
Jamaica.
World War One.
1914
The United Kingdom with France were party to a treaty to defend Belgian neutrality.
This was compromised by the German invasion of Belgium and therefore the United Kingdom
declared war on Germany. World War One (The Great War) broke out on the 1st August 1914.
Jamaica took part in the War, sending to the front about ten thousand men. As usual during
a conflict of this nature Jamaica suffered from a lack of shipping to take her products to
other countries. In time Jamaica was able to resume her regular trade in sugar, rum,
tobacco, coffee and cocoa, which were admitted into the English market on better terms
than the same things produced in foreign countries.
When the war started, Martial Law was immediately proclaimed in Jamaica and a body of
troops called the Jamaica Reserve Regiment was formed for the defence of the island.
On the 14th August, a fund was launched which raised £20,000 by year-end to provide
comforts for British soldiers.
On the 17th September, the Legislative Council voted £50,000 to purchase sugar for
donation to England.
1915
Jamaica began to send volunteers as soldiers to fight in the Great War and a contingent
of 500 men was sent off on the 8th November. Afterwards the Legislative Council took over
the effort.
On the 12th and 13th August a hurricane hit the island; a second occurred on September
25 and 26. Both hurricanes caused a lot of damage to property and agriculture, especially
to bananas.
1916
On the 7th January a second contingent of volunteers was sent off to Britain and this
was followed on the 16th March by a third.
On the 29th March the Legislative Council voted £60,000 a year for 40 years as
Jamaica's contribution to the expenses of the war. Intensive recruitment was started in
all parishes. The fourth contingent sailed to Britain on the 30th September. Other West
Indian islands followed Jamaica's lead in sending men to fight, so the British War Office
resolved to regard all West Indians as one unit to be known as The British West Indies
Regiment.
On the 15th and 16th August a hurricane swept Jamaica.
1917
On the 6th March the Legislative Council introduced compulsory military service, with
every male from 16 to 41 being obliged to register. This was to ensure sufficient soldiers
were available, but the Conscription Law was never put into effect since all the recruits
needed came forward voluntarily. A number of women volunteers also went to England, mainly
to join the nursing services. Five contingents left Jamaica in 1917 bringing the total to
nine contingents in all which comprised of approximately 10,000 men.
In May, some women property-owners were given the right to vote.
In September, still another hurricane hit the island damaging property, banana
plantations and crops. Thus for three successive years the island had not escaped the
ravages of hurricanes .
1918
On the 11th May Sir William Manning left Jamaica to go to Ceylon as Governor. In June,
Sir Leslie Probyn, who had been Governor of Barbados, arrived here as Governor.
On the 11th November an Armistice was signed between Germany and the Allies, chief
nations of which were England, France, U.S.A., Italy and Japan. The war being now
practically over, the Jamaican soldiers began to be sent home. The first lot of them to
return landed in Kingston on the 2nd May 1919, and received a hearty welcome.
Many of the men sent away had died or had been wounded, but most of them had escaped
injury. In Palestine, especially, the 1st and 2nd Battalions of the British West Indies
Regiment (BWIR), most of whom were Jamaicans, had distinguished themselves in fighting the
Turks.

Jamaica Defence Force.
In late 1987, Jamaica's combined armed forces, the Jamaican Defence Force (JDF),
consisted of a ground force supported by small air and coastal patrol contingents. Its
mission was to defend the country against aggression and to support the Jamaica
Constabulary Force (JCF), as required, in maintaining essential services and in protecting
the civil population in the event of a disaster. The JDF also was responsible for coastal
surveillance and air-sea rescue operations. In addition, the JDF has supported anti-drug
operations; since early 1982, JDF Eradication Units have helped to destroy marijuana crops
and illegal air strips. Since the minister of defence portfolio was dropped in the 1970s,
the JDF has been under the minister of national security. As in the other West Indian
islands, the prime minister is the de facto head of the defence forces.
The predominant element in the JDF is the Jamaica Regiment, whose origins go back to
the West India Regiment whose origins date from 1795 and was part of the British Army
establishment. It was used during the various campaigns against revolutionary France, The
War of 1812 and various colonial campaigns in West Africa, as well as during World War I.
The West India Regiment formed the core of the defence force of the short-lived West
Indies Federation in 1959-61. After the federation disintegrated, the First and Third
Battalions became the First and Third Battalions of the Jamaica Regiment. In 1962 the
Jamaica Local Forces (JLF) was formed as one of the conditions under which Jamaica was
granted independence. The JLF soon evolved into the JDF, but the First and Third
Battalions of the JDF retained their historical designations.
In the mid-1980s, the JDF's predominant ground force element consisted of the First
Battalion and a support and service battalion. The First Battalion included the Air Wing
and Coast Guard, as well as a headquarters unit at Up Park Camp in Kingston, an
engineering unit, and other supporting units. Detachments were stationed at the JDF camp
in a facility first established by the British in the mid-nineteenth century at Newcastle,
high in the Blue Mountains, and in "outstations" located in various parts of the
island. The Third Battalion, consisting of part-time volunteers, constituted the ground
force reserve, called the Jamaica National Reserve (JNR). Commanded by a lieutenant
colonel, the JNR, which had 1,030 members in 1986, consisted of a ground force supported
by air and coastal patrol elements organised into an infantry battalion.
Once the sole operational element of the former Ministry of Defence, the JDF, together
with the police, was placed under the Ministry of National Security and Justice in 1974.
The prime minister commanded the JDF through a major general. In 1986 the JDF had a
complement of 1,780 officers and men. In addition, a civilian staff of about 360 included
functional and administrative personnel.
By 1986 JDF ground force equipment was almost exclusively of British origin and
included the SLR rifle, Sterling sub-machinegun, general-purpose machinegun, and twelve
81mm mortars. The army also had a small number of Ferret scout cars, supplemented by
fifteen Cadillac-Gage V-150 Commando wheeled armoured personnel carriers received from the
United States.
The JDF's Air Wing, which was formed in July 1963, was headquartered at Up Park Camp,
with a base at Montego Bay. Expanded and trained successively by the British Army Air
Corps and Canadian Air Force personnel, the Air Wing had a strength of 250 officers and
personnel in 1986. It was equipped for ground force liaison, search and rescue, police
co-operation, survey, and transport missions. In 1986 its inventory included predominantly
American made aircraft, but also some Canadian, British, and French models: five Bell
206A, three Bell 212, and two Aerospatiale Alouette II light helicopters; two of the
Britten-Norman Islander light transports of the short-take-off-and-landing (STOL) type;
one each of DHC-6 Beech KingAir 90 and Beech Duke DHC-6 light transport models; and four
Cessnas, including two 185s and two light transports: the 210 and 337. The aircraft were
well adapted for use in areas of the hilly interior of the country, where there were few
landing fields.
The JDF's coastal patrol element, the Coast Guard, was established at independence. In
1986 it had a complement of about 150 active personnel, including 18 officers and 115
petty officers and personnel under the command of an officer with the rank of lieutenant
commander. It had an additional sixteen personnel in its reserve and thirty in other
ranks. Equipped with predominantly American-made equipment, the Coast Guard modernised its
three 60- ton patrol vessels in 1972-73 and augmented them in 1974 with the 103-ton
multi-purpose transport/patrol vessel HMJS Fort Charles. The Coast Guard operated
from its base at Port Royal in co-operation with the harbourmasters and the harbour patrol
of the JCF. A Coast Guard unit was responsible for maritime anti-smuggling operations. The
JDF's Coast Guard was too small, however, to patrol adequately the island's 1,022
kilometre-long coastline.
Following independence, Jamaica retained a British training mission for the three JDF
components; all JDF officers were trained in Britain. Canada later took over Air Wing
training functions. All Coast Guard officers received training at the Royal Naval College,
Dartmouth. The United States Navy also has provided training assistance for Coast Guard
officers and other ranks. After a four-year lapse (mid-1980 to 1984), the British Army and
JDF resumed their program of reciprocal defence exercises in June 1984. In addition, a
group of 140 JDF soldiers was flown to Dover for a month of training. Jamaica signed a new
military training agreement with Canada in 1985, replacing the one in effect since 1965.
Over 250 JDF candidates trained in Canada during the 1965-85 period.
The United States began providing some military assistance to Jamaica's small defence
force after Jamaica requested training and equipment assistance in 1963. Jamaica's
military aid allocation, however, was zero in the last year of the Manley government in
1980, pratically because of the government's close ties to Cuba. The United States resumed
military assistance to Jamaica after Seaga took office, and in 1986 assistance totalled
US$8.275 million, mostly for enhancing the JDF's narcotics interdiction and marijuana
eradication capabilities. Jamaica was scheduled to receive a total of US$6.3 million in
United States military assistance in 1988, including US$300,000 in International Military
Education and Training (IMET) funds. Under the Seaga government, the JDF had received
heavy equipment, including jeeps, trucks, and patrol boats from the United States.
Jamaica's military recruitment was entirely voluntary. Young men between the ages of
eighteen and twenty-four who had left school at the secondary and post-secondary levels
were required to register for two years of public service work as members of the National
Youth Service. This service could be performed in the JDF, an all-volunteer force, and
prospective registrants were encouraged to consider a service in the JDF with an eye
toward making it a career. JDF personnel were eligible for retirement under the Government
Pensions Scheme.
The Jamaica Combined Cadet Force (JCCF) was a uniformed training contingent founded in
1943. Funds provided by the prime minister's office covered expenses for training,
uniforms, equipment, travel and subsistence, and pay of salaried personnel. JCCF
operations were substantially expanded in 1972, and in 1973 the organisation consisted of
some 2,000 officers and cadets in 33 post-primary school units in all parts of the island,
together with an independent unit and a small headquarters unit at Up Park Camp. Its
mission was to provide youths with training, discipline, good citizenship, and leadership.
Although not a part of the JDF, the JCCF provided a substantial reservoir of young men who
had undergone some military training.
Apart from its training assignments, the JDF was active principally in support of the
larger Jamaica Constabulary Force (JCF). A mobile reserve unit, the JDF was called on when
a local police detachment was too small to deal with an incident such as an unauthorised
strike or a riot. It also furnished manpower for patrols during civil unrest,
search-and-rescue missions, and searches for firearms or marijuana. The Air Wing gave
mobility to ground detachments, and the Coast Guard acted in co-operation with
harbourmasters and the police harbour patrol.

Museum.
Jamaica Forces Museum (The Military Museum).
Curphey Barracks, Up Park Camp, South Camp Rd., Kingston
Mondays - Fridays, 10:00 am - 5:00 pm
Telephone: 926-8121
A small museum divided into sections and exhibiting the colourful history of the
valour of the Jamaican people. Plans of forts around Kingston in 1780;
information and the weapons, medals, uniforms of the West Indies Regiment and
the Jamaican Infantry Militia which existed from 1662 to 1906. Also on disply is
old silver from the officers mess in the First and Second World Wars.

