Thursday, November 28, 2013

Up dates.


A lot has been happening on my end as usually, friends and family visiting for the holidays. Punk and rock shows to see and school coming to a close for winter has zapped most of my free time.
That being said on to the hobby front.

Sadly the "1933: A Nation Divided", Kickstarter didn't make it. So Back to the Drawing board with a less ambitious one to get the book out next time.

In the mean time, I am not going to let all of the plastic-vile buildings I ordered go to waste. So I am thinking I might bite the bullet and start a fallout new vegas project. Stay tuned on that one.

Also I have rekindled my interest in 15mm sci-fi. So I will be trying to get those painted up and posted as I get them.
And finally on the kick starter front, I am looking into the "Total Extinction" One.
Looks cool. But I am not sure if I want to drop money on another kickstarter when I should be getting stuff for the family.
http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/sentinelgames/total-extinction-battle-for-karnak

Here is a link.

Friday, October 25, 2013

New Helmet for the US military



Looks pretty cool, But being a former grunt myself. I will say that I am not envious of the weight and heat that thing will generate being used in humid and hot enlivenments.

Thursday, October 24, 2013

Lots of updates


As the post says. Lots of updates, On the 1933: "A nation divided" Kick starter.
The first few refure to the 1917 Six Ton tank, and the MkVIII "Liberty" Tank. With Pics, stats and history's of these two old school monsters. Also with pic's of the casted up versions that are provided for in the kickstarter.

the Next few post pertain to new buying options for grabbing separate units and tank fallowed by 3 post explaining the history of 3 "Historical" units that fought in the second American Civil War. Such as the "The Crispus Attucks Auxiliary", "The Thaddeus Kosciuszko Volunteer Cavalry Squadron," and last but not least. The Oliver Cromwell Brigade.




http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/1926752146/1933-a-nation-divided/posts

There is also a post stating a goal to the effect that they will be taking submissions for co-authors of stores and back ground.
And in closing, a time line of the start of the conflict and the Ohio River campaign.
SELECT MAJOR EVENTS OF THE SECOND AMERICAN CIVIL WAR,

FEBRUARY, 1933 to MARCH, 1935

With An Emphasis upon the Ohio River Valley Campaign

(July 20th, 1934-January, 1st, 1935)

1933:

February 15th: Attempted assassination of President-Elect Franklin Roosevelt.

February 18th-25th: The Washington, D.C. and New York City “Brushfire” Incidents.

February 20th-25th: The March on Washington.

February 26th: Lindbergh’s “Many Headed Hydra” Speech.

March 3rd: Creation of the Office of General Affairs. Lindbergh nominated.

March 4th: Inauguration of John Nance Garner as Vice President of the United States.

March 5th: Lindbergh officially appointed General Secretary.

April 3rd: Operation “Cleanup” begins; the “Hoover Raid” in New York City.

April 15th: Douglas MacArthur appointed head of Anti-Insurgency Command.

April 18th: General Order #1910 issued.

May 13th: Battle of Pine Plains, New York.

June 5th: Hartford Riots.

June 6th-7th: US Army occupies Hartford, Connecticut.

June 8th: Resignation of John Nance-Garner.

June 11th: Garner returns to Texas.

June 13th: Battle of Sleepy Hollow, New York.

July 4th: The Opposition Government is formed in Philadelphia, lead by by recently resigned VIce President John Nance-Garner and former Vice President Charles Curtis.

October 13th: Opposition Government censures Congress and the Executive Branch

October 15th: Rhode Island overrun by Communist coup.

October 20th: US Marine landings in Rhode Island topple Communist rebels.

November 3rd-7th: Battle of Topeka, Kansas.

November 9th: Nationalists in Illinois establish Pro-Nationalist government in Cairo.

December 2nd: Nationalist Congress censures the Opposition Government

December 7th: Creation of the Kentucky Free State

1934:

February 3rd: Bolshevist “Agrarian-Socialist” government established in Iowa.

February 9th: Establishment of Socialist Government in Wisconsin

February 20th: Nationalist Coup attempt in Frankfort, Kentucky.

May 1st: Communist Coup in Gary, Indiana.

May 3rd : Attempted Communist Coup in Springfield, Illinois.

May 7th: Springfield, Illinois declared an “Open City.”

June 7th: Constitutionalist Government retreats from Philadelphia.

June 9th: The USS Langley Incident – Crew of USS Langley mutinies.

June 11th: March on Des Moines by the Lindbergh Youth.

June 12th: Battle of Sterling’s Still, Kansas.

June 21st: St. Louis established as acting Constitutionalist Capital in lieu of the “Occupation of Washington by an Unconstitutional Dictatorship”

June 22nd: The first confirmed use of the term “Washington Junta” in an editorial by Theodore Roosevelt, Jr.

July 4th: “Coalition Government” takes over in Cincinnati

July 20th: Beginning of Ohio River Valley Campaign

July 23rd: Battle of the Cincinnati Barricades

July 24th: Fall of Cincinnati

July 28th: Organized Constitutionalist forces in Ohio formally evacuate.

August 12th: Battle of Schurmann’s Hollow, Kentucky.

August 14th: Battle of La Grange, Kentucky.

August 20th: Army of the Ohio’s feint attack on the western outskirts of Louisville.

August 22nd: Battle of Louisville Armory, Kentucky.

August 25th: Patton’s “Right Hook” Outflanks Northern Louisville, enters Indiana.

August 28th: Southern Corps, Army of the Ohio, probes Southeastern Kentucky

August 30th: Battle of Lauritzen’s Crossing, Indiana.

September 4th: Battle of Middlesboro, Kentucky.

September 8th: Major Nationalist offensive in Indiana begins; Generals Patton and Tate split the Army of the Ohio. Tate moves toward Indianapolis, Patton moves toward St. Louis.

September 11h: Battle of Evansville, Indiana.

September 21st-25th: Battle of Indianapolis, Indiana.

October 7th: Brigadier General Tate recalled to Washington; Nationalist lines in southern Indiana stabilize.

October 11th: “The Relief of Cairo”; Nationalist forces resupply Cairo, Illinois.

October 20th: Siege of St. Louis Begins

October 29th: Colonel Harry Truman given command of the Defense of St. Louis, appointed a Brevet Brigadier General.

November 30th: General Patton recalled to Washington to testify before Congress. He identifies the Constitutionalist movement as a “serious, well defined threat that is growing in strength and popularity and will require a significant force of arms and a carefully considered operational plan to defeat.”

December 4th: General Charles Pelot Summerall takes command, Army of the Ohio.

December 27th: Summerall ordered to withdraw his forces from St. Louis.

December 30th-January 15th: “Operation McClellan” – the Army of the Ohio begins a long tactical withdrawal back to Ohio. The plan, though executed by Summerall, is thoroughly mapped out by General Patton, an act that arguably saves his career.

1935:

January 20th: Harry Truman is formally appointed a full Brigadier General by the Opposition Government.

February 11th: Congress in Washington authorizes full peacetime mobilization of the United States Army, allowing its numbers to reach the limit established by law: 280,000 men.

February 14th: Formal end of the Ohio River Campaign. Fighting continues throughout the Midwest. Though the Nationalists have fully secured Ohio, established a strong presence in Southern Indiana, and kept Cairo in Nationalist hands, the opposition government remains active in St. Louis, and the War Department prepares for a long, bloody conflict.

February 20-25th: The “Cincinnati Zoo Incident” – In one of the most bizarre incidents of the war, the Cincinnati Zoo is raided by ‘Insurgents’ who open the gates of the zoo and many cages, allowing the animals therein to run wild in the streets of Cincinnati. The 2nd Cohort, Ohio Silver Legion, is ordered to restore order, but must use “non lethal” means to return the animals to their enclosures.

March 20th, 1935: First confirmed use of Soviet supplied weapons by CPUSA forces

March 22nd: "Springfield Burns " - Communist guerillas attack the “Open” city of Springfield, burning much of it to the ground.

Monday, October 14, 2013

The Battle of Sleepy Hollow, New York. June 13, 1933


Overview

IN the late afternoon hours of June 11th, 1933, a group of "armed ruffians, dressed in a civilian clothing and wearing large pistols on their hips" entered the town of Sleepy Hollow New York, and approached several local vendors, attempting to bargain for food, dry guns, and various "assorted supplies (sic)."

Some of the strangers appeared to be drunk, and their armed appearance caused local citizens to panic, as a result of which, a local constable appeared on the town's main thoroughfare, where they had gathered, and requested that they leave, citing the town's ordnance against carrying weaponry and various policies against public intoxication. "The ruffians," period accounts go on to say, "left in a huff."

In consideration of the possible threat posed by the armed visitors, the tiny force of constables placed a call to nearby State Police and Sheriff's offices, requesting reinforcements in case "the armed interlopers" returned again. An additional forty officers - excessive by the standards of the town -had appeared by late that evening, and manned check points on the major roads leading into and out of the town. The expected return of the outsiders, however, did not occur during the 12th, and many of the police reinforcements correspondingly had left the town and returned to their own homes by the evening of the second day.

Around 6:30 AM, on June 13th, a column of trucks, some of them "covered over with boiler plate", rushed into town, disgorging approximately sixty armed "brigands" equipped with "all manner of weapons, both primitive and modern", and demanded that the town immediately surrender large quantities of, "(sic) Ammunition, Dry Goods, and Sundry." They identified themselves as members of the "International Communist Movement."

The twenty or so police officers remaining, mainly State Police and the Sleepy Hollow Constabulary, responded by demanding that the armed strangers leave town, at which point, one of the invaders fired a "warning shot", shattering the window of a local dry goods store. Thereafter followed an hour long engagement between the Communist brigands and the heavily outnumbered policemen.

By the time that the dust had cleared, twelve of the original twenty police officers, and some fifteen Communist guerillas lay dead. The leader of the column, an "unidentified middle aged man, dressed in a sweater and smoking a pipe" clambered to the top of the lead vehicle and offered to leave the town in peace "if the demands of the column were met without further bloodshed." The first demand was that the original supplies requested would be delivered without further delay. The second was that the local policemen surrender their firearms, at which point the invaders would "leave the town in peace."

Completely outnumbered, the policemen reluctantly complied, at which point the Communists began what is described as an "unusually restrained form of looting" in which they "entered several of the local shops, exiting with large numbers of the supplies they sought," which where then loaded onto their trucks. Before leaving, the column of guerillas finished by collecting the firearms of the policemen and setting fire to approximately six buildings on the outlying areas of town before leaving without further violence.

Further police and National Guard reinforcements arrived in Sleepy Hollow the next day, but the town was not subjected to any further violence by the Communists during the early period of the war.

A monument, dedicated to the dead policemen, was erected in 1940, not far from a statue of Washington Irving, the man who immortalized the town with his story, "The Legend of Sleepy Hollow."

Historical Significance

This was the first of many large scale Communist attacks in Upper New York and New England, part of Chairman Browder's plan to fight a long-running guerilla war against local police and military units. While regarded as a Communist victory, it is more significant in that this marks the first time a so-called "Flying Column" of mobile, truck mounted insurgents, was reported in use. The use of such tactics became standard in many areas where Communist forces were not definitively in control of strongly held territories, and helped to sew chaos and confusion, as well as to promote their cause.

Gaming the Battle

This would be an excellent, small scale skirmish scenario, requiring less than one hundred figures - approximately twenty policemen and about sixty or so odd guerillas. The "sweater wearing" leader may actually have been Chairman Browder himself. One would need only a single street and a handful of buildings to provide cover.

The column of trucks, while interesting, do not appear to have played any role in the actual fighting, and could easily be abstracted with one or two vehicles for cover, or simply ignored all together.

The scenario could be fairly simply designed, with the policemen attempting to hold the town until reinforcements could arrive, and typifies the low intensity warfare typical of the war against the Communists in New England and the Mid Atlantic.

http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/1926752146/1933-a-nation-divided/posts/628229?at=BAh7B0kiCHVpZAY6BkVUaQPFQi9JIgtleHBpcnkGOwBUSSIYMjAxMy0xMS0xNCAyMTo0MDoxMQY7AFQ%3D--8dd96919b6db1c8ac9f1b9731746a73219fc5d70&ref=backer_project_update