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	argon
	 New Milton  | 
	 
	1 of 10 
	Wed 23rd Nov 2011  5:14pm  
	 
	I think this is for Rob.  Did the city have a military barracks before the Great War and how long was it established. To go further back than that, was there some military presence, for example, militia during the Napoleonic wars? 
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| Wartime and the Blitz - Coventry's military history | |
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	morgana
	 the secret garden  | 
	 
	2 of 10 
	Wed 23rd Nov 2011  5:38pm  
	 
	If this is any help to you I do know Radford was a Roman settlement hence where it got its name from   
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| Wartime and the Blitz - Coventry's military history | |
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	TonyS
	 Coventry  | 
	 
	3 of 10 
	Wed 23rd Nov 2011  6:28pm  
	 
	I believe there has been a barracks in Smithford Street, Coventry since at least the 1840's (on the site of The Barracks car park in the city centre)
1840's - 4th Dragoon Guards
1850's - 6th Dragoon Guards
1860's - It was home to a Company of Lancers
1870/80/90's - The Royal Artillery
Maybe others can fill in the gaps.
 
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| Wartime and the Blitz - Coventry's military history | |
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	K
	 Somewhere  | 
	 
	4 of 10 
	Wed 23rd Nov 2011  6:31pm  
	 
	I should have thought there would be a militia for a longer period than the Napoleonic Wars, because the militia was often used as an instrument of maintaining public order, as with the Peterloo Massacre in Manchester in 1817.  Militias were a normal part of society before the police were formed.
I'm not sure about a garrison though before 1914.  However the 7th Battalion Royal Warwicks used Coventry's Drill Hall before WWI; and it was a volunteer battalion.  The drill hall was used by the TA in later times, which would have included the 1930s.  See: http://1914-1918.invisionzone.com/forums/index.php?showtopic=520 
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| Wartime and the Blitz - Coventry's military history | |
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	Rob Orland
	 Historic Coventry  | 
	 
	5 of 10 
	Wed 23rd Nov 2011  10:17pm  
	 
	On 23rd Nov 2011  5:14pm, argon said: 
Did the city have a military barracks before the Great War and how long was it established. 
Glad I can be of some use!  | 
| Wartime and the Blitz - Coventry's military history | |
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	argon
	 New Milton Thread starter 
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	6 of 10 
	Thu 24th Nov 2011  2:26pm  
	 
	Thanks for the information everyone. Very comprehensive Rob, can you say when the barracks were demolished?  I saw a photo of soldiers being recruited in 1914 in front of a building but I suppose that could have been the Drill Hall.
To deviate, a mental association to soldiers made me think of rifles. This leads me to ask, probably Dutchman or KeithLesle a question. As youngsters living in Chapelfields we used to play on the rifle fields. (now Allesley Park) does anyone know why they were called that? 
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| Wartime and the Blitz - Coventry's military history | |
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	K
	 Somewhere  | 
	 
	7 of 10 
	Thu 24th Nov 2011  3:44pm  
	 
	Hi argon  
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| Wartime and the Blitz - Coventry's military history | |
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	dutchman
	 Spon End  | 
	 
	8 of 10 
	Fri 25th Nov 2011  11:22pm  
	 
	Here is an article archived from the Evening Telegraph confirming it was once the name for the area:
Rifle Fields gang back together; EVENING TELEGRAPH PHOTOGRAPH LEADS TO REUNION AFTER 60 YEARS.
The term apparently dates back to Saxon times (Allesley was once a Saxon stronghold) and has nothing to do with the modern weapon. I think it refers to farmland from which an income was earned but was not farmed by the owner himself.
 
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| Wartime and the Blitz - Coventry's military history | |
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	argon
	 New Milton Thread starter 
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	9 of 10 
	Sat 26th Nov 2011  5:28pm  
	 
	Thanks Dutchmam. Just looked up etymology of word rifle, means to scrape or rub and so it may have been to scrape (plough) a piece of land. New one on me.  
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| Wartime and the Blitz - Coventry's military history | |
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	K
	 Somewhere  | 
	 
	10 of 10 
	Sat 26th Nov 2011  8:09pm  
	 
	Would never have guessed that!!  
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| Wartime and the Blitz - Coventry's military history | |
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