i.e.pre- 41 AFS, NFS 41-48, CD rescue services] were aquired through contracts raised by the Office (later Ministry )of Works. In 1938 when the HO needed to start procuring vehicles and equipment to meet the deteriorating international situation, it did not have its own contracts and purchasing dept. With the permission of the Treasury they used the OoW resources for the task, a post -1948 HO report I have an extract from, gives this info and makes a point that the arrangement worked well and continued through the war. In addition all emergency fire fighting vehicles and equipment for use by HM forces and all other HMG ministries and depts for war emergency purposes were combined with HO requirements and contracted by the OoW, not the MoS.

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  
Old 13-06-08, 09:09
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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 12:07.
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  #12  
Old 11-06-08, 22:59
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Quote:
Originally Posted by David_Hayward View Post
This was a CD DR training school. Note the nice line-up of machines!
Thanks for sharing this one with us David!

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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  #13  
Old 12-06-08, 08:55
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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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  #14  
Old 10-06-08, 22:55
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Quote:
Originally Posted by David_Hayward View Post
It seems that the M of S inspected vehicles supplied under Contracts or Demands, and I can imagine that if a vehicle was not accepted by the Inspector after driven off the line, it was not taken into stock and thus allocated a number. Up until 1941 this may not have occurred simply because the demand was so great....delivery was all-important and rectification could be done later. After that there was a luxury of being able to get rectification work done in the factory before delivery. I can also imagine that the VRDs were swamped in practice by defects and this led to the call for remedial work to be carried out at source.

David,

All that makes perfect sense, with inexperienced labour, faults were bound to occur and with parts and facilities at the factory, it makes sense to rectify there, anyway, it is doubtful the MoS inspector would sign them out until they were in order. A thought has just occured, that perhaps the reason that census numbers are out of line with chassis numbers, is that any vehicle held back were not numbered until signed out. The VRD were no more than open storage areas, often on grass. They would accept vehicles, then issue from there once demands came in for that particular type.
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