King & Country
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KING & COUNTRY DISPATCHES
November 2022
Hi Guys,November 2022
Welcome once more to this month’s ‘DISPATCHES’… Not too many releases but some welcome additions and reinforcements to a couple of our most recent ranges of ‘Soldiers in Action’ in two widely different ‘Theatres of War’ on both sides of the global conflict that was WW2.
Also being released this month is one of the most important leaders and personalities of the Vietnam War…and one of its most controversial!
Finally, there are several special ‘Yuletide’ offerings just in time for the Christmas Season.
So, without further ado let’s get this show on the road…
1.BEING RELEASED IN NOVEMBER
A. ‘Kokoda Diggers Fight Back’
King & Country’s initial release of figures illustrating this hard-fought campaign in the steep, mountainous jungle of Papua New Guinea focused on Australian soldiers moving along the infamous ‘Kokoda Trail’ in the middle of 1942.
At this time Japan’s newly-won empire extended in depth across vast tracts of China, the Pacific and South East Asia.
After crippling the American Pacific Fleet at Pearl Harbor, capturing Hong Kong, Malaya, Singapore and the Dutch East Indies the Japanese were now poised to strike at Australia itself.
The island of New Guinea was the perfect staging post for their next major offensive and it was here that the Australians decided that the enemy would be halted and then thrown back… The fight was on … Here are the first of our five fighting ’Diggers’…
KT005 ‘Vickers Machine Gunner’
The Vickers Machine Gun or ‘Vickers Gun’ was the name given to the British, water-cooled, .303 heavy machine gun used by British and Empire armies in two World Wars and countless other conflicts from its introduction in 1912 until its retirement in 1968… more the 56 years on ‘active service’, a record virtually unmatched by any other British infantry weapon.
This gun had a reputation for great solidity and reliability and was based on the highly successful Maxim machine gun of the late 19th Century.
These sterling qualities endeared the Vickers to every Australian soldier who ever fired it. Our ‘Digger’ sits perched on a sandbag behind his gun complete with ammunition boxes and ready to open fire on the enemy.
KT006 ‘The Kokoda Bren Gunner’
While the Vickers Guns were supplied at Company and Battalion level all infantry platoons would have a Bren Gun for each one of its three rifle sections.
The Bren was a Light Machine Gun that fired the same .303 round as its heavier Vickers counterpart and although fitted with a bipod could also be mounted on a tripod in the ‘fixed-firing mode’ or even on all kinds of military vehicles.
Our K&C lying prone ‘Digger’ is firing his Bren in the most commonly used shooting position.
KT009 ‘The Kokoda Rifle Section’
A three-man section, all of them armed with the classic Lee-Enfield Rifle, commonly known as the .303 SMLE (Short Magazine Lee Enfield). This bolt action, magazine-fed rifle served the British and Commonwealth Forces from 1903 up until 1957 in several different variants.
The best known of all the Lee Enfield rifles was the SMLE Mk.Ⅲintroduced in 1907 and fitted with the18” long 1907 Pattern Sword Bayonet.
Although superceded in the British Army by the introduction of the Lee Enfield No. 4 Mk. 1 rifle Australia chose to retain their vintage SMLE Mk.Ⅲ’s until well after the Korean War.
Here K&C’s three ‘Diggers’ have adopted various shooting poses as they prepare to take on the advancing Japanese.
AVAILABLE: Mid-Late November
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