Tuesday, 24 May 2016

Introducing The 2nd Madras Coastal Battalion 1780

Introducing The 2nd Madras Coastal Battalion 1780


Colonel. Charles Reynolds I         "Useless, Pink Gin drinker"
2iC Major Williams.  III               "The thundering Pig"
Adjutant Captain Ashworth. I       "Cricket bat Trousers Lustful" "Big Feet"
Subadar Major Haidar Sikh. III    "No sense of humour whatsoever."
Ensign "cannonball" Sugden I

1st Company, the Grenadiers
Lt Quentin Whitemoor. Status II     "the Idiot"
Subadar Hazra Singh III                  "Huge Moustache," the actual commander of this company.
Jemadar II. Ramit Uppar                 "Ram-it Amit the lecherous cad"
Havildar-Major I. Virat Kohli. III   "Never happy" "Intolerant"
47 men. Polished. Fair shots.
East India Flintlock Musket, 46ins, bayonet.

2nd Company
Lt Erasmus Quilp III                        "Sick Leave"
Subadar III. Shikhar Dhawan          "The Big Man"
Havildar I. Ajinkya Rahane             "Bold" "Religious"
Havildar I. Suresh Raina                 "Suicidally brave"
66 men. Rabble Poor shots.
East India Flintlock Musket, 46ins, bayonet.

3rd Company
Subadar Uncle Shami                       "Everyone`s Uncle"
Jemadar II. Ravichandran Ashwin    "Bold" "Fierce"
Havildar-Major I.  Rohit Sharma      "well combed Mustache"
Havildar I.  Ravi Khapoor                "Fierce" "Scars"
54 Men. Rabble Poor shots.
East India Flintlock Musket, 46ins, bayonet.

4th Company
Lt Miss Gloria Beaumont II               "Shot in the Dhoolie, wears a sari"
Subadar III. Vikram Rajeshwar          "The real boss"
Jemadar II.   Uncle Shaeed                 "Everyone`s Uncle"
Havildar-Major I. Farhan Acktar        "Suicidally brave"
Havildar I. Saif Ali Khan                    "Very thin and dour" 
61 Men.  Rabble poor shots.
East India Flintlock Musket, 46ins, bayonet.

5th Company
Lt Mr Hamish Macintosh III             "Suicidally brave, a Scotchman"
Jemadar II. Viktra Manulaglan          "The Big Mustache" "Moody"
Havildar II Charu Ghrant                   "The charmer""
39 Men.  Drilled,  fair shots.
East India Flintlock Musket, 46ins, bayonet.

6th Company
Captain Mr Gunnar Grahame III            "Brainy, Dark and sarcastic"
Subadar III.  Singh Dhoni                      "No sense of humour" "Middle aged"
Jemadar II. Varun Aaron                        "Incredibly short sighted" "Bold"  
Havildar-Major I. Mohit Sharma            "A coward of massive proportions"
Havildar I. Yuvraj Singh                         "Very thin and dour"
48 Men.  Drilled, fair shots
East India Flintlock Musket, 46ins, bayonet. 

7th Company. The Light Company
Lt Mr Parky Parkin. I                               "Lanky Idiot"
Subadar III. Ramesh Rampal                   "A big mustache"
Jemadar II. Arjun Rampal                        "Suicidally brave"
Havildar-Major I. Om Parkash                  "Dark and sarcastic
Havildar I  Dilip Fairbanks Jr                   "battalion athlete and acrobat" 
59 Men.  Drilled, Skirmish trained, fair shots
East India Flintlock Musket, 46ins, bayonet.

Conductor of Ordnance. Ravindra Jadeja
Sub conductor of Commissariat and Public Works Departments.  Bhuvneshwar Kumar Noor
Supply Merchant Nookie Noor, with his boys Max and Paddy.


Civilians in the campaign

Donesh Trump, Dutch Indian fast talker and failed businessman, enemy of Nookie Noor.
The Rani of Bhalti, Courtesan.
Princess Jhelli of Bhuna, Indian patriot and rabble rouser
Brother Belcher of the Wigan Missionary society, Lecherous coward
The sacred cow of Pornomalee, strictly speaking an animal but woe betide anyone who hurts it!
Lady Wesley, wife of the Governor of Madras
Miss Linda Lovelace, pure and innocent daughter of the Parson of Ft George
The sacred goat of Bhuna, worshiped by the strange goat cult.
The Guru of the goat, head of the cult of nascent thugee stranglers.
The Mad Fakir, Ram Shackle, Randi's brother, and patriotic rabble rouser


Notes on the Sepoy army

Sepoy 
In the EIC/Indian Army an ordinary native infantryman equivalent to a Sowar in the Indian Cavalry.
Silladar
Indian cavalryman who provided his own arms and horse instead of having them supplied by Government - the Silladar system originated in the irregular regiments of native cavalry but was extended to the regular cavalry of the Bengal and Bombay Armies in 1861.
Sowar
In EIC/Indian Army an ordinary native cavalryman equivalent to a Sepoy in the Indian Infantry and to a Trooper in the British Cavalry.
Matross
Inferior class of soldier in the EIC Artillery ranking below a Gunner.
Naik Indian Army rank equivalent to corporal.
Lance-Naik NCO in the Indian Infantry equivalent in rank to a British Lance-Corporal.
Havildar Indian Army rank equivalent to sergeant.
Havildar-Major
Most senior NCO rank in the Indian Infantry equivalent to a Sergeant-Major in the British Infantry and to a Kot Dafadar in the Indian Cavalry.
Dafadar
NCO in the Indian Cavalry equivalent in rank to a Havildar in the Indian Infantry.
Lance-Dafadar NCO in the Indian Cavalry equivalent in rank to a Naik in the Indian Infantry
Kot Dafadar Most senior NCO rank in the Indian Cavalry, equivalent to a Troop Sergeant-Major in the British Cavalry and to a Havildar-Major in the Indian Infantry.
Warrant Officers 
Officers appointed by warrant. In the EIC/Indian Army they held the ranks of Sub-Conductor and Conductor and were intermediate in rank between Non-Commissioned Officers and Departmental Officers. In addition, from 1882 a small number of British Army warrant officers with the rank of Sergeant-Major or Quarter Master Sergeant were appointed to non-departmental posts in the Indian Army.
Conductor
Higher of the two appointments within the Warrant Officer rank in the EIC/Indian Army, the lower being that of Sub-Conductor. Conductors and Sub Conductors worked mainly in the Ordnance, Commissariat and Public Works Departments. Conductors were eligible for promotion to the higher grade of Departmental Officer.
Sub-Conductor
Lower of the two appointments within the Warrant Officer rank in the EIC/Indian Army, the higher being that of Conductor. Sub-Conductors and Conductors worked mainly in the Ordnance, Commissariat and Public Works Departments. Before 1860 Sub-Conductors were recruited from NCOs of the Town Major's List/Effective Supernumeraries, after 1860 from NCOs of the Unattached List.
Jemadar 
In the EIC/Indian Army the most junior rank of Indian Commissioned Officer, equivalent to a Lieutenant in the British Army.
Ressaidar Rank of Indian cavalry officer intermediate between Jemadar and Risaldar (see below). In April 1921 the rank of Ressaidar was abolished, all existing Ressaidars being regraded as Risaldars.
Risaldar Rank of Indian cavalry officer equivalent to a Subadar in the Indian Infantry. Until April 1921 it was intermediate between Ressaidar and Risaldar-Major (see below), after that date between Jemadar and Risaldar-Major. Risaldar-Major
The most senior rank of Indian cavalry officer, equivalent to a Subadar-Major in the Indian Infantry.
Subadar
Rank of Indian infantry officer intermediate between Jemadar and Subadar-Major, equivalent to a Captain in the British Army and to a Risaldar in the Indian Cavalry.
Subadar-Major
Most senior rank of Indian infantry officer, equivalent to a Risaldar-Major in the Indian cavalry.



Raising the 2nd Madras
Recruiting the Companies.

1 – 2  50 + 5D6 
3 – 4  40 + 4D6 
5 - 6   30 + 3D6 

1 Rabble 
2 Rabble 
3 Rabble
4 Drilled 
5 Drilled
6 Polished

(only one result of Polished is allowed and these troops will form the Grenadier company)

Dice Result 
1-4 Poor shots 
5-6 Acceptable shots

Each Company has the following complement  of Officers and NCOs

1 x Lieutenant,
1 x Subadar
up to 2 x Jemadar
up to 2 x Havildar. 
On a D6 roll of 5 or 6 a senior or "Major" may be added to these ranks, as Havildar-Major, meaning a senior Havildar.
The Officers names are generated fro the TV Show "It Ain't Half Hot Mum," whilst my Indian Army  Officers and NCOs are mainly Bollywood actors.

Character.
SP2 provides an excellent character generation system to give you a fully rounded idea of the Officer and the help or hindrance he will be supplying during the game.   My games are however solo, and although I need and idea of the nature of my characters I also need to be kept a little in the dark, until my dice rolls reveal some hidden truth during a game.  

To help me achieve this I used the basic characters from the TV show for my European Officers, and a few simple dice rolls on a table for the Indian Army Characters.  They will keep these traits, but may have hidden depths I am unaware of.  


 I came up with this character trait table, that works for me:



6
5
4
3
2
1
6
Acne
Lanky
Agitated
Humble
 Uncle
Unhinged
5
Long moustache
Short sighted
Intolerant
Cautious
 charmer
Useless Idiot
4
scars
Drinker
Bloodthirsty
Bold
 Thin and dour
Stupid
3
Big feet
Hot Tempered
Middle-aged
No sense of humour
 Sarcastic
Cad
2
Clumsy
Moody
Man of few words
Brave
Never Happy
Lustful
1
Athletic
Loud
Fierce
Religious
Bristling Mustache
Cowardly

2 comments:

  1. Excellent stuff. Heartened to read of the return of "Sick leave" Quilp and the sacred goat of Bhuna. Tell me, is Havildar-Major I. Mohit Sharma truly a coward of massive proportions? That is, blessed by Shiva in the janghea department or just very, very cowardly? I think we should be told.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Ah Most Excellent Doctor, ever the clinician, as you point out Mohit is obviously a well endowed and most well proportioned coward. His medical record shall be amended accordingly, and this will obviously be a factor in an upcoming game. Perhaps the Courtesan Jhani of Bhalti will finally be interested in one of my Officers?
    A Havildar Major is the equivalent of a Sergeant Major, so clearly anyone who attains that rank, yet has only a level 1 has some issues.
    I`m concerned about the hotpants my 2nd Madras wear since Mohit Sharma has this issue.
    Actually I really wanted to call him Sharma the charmer, but the dice decreed otherwise.
    6th Company will begin calling him Mohit "Long Shlong" forthwith.

    ReplyDelete