QUOTE (Ron Clifton @ Nov 2 2009, 05:24 PM)

Hello Eassierider
They may have done some work on this at the School of Musketry at Hythe but somehow I doubt that they would have trained many in the UK. For snipers you need men who are already good shots and physically fit, and there men would be more likely to be found alreaady with the BEF in France. It would make little sense to bring them back to the UK for training.
It would also make more sense to train them somewhere where the terrain, especially as broken lanscape, more closely reflected the ground over which they would need to operate.
Of course, there would have been musketry ranges at most of the military camps in the UK but I cannot see them teaching the techniques of sniping in any depth.
Ron
Hello, and thanks, Ron. What you say makes perfect sense, it's just that while reading this article:
http://www.westernfrontassociation.com/gre...ol-sniping.htmlI came upon this passage:
"Additionally, by 1917 the mindset of the British High Command became more positive towards sniping and encouragement was given to its general adoption and aggressive practice whenever and wherever feasible. And all five armies of the BEF had sniper training schools whilst others were founded in the UK; all well supplied with new official training manuals and technical instruction books."
So I wondered where these "schools" might have been, or who might have gone to them rather than the Western Front schools (for instance, men recovering/recovered from wounds who had been noted as candidates while on active service). I have now contacted the Western Front Association to see if any light can be shed.