City guard

A city guard, city watch, town guard, or town watch was a law enforcement and security formation found in many countries and historical periods, usually subordinate to the local municipal government. Historically many cities had their own guard formations, which doubled as police and military forces in times of need.

Drum of the Edinburgh City Guard (late 18thC) bearing the city's coat of arms

Antebellum United States

By the 1830s the American frontier expanded Westwards with Indian wars in the Eastern United States ending. Many states let their unorganised militia lapse in favour of volunteer militia units whom to differentiate themselves between unorganised militia frequently called themselves city guards or national guards[1]. These companies performed functions such as assisting local law enforcement, providing troops for ceremonies and parades or acting as a benevolent social club. The groups of company size were usually uniformed and armed themselves as well as erecting armories through their own contributions. Volunteer units of sufficient size could elect their own officers and apply for a state charter under names that they themselves chose[2][3].

Sample companies

  • Boston City Guard
  • Cambridge City Guard
  • Chicago Light Guard [4]
  • Detroit Light Guard
  • Hannibal Guards
  • Montgomery Guards
  • Richardson Light Guard
  • Salem Light Guard
  • Swatara Guards
  • Wallace Guards
  • Wamesit Guard
  • Worcester City Guard

With the unification of laws and centralization of state power (e.g. the Municipal Police Act of 1844 in New York City, United States), such formations became increasingly incorporated into state-run police forces.

The Militia Act of 1903 stipulated all organised militia companies were to be incorporated into the Army National Guard or Naval Militias, some companies managed to remain outside these organisations<ref>p.

City guard in fiction

gollark: It has at no points contained a collective consciousness which never had internal disagreement. Probably.
gollark: YET.
gollark: Germany is not really a single unified entity.
gollark: Yes, I agree, America has unreasonably vast military spending/
gollark: Oh, you mean military spending, sure.

See also

Notes

  1. p.131 Uviller, H. Richard & Merkel, William G. The Militia and the Right to Arms, or, How the Second Amendment Fell Silent Duke University Press, 20 Jan 2003
  2. Givens, Terryl L. & Grow, Matthew J. Parley P. Pratt: The Apostle Paul of Mormonism Oxford University Press, 4 Oct 2011
  3. p. 115 Stentiford, Barry M. The Richardson Light Guard of Wakefield, Massachusetts: A Town Militia in War and Peace, 1851-1975 McFarland, 17 Apr 2013
  4. http://taylors-battery.com/Pre%20war%20militia%20history%20and%20the%20formation.htm
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