A hundred years or so after the heyday 
          of the Volunteer Drill Hall, many people have little idea of what 'drill' 
          actually was, yet it is clear from contemporary sources that drill halls 
          and the training which took place in them were valued by the community. 
          Towns prized their drill halls and encouraged their young men to give 
          up their time, unpaid, regularly and diligently, to participate as Volunteers.
          
           'The Volunteers ... carefully attended to the ordinary routine 
          of drill, with an occasional "camp out", in which very useful work was 
          done,' (1) notes an author writing in Warrington in 1898. He assumes, 
          rightly, that his contemporary readers are familiar with what he meant. 
          
           
  
   The 'ordinary routine of drill' involved marching and rifle drill (including cleaning and the dis- and re-assembly of their weapons; engineers and gunners and medical professionals would study their own particular skills) relentlessly, week in, week out, to develop unquestioning discipline and proficiency in their role.
The 'ordinary routine of drill' involved marching and rifle drill (including cleaning and the dis- and re-assembly of their weapons; engineers and gunners and medical professionals would study their own particular skills) relentlessly, week in, week out, to develop unquestioning discipline and proficiency in their role.
			  
           The 'camp out' was for many the closest thing to an annual holiday. Each company would join up with the rest of their battalion, and they in turn would join the other units of their division in tented camps. They would then engage in rifle competitions and exercises with hundreds of others to ensure that the division, as a whole, would provide a cohesive fighting force to defend the Empire. 
          
           Regular Orders published in the Chatham, Rochester and Brompton 
          Observer give a flavour of the weekly routine. The Local Volunteer Orders 
          published on April 8th, 1905, list the military personnel and the variety 
          of activities from which a Volunteer would select those he was expected 
          to attend. 
          
           The Queens Own (Royal West Kent Regiment) comprised:
  
  
      - Saturday 8th April:
- Class Firing for Trained Volunteers (A, B, C and K Companies)
- Monday 10th April:
- Machine Gun - 7.45 pm
- Armoury - 7.30 pm - 8.30 pm
- Tuesday 11th April:
- Recruit Training - 7.45 pm
- Wednesday 12th April:
- Signallers - 7.45 p.m.
- Semaphore instruction, all Companies - 7.45 pm
- NCO's Class - 7.45 pm
- Thursday 13th April:
- Company Training - drill order, with leggings - 7.45 pm
- Recruit Training - 7.45 pm
- Morris Tube training for recruits - 7.30 pm
- Friday 14th April:
- Signallers - 7.45 pm
- Saturday 15th April:
- Class Firing for Trained Volunteers (E, F, G and H Companies)
- Signallers - 3 pm
- Company Training (H Company) - drill order with leggings, FS caps - 
        3 pm
	
	
	The listings helpfully provided details 
          of the times of suitable trains from Chatham Station to enable men to 
          attend Saturday activities. 
          
           However, H Hibbard, SSM of the Royal East Kent Imperial Yeomanry, 
          seemed as keen to ensure that arrangements were in place for the annual 
          camp as to inform men of the week's activities. The riding drill on 
          Wednesday and Saturday, and the recruits' drill on Thursday at 8, are 
          given cursory listing, while he urgently reminds men who wish to apply 
          for leave from the annual training that they must do so this week, insists 
          that men who wish to use their own horses give notice this week or face 
          using the Squadron's horses and exhorts men to collect their rifles 
          from Headquarters without further delay. 
          
           It is clear that the drill halls were well used, often for several 
          training activities at a time; and that almost every evening and Saturday 
          afternoon, something was happening, overseen by 'Officers trained in 
          tactics and the science of war.' (1) It seems this was to good effect. 
          In 1898, George Venn observed with some pride that the Volunteers had 
          become a serious fighting force, complemented by integral specialist 
          sections such as Signals, Ambulance and enthusiastic Bicycles. Unfortunately, 
          other observers noted a dearth of officers; Colonel Ommanney, speaking 
          to open Congleton Drill hall, recalls seeing many 'fine healthy young 
          men who would have made most suitable officers of the Volunteer corps' 
          but, he reflects in jaundiced surprise, they seem to prefer golf and 
          'other pastimes'. 
          
           Despite this, the opening of a town's drill hall was generally 
          reported with pride and excitement, reflecting the views of local opinion 
          formers that the training activities which would take place therein 
          could only be good for the community and for the country. 
          
           Local newspapers record 'the weekly company drills and ... almost 
          nightly training of recruits' (2), which had an additional benefit for 
          towns, 'because the training and discipline of so many of her young 
          men must have a healthy effect upon the tone of the inhabitants at large'. 
          Indeed, the physical activity of drill was seen by some as beneficial 
          to the health of the nation too; apparently boys and young men in large 
          towns, such as Stockport, 'saw great want of physique in the boys who 
          would be the future men of [the] country'; and some argued that their 
          health and physical development would be improved by drill. (3) 
           Preparation and instruction in drill halls 'developed men physically 
          and taught them organisation and self-reliance, besides training them 
          in the use of arms for the defence of the county against invasion.' 
          (4) 
           
           '...They had but one thing to do, and that was to do what they 
          were told, and to do their duty to their country. ... [They were] brought 
          up to that high state of efficiency which was required by modern warfare. 
          ... eager to go into camp realising what practical work in camp meant, 
          realising that a fortnight in camp was infinitely more valuable than 
          one week, and realising that 900 good men were better than 1200 who 
          were only partially efficient.' ( 5) 
           'The day will come when the country will have to depend on its 
          Grand Volunteer Army. When the country is at war, it is probable that 
          the Regular army will be engaged elsewhere, and England will have to 
          depend mainly upon our Volunteers for her very existence.' (6) 
          
          
           
          
    Extracts from the Chatham, Rochester and Brompton 
      Observer are reproduced by permission of Medway Archives and Local Studies 
      Centre.
      
      
      
			
    
      - Walter Crompton & George Venn, Warrington Volunteers 1798 - 1898, published 
        1898.
- Congleton and Macclesfield Mercury, May 6th 1905
- Col A E Ommaney, commanding 22nd Regimental District, opening of Congleton 
        Drill Hall. reported in Congleton and Macclesfield Mercury, May 27th 1905
- Major General Sir Francis Howard, opening Congleton Drill Hall, Congleton 
        and Macclesfield Mercury, May 6th 1905
- Lord Methuen, opening the new drill hall of the 4th Volunteer battalion 
        (Q.O.) Royal West Kent Regiment, reported in Chatham Observer, May 6th, 
        1905
- Col Dunnage, Royal Artillery, 25th June 1898, speaking at Liverpool