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Home Service units have a wide mix of ages, from young men fresh out of muster service to retired regular troops. After compulsory muster service, men are required to serve in the Home Service for another 8 years, which may be reduced by paying a fine known as scutage. Retired regular troops must also join the home service and serve four years if they have served in the regular forces for less than six years. Those exempt from muster may also voluntarily join the Home Service
Home Service units have a wide mix of ages, from young men fresh out of muster service to retired regular troops. After compulsory muster service, men are required to serve in the Home Service for another 8 years, which may be reduced by paying a fine known as scutage. Retired regular troops must also join the home service and serve four years if they have served in the regular forces for less than six years. Those exempt from muster may also voluntarily join the Home Service


Home servicemen normally wear [[Uniforms of the Royal Army (Great Nortend)#Dress Order III: Duty dress|duty ]], deck,[[Uniforms of the Royal Army (Great Nortend)#Dress Order VI: Field dress|field]] or working dress at on service. Unlike active troops, home servicemen do not wear their uniform when “walking out”. Additionally, uniforms have shoulder patches with the words, “Home Service”. Uniforms additionally have troop, company  and battalion patches where applicable.  
Home servicemen normally wear [[Uniforms of the Royal Army (Great Nortend)#Dress Order III: Duty dress|duty]], deck,[[Uniforms of the Royal Army (Great Nortend)#Dress Order VI: Field dress|field]] or working dress at on service. Unlike active troops, home servicemen do not wear their uniform when “walking out”. Additionally, uniforms have shoulder patches with the words, “Home Service”. Uniforms additionally have troop, company  and battalion patches where applicable.  


Home servicemen are paid according to rank and branch, starting at £1/-/- per full day served, and up to 10 shillings per drill night for a private or ordinary seaman or aircraftman.
Home servicemen are paid according to rank and branch, starting at £1/-/- per full day served, and up to 10 shillings per drill night for a private or ordinary seaman or aircraftman.

Revision as of 06:00, 15 December 2020

Home Service
Erbonian Coat of Arms.png
Active8 June 1936 —
Country Great Nortend
RoleCivil and military defence
Insignia
War Cross
GNFlagNavy.png
Red Ensign
GNRedNavyEnsign.png
Blue Ensign
GNBlueNavyEnsign.png

His Majesty's Home Service consists of the combined reserve military forces of Great Nortend. The Home Service is divided into three divisions, being the Home Force, the Home Fleet and the Home Flight, serving as the reserve counterpart to the Royal Army and the Navy Royal's Sea Fleets, and Air Flight respectively. It is tasked principally with the defence of the Realm, rather than offensive actions. It also trains to assist the civil forces in responding to civil emergencies such as fires, floods, storms and riots within their areas of expertise.

The Home Service is mainly manned by part-time home servicemen in civilian occupations who participate in military training and activities on a part-time basis after full-time muster service. Servicemen are obliged to attend weekly parade or drill nights as well as four week-end bivouacs and up to a fortnight of training programmes annually. The period of compulsory home service after muster is 8 years, which may be reduced to four years or none by paying a fine called scutage.

Owing to their role as home and civil defence, home servicemen have never been deployed abroad in offensive combatant roles and are thus nicknamed the “Marching Boys”.

History

The Defence of the Realm Act 34 Edm. IX established the modern-day Home Service in 1936 after deficiencies in the existing home defence was raised in the Great Astyrian War. The Act restructured and combined the former locally raised militias, yeomanries, volunteer corps, naval merchant marine and air reserve forces. The resulting two services, the Home Force and Home Fleet, were placed under the command of the War Office. Later, in 1960, with the establishment of the Air Flight as a distinct sub-unit of the Navy Royal, a Home Flight was carved out of the Home Fleet as a similar distinct sub-unit for air capability.

Organisation

The Home Service is organised at a local level. Several troops of the Home Force from a particular region are grouped together as a company, and often undertake exercises together. Several companies form a district and several districts form a militia battalion, which is a county-sized formation. This is analogous to the structure of the King's Cadet Corps, the youth equivalent of the Home Service.

The Home Fleet and Flight are structured similarly, albeit built around the company structure rather than on smaller troops or platoons.

Civil response

The Home Service is often the first responders to civil emergencies such as fire, flooding and storms. For instance, servicemen are trained to use and operate hydrants and fire engines when professional firemen have yet to arrive.

The Home Service shifted its focus after the 2007 Whenton Report back to its original principles of local military and civil defence after a slow decline in their military role leading to some platoons even regularly leaving rifles at home. Since 2008, Home Service companies have participated in regular major exercises domestically and abroad. Furthermore, they retain their on-going responsibility for the defence of critical local infrastructure such as water works, gas plants and electricity mills, as well as response in emergency scenarios such as fire, severe flooding, snowfall, storms, riot or invasion.

Manpower

Home Service units have a wide mix of ages, from young men fresh out of muster service to retired regular troops. After compulsory muster service, men are required to serve in the Home Service for another 8 years, which may be reduced by paying a fine known as scutage. Retired regular troops must also join the home service and serve four years if they have served in the regular forces for less than six years. Those exempt from muster may also voluntarily join the Home Service

Home servicemen normally wear duty, deck,field or working dress at on service. Unlike active troops, home servicemen do not wear their uniform when “walking out”. Additionally, uniforms have shoulder patches with the words, “Home Service”. Uniforms additionally have troop, company and battalion patches where applicable.

Home servicemen are paid according to rank and branch, starting at £1/-/- per full day served, and up to 10 shillings per drill night for a private or ordinary seaman or aircraftman.

Requirements

A person is required to fulfil the following criteria to be eligible to join the Home Service voluntarily.

There is no maximum age limit for service; however, a home serviceman will be forced to retire or leave if he fails to maintain sufficient physical ability to service in the Home Service. A home serviceman must also be able to fulfil his obligations to the Home Service. Most home servicemen leave after completing their eight compulsory years, or shortly thereafter.