The Civil Defence Corps ( CDC ) was a civilian volunteer organisation established in Great Britain in 1949 to mobilise and take local control of the affected area in the aftermath of a major national emergency, principally envisaged as being a Cold War nuclear attack . By March 1956, the Civil Defence Corps had 330,000 personnel. It was stood down in Great Britain in 1968, although two Civil Defence Corps still operate within the British Isles, namely the Isle of Man Civil Defence Corps and the unrelated Civil Defence Ireland in the Republic of Ireland. Many other countries maintain a national Civil Defence Corps, usually having a wide brief for assisting in large scale civil emergencies such as flood, earthquake, invasion, or civil disorder.
47-472: WVS may refer to: Women's Royal Voluntary Service (WRVS) World Values Survey , a global research project that explores people’s values and beliefs Worldwide Veterinary Service Warwickshire Vision Support , a UK charity providing support for people with sight loss in Warwickshire A virtual scripting language based on XML . WebSphere Voice Server,
94-587: A Speech Recognition product from IBM that provides automatic ASR and TTS functions for solutions supporting MRCP or Media Resource Control Protocol. Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title WVS . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=WVS&oldid=842789858 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description
141-488: A civil defence unit to protect its own property and staff. These units were organised in a similar way to the Civil Defence Corps, with Headquarters, Warden, Rescue, First Aid and Fire Guard Sections. The Fire Guard Section managed fire points and smaller fire appliances . Each unit had its own control post, and groups of units could form a group control post. Group control posts and control posts in larger factories had
188-575: A different kind of response from the wartime experience, potentially wiping out any local emergency response and communications in the affected area, so from 1954 there was a new approach to training and equipment to reflect this. It included a new rescue manpack and the purchase of new vehicles. The headquarters sections were equipped with mobile control centres, despatch riders, and Land Rovers equipped for reconnaissance (e.g. to measure radiation levels, damage, and road accessibility). These were fitted with radio to communicate back to base, and could carry
235-451: A nuclear strike (with one vehicle spare). The radio operator would be in touch with area control at a base station, which could be a mobile station based in a Ford Thames signal office vehicle, or could be in a local town hall. The wireless equipment was Pye or BCC and operated at 155 or 168MHz. These mid-1950s radios (like the military equivalent) were 12 volt, using the vehicle supply or batteries. A second 5-channel radio operating at 96Mhz
282-467: A nuclear war made it pointless to prepare for such a conflict. Members of the corps were issued with dark blue battledress and berets . A system of horizontal bars and point-down chevrons was used to indicate rank. The Civil Defence Corps initially inherited vehicles and equipment that had been stored since the end of the Second World War. However, it was realised that a nuclear attack demanded
329-473: A period of fifteen years. Holders of the medal qualify for the award of a clasp after each subsequent period of twelve years service. When the WVS was awarded the prefix ‘Royal’ in 1966, it was initially decided not to re-name the medal to reflect the new title of the organisation, as it was considered unfair to differentiate between those who had received the medal before 1966 and those after. Some thirty years later,
376-402: A second radio for forward communication to personnel on foot. To repair or establish communication, there were also field cable party Land Rovers towing trailers for cable laying. A reconnaissance detachment comprised four Land Rovers, each with a crew of four (driver, leader/navigator, radiac operator, wireless operator), which would be sent in on three parallel paths towards an area affected by
423-511: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Women%27s Royal Voluntary Service The Royal Voluntary Service (known as the Women's Voluntary Services ( WVS ) from 1938 to 1966; Women's Royal Voluntary Service ( WRVS ) from 1966 to 2004 and WRVS from 2004 to 2013) is a voluntary organisation concerned with helping people in need throughout England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland . It
470-562: The National Health Service called for 250,000 new volunteers from the general public in England and Wales to be directed by a call-centre run by the RVS to help self-isolating vulnerable and elderly people requiring assistance. The following day, it was announced that more than 400,000 had volunteered. By the end of the week, recruitment to the "NHS Volunteer Responders" was halted to enable
517-712: The Queen's Messenger Food Convoys which took food to areas in need after a bombing raid. The people who survived the bombing of Coventry received help from one of the convoys with 14,000 meals being served. By 1941, one million women belonged to the WVS. Their work did not slacken after the end of the Luftwaffe 's bombing raids. The Battle of the Atlantic and the devastating toll of merchant ships sunk by U-boats led to shortages in Great Britain . The WVS did all that it could to assist in
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#1732851589130564-647: The County and Regional offices and Headquarters. Each Centre had to file a monthly Narrative Report in quadruplicate which allowed both the sharing of good practice and ideas, but also allowed those in charge to keep tabs on their members. These Narrative reports which were produced from 1938-1992 are inscribed on the UK Memory of the World Register , part of UNESCO 's Memory of the World Programme and are considered one of
611-515: The Soldier Week , Wings for Victory Week and Warship Week . Retford train station in Retford , Nottinghamshire has a plaque to commemorate the contribution of the WVS during WWII. Retford was on a busy railway junction. The WVS of Retford used the canteen and rest room to serve almost 2.3 million meals to British and Allied forces between 1940 and 1946, at a rate of over 1,000 meals per day. In
658-550: The WVS and its members are a central feature of the 2006 made-for-TV film dramatisation of her wartime diaries. Civil Defence Corps Although under the authority of the Home Office , with a centralised administrative establishment, the corps was administered locally by Corps Authorities. In general every county was a Corps Authority, as were most county boroughs in England and Wales and large burghs in Scotland . The CDC
705-514: The WVS helped a great many people who went to their rest centres. Some people stayed for a night; many stayed for much longer and stretched the resources of the WVS to the limit. In Barnes , one WVS member fed 1,200 bomb victims in just one day, cooking in her own kitchen. It would be difficult to overstate the importance of the work done by the WVS during the Blitz: the rest centres provided shelter, food, and importantly, sanitation. But working so near to
752-572: The WVS in Northampton, England. WVS organisations were also set up in Canada and Australia. To reflect their role during the war, WVS members were eligible for the Defence Medal – the campaign medal awarded for home defence – on the same basis as members of the emergency services. In the immediate post war era, the WVS continued to operate as food rationing remained in place. Such was their work, that
799-624: The Welfare Sections. From 1949 to 1968, the Civil Defence Corps Training School was at Taymouth Castle in Scotland. The Castle was also one of the sites for PYTHON , the plan for continuity of government in the event of nuclear war. The Civil Defence Corps was disbanded due to persistent shortages of volunteers which resulted from the widely-held belief that extensive damage which would be inflicted by hydrogen bombs in
846-614: The amalgamation and closure of some centres as District Councils were introduced. Through the 1990s cost-cutting and the professionalisation of the organisation meant that Centre Organisers and County and Regional Offices were phased out and the centres were closed. Headquarters which had been in London since 1938 was moved out to Milton Hill House in Oxfordshire in 1997 and by 2004 there were no local or regional centres remaining. The organisation of large areas (usually comprising several counties) and
893-619: The buildup to D-Day , the expertise the WVS had in catering was put to use again. The skills learned during the Blitz were again put to good use when the V-1 and V-2 rockets fell on London. Once again, the WVS played a key role in evacuation. With the success of D-Day, the WVS moved into Europe to support troops there. The first WVS abroad had landed in Italy with the success of the invasion there. The WVS model proved to be so successful that other countries around
940-450: The centre of the bombing inevitably led to casualties. 241 members of the WVS were killed during the Blitz and many more were wounded. 25 WVS offices were destroyed. The WVS began running IIPs (Incident Inquiry Points), places where people came to find out about their loved ones who were in an area that had been bombed in order to free the ARP to work with the fire brigade. The WVS also helped with
987-431: The cities proved reasonably easy. Getting them to a known area of safety proved a lot more difficult as trains did not always arrive at an expected destination or would turn up at a reception point unexpectedly. The WVS is credited with helping to move 1.5 million people (the majority were children) out of cities in the early days of September 1939. The WVS also played a major role in the collection of clothing required for
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#17328515891301034-399: The collection of required material for the war effort and also to educate people not to waste what they had. Each WVS centre had its own Salvage Officer and Food Leader. The Food Leader did whatever was required at a local level to assist the authorities in the complicated task of food rationing. Educational pamphlets were produced and lectures held. The WVS organised campaigns such as Salute
1081-698: The country] what it can do to protect itself and the community." In the words of Home Secretary Sir Samuel Hoare , "as regards their civil defence functions, the Minister regards the Women's Voluntary Service as occupying ... much the same relationship as that of the women's auxiliary services for the armed forces of the Crown." Immediately after its formation, Queen Mary assumed the role of patron while Queen Elizabeth began serving as its president in December 1938. The WVS/WRVS
1128-751: The elderly. They are particularly well known as providers of the Meals on Wheels service which delivers hot meals to the housebound. Their mission is "to help people to maintain independence and dignity in their homes and communities, particularly in later life." In 1968, the government dismantled the Civil Defence Corps, to which WRVS had been affiliated, and WRVS was registered as a charity from 16 January 1968. The services they now provide are practical services delivered with warmth and care to thousands of older and housebound people every day such as Meals on Wheels, Good Neighbours and community transport. They also run hospital shops and cafés where any profits are returned to
1175-462: The end of the list read "Everlasting Father, we commend to thee all those for whom the end of the war is not the end of suffering, the wounded, the homeless, the hungry, the bereaved." In 1952, Queen Elizabeth II agreed to become patron of the WVS and in 1966, she awarded the service the honour of adding 'Royal' to its title, it becoming the Women's Royal Voluntary Service. The organisation evolved to helping isolated and lonely people, particularly
1222-416: The fires, women in the WVS set up mobile canteens to keep them refreshed, thus placing themselves in serious physical danger with collapsing buildings a constant threat. When a raid ended, the WVS also played a part in looking after the injured and those who had lost their homes. Records indicate that the WVS dealt with and helped over 10,000 people every night of the Blitz. The Blitz lasted for 57 nights, and
1269-498: The hospital to improve services for patients, staff and visitors. Royal Voluntary Service emergency teams provide back-up to the professional services and members of the public in times for major incidents such as the Lockerbie disaster , Hillsborough disaster , Buncefield fuel depot blast and flooding crises in July 2007 by running rest centres and providing emergency feeding to members of
1316-529: The medal's name was changed to the Women's Royal Voluntary Service Medal, this name remaining even after the organisation became the Royal Voluntary Service in 2013. By 2015, approximately 35,000 medals had been awarded. Mass-Observation diarist Nella Last joined the Women's Voluntary Service in her hometown of Barrow-in-Furness at the outbreak of World War Two. Her wartime diary contains frequent references to her WVS work. Her association with
1363-446: The more than 750,000 applications to be processed by the RVS. In May 2024, Queen Camilla became the organisation's patron, having previously served as its president since December 2012. The WVS got its first uniform in June 1939 when an overcoat and hat was launched. They and the suit uniform which followed shortly after were designed by Digby Morton , the famous London couturier, and
1410-492: The most important documents for social and women's history produced in the 20th century. In addition headquarters issued substantial numbers of circular notices each year informing Organisers of new projects and re-enforcing the rules and regulations. This structure stayed in place almost unchanged until the Local Government reorganisations in the 1970s which changed boundaries and led to changes in regional organisation and
1457-618: The needy. In October 1939, Lady Reading broadcast to the United States about the need for clothing in the UK. The broadcast led to large quantities of clothing (known as " Bundles for Britain ") being sent by the American Red Cross and distributed from WVS Emergency Clothing Stores. When troops returned to ports after the evacuation at Dunkirk , members of the WVS were there to greet them and hand out food, drink and warm clothing. The WVS base at
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1504-459: The new Labour government funded the WVS from central government funds. In 1951, the W.V.S. Roll of Honour , listing 241 members of the WVS who were killed in the line of duty during WWII, was created by Claire Evans, B.E.M., Irene Base and Roger Powell. Made of vellum and bound in Moroccan leather, it was taken on a three-month tour around British cathedrals, guild halls and museums. An inscription at
1551-604: The organisation badge) or branded work-wear, such as polo shirts and fleeces. The Women's Voluntary Service Medal was instituted on 23 March 1961, when the Home Secretary Richard Butler announced in the Commons that Queen Elizabeth II had approved the medal. The WVS Long Service medal is presented by Royal Voluntary Service on behalf of the King and is awarded to a volunteer after they complete forty duties each year over
1598-477: The public, fire crews and police. In 2004, the organisation's name was changed from the Women's Royal Voluntary Service to simply WRVS in an attempt to modernise its image and in recognition of the fact that 11% of its 60,000 volunteers were men. In 2013, it changed its name to Royal Voluntary Service , to further dispel the myth that it is an organisation for women only; currently about 5% of its volunteers are men. On 24 March 2020, in response to COVID-19 ,
1645-456: The railway station in Headcorn, Kent was an especially busy place for feeding returning soldiers before they dispersed—a spit was installed so that meat could be roasted on the spot. The WVS also played a vital part during the Blitz bombings of British cities. By the time of the Blitz, women in the WVS were adept at providing food and drink around the clock. While ARP wardens and firemen fought
1692-498: The services within them were taken on by members of staff and local services (such as Meals on Wheels, Darby and Joan clubs or Hospital Shops) were managed independently. In 2013 Royal Voluntary Service resurrected the centre model, which are now called 'Hubs' and there are 67 spread across Great Britain. The WVS played a key part in the evacuation of civilians from urban areas. The WVS had been asked to pinpoint areas of safety and billeting for evacuated children. Moving children out of
1739-431: The thick green/grey Harris tweed from which they were produced was supplied by Harrods . The uniform was not free however, and a full suit uniform, coat, hat and scarf cost £9 4s 7d in 1940, about two weeks of the average man's wages. The first free WVS uniform would not be introduced until 1953 when those WVS members who were part of the Civil Defence Corps were issued with a free dress, beret and overcoat. The uniform
1786-724: The world set up their own versions during the war, with the assistance of the British WVS. The most successful of these was formed in 1942 in India, especially in Bengal, which had during the war a membership of over 10,000 and continued into the 1950s. In the US the American Women's Voluntary Services was started soon after the start of the war in Europe by Alice Throckmorton McLean , who had become familiar with
1833-572: Was Region 11 and London Region 12. Each Region had a Regional Administrator who was paid for by the Home Office. Under this each county had a County Organiser and 'staff' and below that were the Centres. During and after the Second World War there were almost 2,000 WVS centres around Great Britain (and in Northern Ireland during the war), each at the sharp end of providing help to their communities. Each
1880-427: Was a voluntary organisation, and it was Lady Reading's vision that there would be no ranks. It was perhaps the only organisation where you could find a Duchess and a charlady working side by side. While many members of the WVS mucked in on pretty much all tasks, an organisation without any hierarchy would not have worked so, while there were no ranks, there were titles. Women were recruited for specific tasks, whether that
1927-484: Was fitted between the driver and navigator and could be used to communicate with personnel on foot. These vehicles were fitted with hard tops with side windows. The Radiac operator would gather radiation level measurements that would be analysed together with wind patterns by the intelligence section. The field cable party Land Rovers were soft-tops towing Brockhouse trailers with both cable and poles, so that cables could be carried over roads. Establishment of communications
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1974-624: Was founded in 1938 by Stella Isaacs, Marchioness of Reading , as a British women's organisation to recruit women into the Air Raid Precautions (ARP) services to help in the event of War. On 16 May 1938, the British government set out the objectives of the Women's Voluntary Service for Civil Defence : It was seen "as the enrolment of women for Air Raid Precaution Services of Local Authorities, to help to bring home to every household what air attack may mean, and to make known to every household [in
2021-596: Was never established in Northern Ireland . Each Corps Authority established its own Division of the corps. Each division was divided into several sections: In London the City of London and London boroughs were Corps Authorities, but their divisions only had Headquarters, Warden and Welfare Sections. The London County Council organised the Rescue and Ambulance and First Aid Sections centrally and also shared responsibility for
2068-472: Was not compulsory, except for those carrying out certain roles (such as manning a mobile canteen) and many members wore WVS overalls or just their membership badge. The WVS uniform changed very little over the years, the first change was in 1966, when the cut of the suits was altered to make them more fashionable, and then in the 1970s polyesters were introduced. WRVS ceased to be a uniformed organisation in 1998 and today volunteers can wear their own clothes (and
2115-415: Was one of the first priorities. Other vehicles included rescue trucks, equipped with a wide range of rescue equipment and trained staff with Rescue Manpacks, and welfare vehicles, as well as ambulances. The Industrial Civil Defence Service was a similar organisation to the Civil Defence Corps, but separate from it. Every industrial or commercial undertaking which employed two hundred or more people could form
2162-436: Was prominently positioned within a town or village and was run by a Centre Organiser appointed by Headquarters in London. Each Centre Organiser had a team of members who were responsible for different aspect of WVS work e.g. evacuation, Training, Food or Clothing. Under their direction were the 'ordinary' members. While Centre Organisers had ultimate control over the work they did in their areas, they were tightly scrutinised by
2209-520: Was to drive ambulances, join in a knitting work party, or to collect National Savings. Inevitably those women who signed up for one thing often ended up being co-opted for other work, especially if they showed aptitude. The WVS was split into 12 Regions (using the same boundaries as the Civil Defence Corps ) which started with 1 in the NE of England and moved clockwise down the country and back up. Scotland
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