Junior Leaders
Junior Leaders was the name given to some Boys' Service training Regiments of the British Army that took entrants from the age of 15 who would eventually move on to join adult units at the age of seventeen and a half.[1] Their aim was to produce and train the future Non-commissioned officers for their Regiment or Corps.[2]
History
Junior Leaders' Regiments began in the mid-1950s, growing from the earlier system of 'Boy Service', and continued into the 1990s. There were various Junior Leader Regiments for entrants to the various Regiments and Corps of the Army. These included:
- The All Arms Junior Leaders' Regiment, All Arms Junior Leaders' Regiment[3]
- The Junior Infantryman Battalion (1967)[4]
- The Infantry Junior Leaders Battalion[5]
- The Junior Parachute Company[6]
- Junior Leaders Regiment, Royal Armoured Corps[2]
- Junior Leaders Battalion Royal Army Ordnance Corps[7]
- Junior Leaders Regiment, Royal Corps of Transport
- Junior Leaders Regiment, Royal Army Service Corps
- The Junior Leaders Regiment Royal Artillery[8]
- The Junior Leaders Regiment, (JLR), Royal Corps of Signals[1]
- The Junior Leaders Regiment Royal Engineers[9]
Training
Training was provided in the following categories:
Education Junior Leaders were given the opportunity to study for and pass the then Army Certificate of First Class Education, thus qualifying them to eventually achieve Warrant Officer and Commissioned Officer rank. Junior Leaders could also study for O levels.
Military and Trade Training. Junior Leaders were given full military training, teaching them the skills of drill, Weapons handling, shooting and physical training. Most junior soldiers also undertook Trade training which saw many of them being posted to their Regular Units with Trade qualifications under their belt. Junior Leaders initially trained for 2 years made up of 6 Terms from the age of 15 but the training period was reduced to 12 months after the school leaving was increased to 16 years of age.
Weapons. Junior Leaders were taught to shoot and drill with their issue rifle, initially the Lee–Enfield, later the L1A1 Self-Loading Rifle and then the L85A1. They were also taught bayonet drills and how to shoot the SMG, LMG, GPMG, Carl Gustav and grenade throwing.
Trade Training. Junior Leaders were trained in the main operating trades within their chosen corps.
Leadership, Adventure Training and Sports Special emphasis was given to leadership, important for future SNCOs. All forms of active pursuits were encouraged and included canoeing, sailing, rock climbing, map reading, cooking in the field and survival in arduous conditions.
Junior Leaders also attended military and civilian Outward Bound courses in the UK and abroad. A wide variety of sporting activities were available and competitions with military and civilian youth organisations in the UK and abroad were encouraged.
Junior soldiers today
Today, the British Army recruits junior soldiers to the Army Foundation College, where they are given basic and specialist training, but they are not deployed on adult service until reaching legal age.[10] This is markedly different from the old Boy Soldiers of the 19th Century, who might go into the field alongside adult soldiers in a variety of non-combat roles, such as buglers, but not dissimilar from the old Army apprenticeship schemes. Today's junior soldiers are titled depending on the Corps to which they belong; Junior Infantryman, for example. The Army Foundation College trains junior soldiers in the skills required for their roles as private soldiers in their respective Regiment or Corps, but not specifically for the role of senior NCO or Warrant Officer.
The
The Royal Air Force Air Cadets runs a course also named Junior leaders, aimed at cadets aged 17 and over, with the aim of delivering the highest standard of Leadership to cadets using infantry tactics as a vehicle. The Course is also open to any Cadet from the MOD sponsored cadet forces (Community Cadet Forces, Combined Cadet Force).
References
- ^ a b "Official History of the Junior Leaders' Regiment Royal Corps. of Signals" (PDF). [dead link]
- ^ a b "A Brief History of the Junior Leaders' Regiment RAC". Archived from the original on 9 May 2012. Retrieved 8 May 2012.
- ^ "About the A.A.J.L.R."
- ^ "IBB & Infantry Junior Leaders Battalion".
- ^ "The Infantry Junior Leaders Battalion".
- ^ "The Junior Parachute Company". Archived from the original on 13 December 2013. Retrieved 10 May 2012.
- ^ "A Brief History of the Junior Leaders Battalion Royal Army Ordnance Corps 1945 – 1982 Royal Army Ordnance Corps".
- ^ "The Junior Leaders Regiment RA". Archived from the original on 13 March 2013.
- ^ "REA Junior Leaders". Archived from the original on 17 March 2012. Retrieved 8 May 2012.
- ^ "Ministry of Defence: British Army Army Colleges" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 3 April 2012. Retrieved 8 May 2012.
- ^ "Junior Leaders parade". The Royal Gazette. City of Hamilton, Pembroke, Bermuda. 20 December 1969.
- ^ "The Bermuda Regiment Junior Leaders". The Bermuda Regiment. Archived from the original on 29 August 2012.
- ^ The Royal Gazette: Cadet Corp to be replaced as budget savings are made. Published 21 March 2012 (Updated 21 March 2012)
- ^ The Bermuda Regiment: Archived 2012-08-29 at the Wayback Machine The Bermuda Cadet Corps
- ^ The Bermuda Regiment: Archived 2012-08-28 at the Wayback Machine Request for volunteer instructors for the Junior Leaders
- ^ Junior Leaders, Regiment Team Up For Exercise. Bernews. 24 March, 2014
- ^ Outward Bound, Bermuda. Our People: Archived 2016-11-19 at the Wayback Machine Lt Col BN Gonsalves, ED, tacsc
- ^ "A BILL entitled ROYAL BERMUDA REGIMENT (JUNIOR LEADERS) ACT 2015. Parliament of Bermuda" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 18 October 2016. Retrieved 15 October 2016.