Homebrew Rules

Saturday, 2 March 2024

Yet more ECW - Soz

It’s been a busy couple of weeks here at Maison Broom, what with building works and getting the garden ready for spring. 

The hobby mojo has disappeared entirely for now, but fortunately gaming of sorts has continued through remote stuff with Max Foy and my ECW campaign - an update of which I present below.

Background fluff update.

King Charles was greatly disappointed by the Autumn reversal in the south west and reluctantly instructed Hopton to consolidate the gains he’d made rather than advancing to link up with the Royalist forces around Bristol. 

Fortunately for Hopton all eyes at court were soon focussed on the rapidly approaching army of General Waller. In a few short months the man had marched almost unopposed across the midlands and had garrisoned Banbury and a sympathetic Coventry - right on the doorstep of Charles’ new Birmingham capital. 

Such a situation could not be allowed to stand and the Kings nephew Rupert of The Rhine led elements of the new Birmingham field army to interdict Waller’s extensive lines of supply. By mid December the situation had become untenable and Waller withdrew in good order back towards London. Both abandoned sites were garrisoned by the King within a week of Wallers withdrawal but Coventry, a hotbed of Parliamentary sentiment, was to prove an ongoing problem with numerous acts of dissent and constant heavy handed suppression required to maintain order there.

Anxious to retain some credit at court Hopton eventually coordinated a daring seaborne raid on the isolated Parliamentary garrison in Pembroke south Wales. The destruction caused by his landing parties was only minor but its purpose was a mere diversion, for the main blow came from royalist units marshalled in Carmarthen. The towns distracted defenders were caught off guard and the town fell within hours, extinguishing the last pocket of Parliamentary influence in the Principality. 

In some ways this action was a copy of landings effected by Parliament earlier in November. On that occasion their forces landed by arrangement with sympathisers in Liverpool and by the time Waller had begun to withdraw from the midlands uprisings in Manchester and Preston had raised their own milita and secured the two towns for Parliament's cause.

At the end of the year the situation had largely stabilised and bad weather eventually forced both of the major combatants into winter quarters. Despite having failed to secure an outright victory over each other both sides had cause for some celebration. The King had secured a new capital, and the enormous industrial potential of both Bristol and the midlands - his army though modest in size slowly filling out as recruits drifted in from Welsh towns that were ‘squeezed’ into open support of the Monarch.

Apart from victory in the first major battle, Pym and the Parliamentarians had secured London, opened a second front in the north west and unsurprisingly, given popular sentiment in the region, seen the formation of an Eastern Association of towns geographically secure from the Kings forces. The only fly in the ointment was an unexpected outbreak of belligerent neutrality around Guildford that soon spread to neighbouring Tunbridge Wells. 

On one incursion to secure unpaid taxes, a regiment of trained band soldiers was turned back by nearly 4,000 angry country folk armed with home made weapons and a banner proclaiming…


In Birmingham a new monthly news sheet was launched and its second edition seized on the south eastern discontent with some relish.

The Good burghers of Guildford give Parliament ‘the bird’

With the discontent rumbling on Winter slowly gave way to Spring. New army’s were assembling and plans laid for victory in ’43. 

Areas under control Dec 31st 1642


Toodleooh.



23 comments:

  1. Excellent right up. And I love the pamphlet! You've done this before?

    What is happening in Kent is a sign that the ordinary people of this land want to shake off the "a'woke" ways of the Round Heads. Be rid of those new fangled, foreign practices from London, dominated as it is by Puritanists! The King's counsellors, Lords Braverman and Anderson of Ashfield are surely right!!

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    1. Hi mate, yeah I did the odd pamphlet or two on the old campaign, helped by the fact that I’ve a goodly (digital) store of woodcut images. I’m a sucker for 17th century propaganda leaflets, lol. I wouldn’t like to comment on the rights and wrongs of this particular matter at the moment because I have to remain impartial. I’ll try to cobble a new one together from either side when events produce something worthy of record. Mercurious Aulicus was actually a Royalist leaning newsheet but it didn’t go into circulation until much later on.

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  2. Has it really been that long since we had a game? Well, Italian Wars coming up at a remote table (not so) near to you soon.

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    1. Yeah Jon, time flies and all that. What I have found is that after playing remotely with either yourself or Tony is that solo gaming (which has been my staple for the last 40 years), now seems sort of…meh…by comparison.

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  3. A good round-out to the year and from a campaign perspective, both sides are well positioned for another year of intrigue.

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    1. Hi Norm, yeah both sides have gone for a very conventional historical carve up of the country so far. I’m looking forward to a few surprises.

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  4. Great background on the ongoing campaign, JBM. I expect a lot of field action in the coming months!

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  5. Lots of great background fluff. And cool posters that invoke the era.

    The best cure of declining hobby mojo is a deadline of some sort. Makes one focus. 😝😀

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    1. Hey Stew, that’s where being retired is not an advantage. These days I’m very deadline averse. lol. Mojos come and go - everyone goes through it at one time or another. I’ll mess around with some space nazis or other nonsense for a bit until things pick up again.

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  6. Your mojo may have gone South so to speak, but a great update on the campaign and loved those leaflets. This tim elast year my mojo went too and I just waited until I was in the mood again, which took many a good month. But like you, being retired (but a parent/carer), I'm somewhat deadline averse too!

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    1. Thanks Steve - I’ve been dicking around with model airships again, where there’s no pressure to complete anything and no one is even vaguely interested, hobby wise. I’m trying the thin end of the wedge trick. Before you know it I’ll be painting AWI units again without realising it. That’ll fool that stupid mojo of mine!

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    2. Well I for one enjoyed your model airships, some of which I tried to buy at Colours but they didn't have them on the stand. Larger than I thought they would be but they did look damned cool!

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  7. I do like the news sheets you throw into the campaign background.

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    1. Thanks Peter, I have a lot of fun compiling these!

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  8. Splendid stuff JBM…
    Top work on the propaganda…

    All the best. Aly

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    1. Cheers Aly, think of them as early versions of the Sun and the Mirror. No topless birds but plenty of witch dunking and signs and portents. Lol.

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  9. Entertaining alternative history and nice pamphlet, space nazis and airships sounds interesting, no sign of your late 17th century nautical campaign again?
    Best Iain caveadsum1471

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    1. Hi Iain - nearly all the ships were damaged beyond repair during our move to France. I have some PP replacements but they’re well down the painting queue - behind the airships as it happens. Now if only my painting mojo would just return….

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  10. Thanks you for sharing the wonderful update & campaign news. Like you, my painting mojo has completely disappeared for now. After all of these decades I trust that it will eventually reappear. Meanwhile, also like you, remote gaming keeps me going. I’m my case, it’s nice to have someone else to do the heavy lifting for awhile.
    ~ Tom T

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    1. Hi Tom, thankfully I have a doctors note that prevents me from heavy lifting at all times.Lol. I’ve cheated my mojo a bit by painting airships this month which we all know is not proper painting, so it doesn’t seem to mind that. Trick’ll be to slip in the odd AWI figure when it’s not looking.

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  11. Posts like this are why I, as an ignorant colonial, don't understand the ECW but find it quite fascinating.

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    1. Cheers for dropping by and leaving a comment. I find the social and political aspects of the period are every bit as fascinating as the military bits.

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