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Trained band

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336:, last accessed 27 Oct 2018: "Although the basic tactical unit in all the colonies was the company, or trainband, regional variations and changes over time were as important as the superficial uniformity. No standardized company size existed, some companies containing as few as sixty-five men and others as many as two hundred. Some trainbands elected their officers, but in others the governors appointed them. Southern colonies, with widely dispersed populations, often organized companies on a countywide basis, while in New England, with its towns and villages, individual communities contained their own trainbands. As populations increased and the number of trainbands grew, colonies organized companies into regiments to preserve efficient management." 58: 500: 88:, they were supposed to drill on a regular basis, although this was rarely the case in practice. The regular army was formed from the Trained Bands in the event of war, though the inability or unwillingness of many of the bands to serve outside of their home regions often left the army short on manpower compared to the paper strength implied by the Trained Bands rolls. They later became common in the 22: 211:
colonial militia units were usually referred to as "train bands" or, sometimes, "trained bands". Typically, each town would elect three officers to lead its train band with the ranks of captain, lieutenant and ensign. As the populations of towns varied widely, larger towns usually had more than one
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In the early American colonies the trained band was the most basic tactical unit. However, no standard company size existed and variations were wide. As population grew these companies were organised into regiments to allow better management. But trainbands were not combat units. Generally, upon
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Founded in 1572, and organised by county, it was not until the 'Exact Militia Programme' of 1625 that they began to have regular training and weapons drill. Even then, standards varied considerably, and depended on the level of financial support by the local gentry. Although
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On December 13, 1636 the Massachusetts Militia was organised into three regiments - North, South and East. As there are National Guard units descendants of these regiments, this date is used as the "birthday" of the
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The Public Records of the State of Connecticut ... with the Journal of the Council of Safety ... and an Appendix: Pub. in Accordance with a Resolution of the General Assembly, by Charles J. Hoadly
125:. In 1588, the Trained Bands consisted of 79,798 men, categorized by their primary weapon: 36% arquebusiers, 6% musketeers, 16% bowmen, 26% pikemen, and 16% billmen. 177: 200:
The issue is whether the men "received training" in the modern sense, or whether they were "in the train" or retinue or were otherwise organised around a
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reaching a certain age a man was required to join the local trainband in which he received periodic training for the next couple of decades. In wartime,
163:, but were often unwilling to serve outside their home areas. They were rapidly replaced by more professional bodies, the most important being the 520: 530: 350: 217: 427: 393: 411: 178:
military forces were formed by selecting men from trainbands on an individual basis and then forming them into a fighting unit
465: 275: 349:, Dover Publications, Inc., Mineola, N.Y., an unabridged republication of the work originally published in 1910, p. 658, 187:
train-band, i.e. train'd band, a band of trained men, Cowper, John Gilpin, st. I, and used by Dryden and Clarendon (Todd)
525: 132:, together with a muster roll by county. This shows large variations in size, equipment and training; the largest was 364: 490: 129: 152: 121:, there was considerable reluctance to serve outside their counties, and a proportion were armed only with 504: 437:
Warton, Jonathan (April 1997). "Ludlow's Trained Band: A Study of Militiamen in Early Stuart England".
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https://books.google.com/books?id=jeeGAAAAQBAJ&q=Train-band#v=snippet&q=Train-band&f=false
114: 62: 332:, New York: Free Press; London: Collier Macmillan, 1984, Library of Congress bibliographic record, 221: 183:
The exact derivation and usage is not clear. A nineteenth-century dictionary says, under "Train":
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A standard drill book was issued in February 1638, which was used throughout the 1639 to 1653
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train band. In the middle of the 1600s train bands began to be referred to as companies.
164: 40: 514: 220:, despite the fact that citizen militias in the American Colonies date back to the 473: 283: 208: 141: 97: 160: 145: 133: 35: 330:
For the common defense: A military history of the United States of America
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tried to assemble armies of around 30,000 militia for the 1639 and 1640
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The Bishops' Wars: Charles I's campaigns against Scotland 1638–1640
81: 56: 155:, the Trained Bands provided the bulk of the forces used by both 15: 306:"Sample text for Library of Congress control number 94005199" 334:
http://catdir.loc.gov/catdir/samples/simon052/94005199.html
140:, with 8,000, increased in 1642 to 20,000. Counties like 193:
Skeat's Etymological Dictionary of the English Language
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State Formation in Early Modern England, C.1550-1700
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Journal of the Society for Army Historical Research
420:Rebellion: Britain's First Stuart Kings, 1567-1642 347:An Etymological Dictionary of the English Language 406:, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1994, 185: 104:, elements of which remain in existence today. 8: 29:It has been suggested that this article be 96:. Similar organisations include the Dutch 92:, where they are normally referred to as 369:. Case, Lockwood & Brainard Company. 240: 151:In the early stages of the 1642 to 1646 495: 233: 328:Allan R. Millett and Peter Maslowski: 7: 108:Trained Bands in England and Wales 14: 498: 20: 388:. Cambridge University Press. 1: 521:Infantry units and formations 204:as in horse-drawn artillery. 136:, which had 12,000 men, then 46:Proposed since February 2024. 531:Militia of the United States 353:, last accessed 27 Oct 2018. 72:were companies of part-time 547: 384:Braddick, Michael (2000). 130:Wars of the Three Kingdoms 148:had fewer than 500 men. 261:J. Tincey and R. Hook, 153:First English Civil War 402:Mark Charles Fissell, 198: 66: 60: 418:Harris, Tim (2014). 363:Connecticut (1894). 222:Jamestown settlement 207:In the 17th century 171:American train bands 63:London Trained Bands 263:The Armada Campaign 252:Fissell, Chapter 5. 526:Militia of England 67: 345:Walter W. Skeat: 90:American colonies 53: 52: 48: 538: 503: 502: 501: 494: 485: 483: 481: 472:. Archived from 454: 433: 399: 371: 370: 360: 354: 343: 337: 326: 320: 319: 317: 316: 302: 296: 295: 293: 291: 282:. Archived from 272: 266: 259: 253: 250: 244: 238: 202:military "train" 196: 161:Parliamentarians 61:A member of the 44: 24: 23: 16: 546: 545: 541: 540: 539: 537: 536: 535: 511: 510: 509: 499: 497: 489: 479: 477: 466:"Trained Bands" 464: 461: 445:(365): 86–102. 436: 430: 417: 396: 383: 380: 375: 374: 362: 361: 357: 344: 340: 327: 323: 314: 312: 304: 303: 299: 289: 287: 276:"Trained Bands" 274: 273: 269: 260: 256: 251: 247: 239: 235: 230: 197: 191: 173: 110: 84:. Organised by 49: 25: 21: 12: 11: 5: 544: 542: 534: 533: 528: 523: 513: 512: 508: 507: 505:British Empire 487: 486: 476:on 6 June 2023 460: 459:External links 457: 456: 455: 434: 429:978-0199209002 428: 415: 400: 395:978-0521783460 394: 379: 376: 373: 372: 355: 338: 321: 310:catdir.loc.gov 297: 286:on 6 June 2023 267: 265:(1996), p. 47. 254: 245: 243:, p. 194. 232: 231: 229: 226: 218:National Guard 189: 172: 169: 165:New Model Army 109: 106: 51: 50: 28: 26: 19: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 543: 532: 529: 527: 524: 522: 519: 518: 516: 506: 496: 492: 475: 471: 467: 463: 462: 458: 452: 448: 444: 440: 435: 431: 425: 421: 416: 413: 412:0-521-34520-0 409: 405: 401: 397: 391: 387: 382: 381: 377: 368: 367: 359: 356: 352: 348: 342: 339: 335: 331: 325: 322: 311: 307: 301: 298: 285: 281: 277: 271: 268: 264: 258: 255: 249: 246: 242: 241:Braddick 2000 237: 234: 227: 225: 223: 219: 213: 210: 205: 203: 195:(Oxford 1879) 194: 188: 184: 181: 179: 170: 168: 166: 162: 158: 154: 149: 147: 143: 139: 135: 131: 126: 124: 120: 119:Bishops' Wars 116: 107: 105: 103: 102:Swiss militia 99: 95: 91: 87: 83: 79: 75: 71: 70:Trained Bands 64: 59: 55: 47: 42: 38: 37: 32: 27: 18: 17: 478:. Retrieved 474:the original 469: 442: 438: 419: 403: 385: 365: 358: 346: 341: 329: 324: 313:. Retrieved 309: 300: 288:. Retrieved 284:the original 279: 270: 262: 257: 248: 236: 214: 206: 199: 192: 186: 182: 174: 150: 127: 111: 93: 69: 68: 54: 45: 34: 470:BCW Project 280:BCW Project 209:New England 515:Categories 315:2023-08-30 228:References 142:Shropshire 100:, and the 98:Schutterij 94:Trainbands 224:in 1607. 157:Royalists 146:Glamorgan 134:Yorkshire 115:Charles I 36:Trainband 480:13 March 451:44232985 290:13 March 190:—  123:longbows 422:. OUP. 378:Sources 78:England 74:militia 65:in 1643 41:Discuss 491:Portal 449:  426:  410:  392:  138:London 86:county 31:merged 447:JSTOR 82:Wales 33:with 482:2020 424:ISBN 408:ISBN 390:ISBN 292:2020 159:and 80:and 144:or 76:in 39:. ( 517:: 468:. 443:91 441:. 308:. 278:. 180:. 167:. 493:: 484:. 453:. 432:. 414:. 398:. 318:. 294:. 43:)

Index

merged
Trainband
Discuss

London Trained Bands
militia
England
Wales
county
American colonies
Schutterij
Swiss militia
Charles I
Bishops' Wars
longbows
Wars of the Three Kingdoms
Yorkshire
London
Shropshire
Glamorgan
First English Civil War
Royalists
Parliamentarians
New Model Army
military forces were formed by selecting men from trainbands on an individual basis and then forming them into a fighting unit
military "train"
New England
National Guard
Jamestown settlement
Braddick 2000

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