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Lance Corporal Jones

Lance Corporal Jack Jones is a fictional Home Guard platoon lance corporal and veteran of the British Empire,[1] first portrayed by Clive Dunn in the BBC television sitcom Dad's Army. His catchphrases are "Don't panic!", "Permission to speak, sir?" and "They don't like it up 'em!". Jones also often recounts, at length, his past military experiences, particularly those in Sudan and India and gives a glimpse to the military traditions and events in the concluding years of the 19th century.

Lance Corporal Jones
Dad's Army character
First appearanceThe Man and the Hour
Last appearanceNever Too Old
Portrayed byClive Dunn (TV series)
Clive Dunn and Jack Haig (stage show)
Tom Courtenay (2016 film)
Kevin Eldon (Dad's Army: The Lost Episodes)
In-universe information
OccupationButcher
RelativesGeorge Jones (father)
Mildred Fox (wife)
Unnamed brother
Unnamed sister
Affiliated withHome Guard

Fictional biography edit

The backstory invented for Jones suggests that he was born in 1870 in Walmington-on-Sea, the son of George Jones, who by the start of World War II is the 88-year-old caretaker of the Peabody Museum of Historical Army Weapons. In "The Showing Up of Corporal Jones", when Major Regan asks him his age, Jones replies sixty, but tells Captain Mainwaring later in the same episode his actual age, which is seventy. Jack Jones joined the army as a drummer boy in 1884; thereafter, he served in five military campaigns – the Gordon Relief Expedition to the Sudan (1884–1885), the Anglo-Egyptian Reconquest of the Sudan (1896–1899), the Boer War (1899–1901), where after that he was promoted to Lance Corporal, and the First World War (1914–1918) (declaring in "The Deadly Attachment" that, "I haven't had this much fun since I was in the trenches in 1916!"). Occasionally he mentions fighting the Pathans on the North-West Frontier (his medal ribbons imply service on the Frontier in 1895-98[a] and 1908).[b] In the episode "The Two and a Half Feathers" he mentions that he served in the Royal Warwickshire Regiment, while in "The Bullet Is Not for Firing" he startles his khaki clad colleagues by appearing at a court of enquiry in the pre-1914 scarlet and blue full dress uniform of the regiment, complete with two rows of medals. While some characters, such as Major Regan, comment on Jones' medals as a way of critiquing his age and fitness for service in the Home Guard, others such as Captain Square (from the rival Eastgate platoon) are quite complimentary; at one point Square (himself a veteran campaigner) tells Jones that he has "an illuminated history of the British Empire" on his chest.

During his service on the Western Front, he says that he was known as the Mad Bomber, due to his inclination to throw grenades madly. He was invalided out of the army in 1915 because of his poor eyesight, as he said in the first episode "The Man and the Hour". Ιn the same episode he mentions that the last 14 years of his career he was a Lance Corporal. So it means that he was promoted to this rank in 1901, after the Boer War.[2] He also claims that he once formed part of a Guard of Honour for Queen Victoria. During the episode "Battle of the Giants!" Jones gets an attack of malaria, which he probably picked up during his service in Africa. Despite his advanced age, Jones reveals that both his parents are still alive and well. It is also stated in the episode "Room at the Bottom", that Jones is a member of the Royal Antediluvian Order of Buffaloes.

At the outbreak of the Second World War, Jones was working as the town butcher. (The address of his shop was mentioned in the episode "A Brush with the Law" as being 19 High Street, Walmington-on-Sea.) He was so keen to join the Local Defence Volunteers that, despite his age (70), Captain Mainwaring instantly appointed him as the platoon's lance corporal. However, it is suggested that Jones' ability to provide off-the-ration meat may have had rather more to do with this decision than his physical and mental abilities, which were declining somewhat due to his age. His vision, for example, was so poor that when signing up for duty, he initially signed the table instead of the form.

In many episodes, Jones fondly recalls his participation in the Battle of Omdurman in the Sudan, facing the "Fuzzy Wuzzies" under the command of General Kitchener. As an aged veteran, he is extremely fond of bayonet warfare ("the cold steel"), and usually meets any queries about this with the assertion that "they don't like it up 'em!", a phrase which writer Jimmy Perry remembered an old campaigner using, during his own service in the Home Guard.

It is also noted that Jones once kept wicket behind the great cricketer Ranjitsinhji, who was "an Indian gentleman and upstanding man" until he "whipped his bails off".

Age and health edit

It is a bit of a puzzle as to how old Jones is. In the fifth episode of series one ("The Showing Up of Corporal Jones"), he tells Major Regan (who is inspecting the platoon) that he is sixty years old. Yet later in the same episode, he tells Captain Mainwaring that he is "only" seventy. But in the last episode of series four ("Fallen Idol"), he says that he is not sixty yet. Yet Walker says that due to all of the military activities Jones keeps claiming that he took part in, he must be over ninety. Jones contracted malaria during his military service in the Egypt and the Sudan in the Season 4 Episode 14 extended Christmas special "Battle of the Giants!" he gets a bout of it and says he had it for nearly forty years.[3][4][5]

Character traits edit

Jones is known for a number of eccentric traits, such as using long, rambling explanations and anecdotes whenever he wants to make a point. He is also invariably one step behind the rest of the platoon in any drill manoeuvre. This is apparently a trait he has had throughout his military career; a fellow veteran, named George Clarke, remembered Jones by this trait in the series 4 episode "The Two and a Half Feathers." Only twice was Jones witnessed to be in step with the platoon, once after a whole year's practice; but he quickly reverted to form. The next time was when the whole platoon took the extra second Jones always does to respond to make them look orderly. He often makes far-fetched suggestions, such as advising that they chop off the German prisoners' trouser buttons, on the grounds that if they escaped, a group of men walking through the town with their trousers around their ankles might cause people to "raise some inquiries". Every time, Jones' suggestions are soundly refuted by Mainwaring with a curt "I think you're wandering into the realms of fantasy, Jones." Jones is notably brave, eagerly volunteering for even the most suicidal of missions: for example, when the platoon was discussing torture, he declared loudly and excitedly that the platoon should torture him to see what they were up against. In this instance he failed to calm down when grabbed by other members of the platoon, only returning to normal after being slapped by Frazer. Jones uses odd turns of phrase such as "It would be more tasty for us to tell him" (instead of "tasteful"), and "I would go through fire and brimstone and treacle for you, sir".

Despite his advanced years and physical failings, Jones is extremely excitable and active. Whenever action or danger is imminent he becomes near-hysterical and runs around frantically shouting, "Don't panic! DON'T PANIC!" at the top of his voice (usually at some inappropriate moment, such as when holding an armed landmine or hand grenade) until someone manages to calm him down to a state in which he is useful. This is often not evidence of fear, however, but of extreme eagerness: a courageous man, Jones is always the first to volunteer for any activity (regardless of any potential danger) and is extremely keen when doing so: he is known to sulk if someone else is chosen (the one time he did not volunteer, Frazer accused him of only volunteering to impress Captain Mainwaring – who was not with them – and infuriated Jones into volunteering after all). If awoken suddenly from sleep, or if someone tries to take his bayonet, Jones will attempt to strangle the culprit, for which he profusely apologises afterwards.

 
Tom Courtenay in the role of Corporal Jones in the 2016 Dad's Army film.

In one episode, "The Two and a Half Feathers" Jones has to confront his past when a former comrade from the Sudan, Private Clarke, joins the Walmington-on-Sea platoon. Clarke accuses Jones of leaving him to die, following an incident many years before in which both men were attacked and kidnapped by dervishes. After his courage is doubted by the town and the platoon, Jones later vindicates himself with the true story of what happened (which he had nobly held back to spare a third party unnecessary pain or scandal). After Jones reveals the truth, Clarke later flees without explanation, leaving Jones' honour and respect intact.

The platoon uses Jones' delivery van as transport and improvised IFV for their manoeuvres. Jones is very proud of his van, and is often reluctant to allow various modifications needed for the platoon's activities. The instances when Mainwaring causes the van to get damaged are the very rare occasions when Jones becomes upset with the captain, at one point threatening to blacklist Mainwaring from his sausage list; to which Mainwaring replied carefully "Steady Jones". However Mainwaring generally dismisses the matter, insisting "There's a war on!". As well as keeping Mainwaring and Wilson buttered up with bribes of meat, Jones often does the same with various other townsfolk when needed. His assistant in the shop is "my boy Raymonde", with the accent on the "e".

Relationships edit

Jones appears to have reasonably good relationships with both Mainwaring and Wilson, whom he often bribes with meat when he wants his own way. Although Jones' over-keen and sometimes bungled efforts sometimes annoy Mainwaring, the captain is nonetheless admiring of his ever-enthusiastic approach, and considers him one of his best men, often discussing matters with him and Wilson before addressing the rest of the platoon. In an episode where an unexploded bomb is stuck at the top of a telegraph pole after an air raid, Jones volunteers to climb up and retrieve it, causing Mainwaring to say that Jones is "brave as a lion, if every one of our men were like him no one could stop us." His relationship with Mainwaring is also doubtlessly improved by Jones' tendency to flatter his superior officer and remains steadfastly loyal to him. However, there have been few occasions where Jones has shown doubt and even mistrust towards Mainwaring. Notably in the episode "The King was in His Counting House", Jones disdains Mainwaring's claim that his father was a renowned tailor and member of "The Master Tailors' Guild", by revealing that Mainwaring's father merely owned a "poky little drapery shop up a side alley" and sold poor-quality workman's trousers. His main rivalries are with Frazer, and the Verger, whom he often calls a troublemaker.

On informal occasions, Jones is often accompanied by Mrs Fox, his love-interest. Mrs Fox is a busty middle-aged widow, and a regular customer at Jones' butcher's shop. He has also been known to court the attention of Mrs. Prosser on occasion. In the final episode Jones and Mrs. Fox get married.

Military service edit

Jones is seen throughout the series wearing his ribbon bars which recognise his previous service in the British Army. From the beginning of series 4 they are as follows:[c]

   

         

         

  1. Egypt Medal (1882–1889)
  2. Indian General Service Medal (1895–1902)
  3. Queen's Sudan Medal (1897)
  4. Queen's South African War Medal (1899–1902)
  5. King's South African War Medal (1901–1902)
  6. India General Service Medal (1909)
  7. 1914 Star (or 1914–15 Star)
  8. British War Medal
  9. Allied Victory Medal
  10. Army Long Service and Good Conduct Medal (with post-1918 ribbon)
  11. Khedive's Star (1882–1891)
  12. Khedive's Sudan Medal

Notes edit

  1. ^ Ribbon for the India Medal, 1895–1902
  2. ^ Ribbon for the India General Service Medal, 1909
  3. ^ Jones wears these medal ribbons from the first episode of series 4, "The Big Parade", filmed in 1970.

References edit

  1. ^ Richards, Jeffrey (15 September 1997). Films and British National Identity: From Dickens to Dad's Army. Manchester University Press. p. 361. ISBN 0-7190-4743-9.[permanent dead link]
  2. ^ In the 1968 pilot episode "The Man and the Hour", Jones informs Mainwaring that he "left the army in 1915, I was invalided out – the old minces (mince pies = eyes) I couldn't quite focus".
  3. ^ Battle of the Giants! (Season 4 Episode 14)
  4. ^ Webber, Richard; Croft, David (2000). The Complete A-Z of "Dad's Army". Orion Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0752818382.
  5. ^ Croft, David; Perry, Jimmy; Webber, Richard (2003). Dad's Army: The Complete Scripts: Scripts 1-8. Orion Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0752860244.

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Lance Corporal Jack Jones is a fictional Home Guard platoon lance corporal and veteran of the British Empire 1 first portrayed by Clive Dunn in the BBC television sitcom Dad s Army His catchphrases are Don t panic Permission to speak sir and They don t like it up em Jones also often recounts at length his past military experiences particularly those in Sudan and India and gives a glimpse to the military traditions and events in the concluding years of the 19th century Lance Corporal JonesDad s Army characterFirst appearanceThe Man and the HourLast appearanceNever Too OldPortrayed byClive Dunn TV series Clive Dunn and Jack Haig stage show Tom Courtenay 2016 film Kevin Eldon Dad s Army The Lost Episodes In universe informationOccupationButcherRelativesGeorge Jones father Mildred Fox wife Unnamed brotherUnnamed sisterAffiliated withHome Guard Contents 1 Fictional biography 2 Age and health 3 Character traits 4 Relationships 5 Military service 6 Notes 7 ReferencesFictional biography editThe backstory invented for Jones suggests that he was born in 1870 in Walmington on Sea the son of George Jones who by the start of World War II is the 88 year old caretaker of the Peabody Museum of Historical Army Weapons In The Showing Up of Corporal Jones when Major Regan asks him his age Jones replies sixty but tells Captain Mainwaring later in the same episode his actual age which is seventy Jack Jones joined the army as a drummer boy in 1884 thereafter he served in five military campaigns the Gordon Relief Expedition to the Sudan 1884 1885 the Anglo Egyptian Reconquest of the Sudan 1896 1899 the Boer War 1899 1901 where after that he was promoted to Lance Corporal and the First World War 1914 1918 declaring in The Deadly Attachment that I haven t had this much fun since I was in the trenches in 1916 Occasionally he mentions fighting the Pathans on the North West Frontier his medal ribbons imply service on the Frontier in 1895 98 a and 1908 b In the episode The Two and a Half Feathers he mentions that he served in the Royal Warwickshire Regiment while in The Bullet Is Not for Firing he startles his khaki clad colleagues by appearing at a court of enquiry in the pre 1914 scarlet and blue full dress uniform of the regiment complete with two rows of medals While some characters such as Major Regan comment on Jones medals as a way of critiquing his age and fitness for service in the Home Guard others such as Captain Square from the rival Eastgate platoon are quite complimentary at one point Square himself a veteran campaigner tells Jones that he has an illuminated history of the British Empire on his chest During his service on the Western Front he says that he was known as the Mad Bomber due to his inclination to throw grenades madly He was invalided out of the army in 1915 because of his poor eyesight as he said in the first episode The Man and the Hour In the same episode he mentions that the last 14 years of his career he was a Lance Corporal So it means that he was promoted to this rank in 1901 after the Boer War 2 He also claims that he once formed part of a Guard of Honour for Queen Victoria During the episode Battle of the Giants Jones gets an attack of malaria which he probably picked up during his service in Africa Despite his advanced age Jones reveals that both his parents are still alive and well It is also stated in the episode Room at the Bottom that Jones is a member of the Royal Antediluvian Order of Buffaloes At the outbreak of the Second World War Jones was working as the town butcher The address of his shop was mentioned in the episode A Brush with the Law as being 19 High Street Walmington on Sea He was so keen to join the Local Defence Volunteers that despite his age 70 Captain Mainwaring instantly appointed him as the platoon s lance corporal However it is suggested that Jones ability to provide off the ration meat may have had rather more to do with this decision than his physical and mental abilities which were declining somewhat due to his age His vision for example was so poor that when signing up for duty he initially signed the table instead of the form In many episodes Jones fondly recalls his participation in the Battle of Omdurman in the Sudan facing the Fuzzy Wuzzies under the command of General Kitchener As an aged veteran he is extremely fond of bayonet warfare the cold steel and usually meets any queries about this with the assertion that they don t like it up em a phrase which writer Jimmy Perry remembered an old campaigner using during his own service in the Home Guard It is also noted that Jones once kept wicket behind the great cricketer Ranjitsinhji who was an Indian gentleman and upstanding man until he whipped his bails off Age and health editIt is a bit of a puzzle as to how old Jones is In the fifth episode of series one The Showing Up of Corporal Jones he tells Major Regan who is inspecting the platoon that he is sixty years old Yet later in the same episode he tells Captain Mainwaring that he is only seventy But in the last episode of series four Fallen Idol he says that he is not sixty yet Yet Walker says that due to all of the military activities Jones keeps claiming that he took part in he must be over ninety Jones contracted malaria during his military service in the Egypt and the Sudan in the Season 4 Episode 14 extended Christmas special Battle of the Giants he gets a bout of it and says he had it for nearly forty years 3 4 5 Character traits editJones is known for a number of eccentric traits such as using long rambling explanations and anecdotes whenever he wants to make a point He is also invariably one step behind the rest of the platoon in any drill manoeuvre This is apparently a trait he has had throughout his military career a fellow veteran named George Clarke remembered Jones by this trait in the series 4 episode The Two and a Half Feathers Only twice was Jones witnessed to be in step with the platoon once after a whole year s practice but he quickly reverted to form The next time was when the whole platoon took the extra second Jones always does to respond to make them look orderly He often makes far fetched suggestions such as advising that they chop off the German prisoners trouser buttons on the grounds that if they escaped a group of men walking through the town with their trousers around their ankles might cause people to raise some inquiries Every time Jones suggestions are soundly refuted by Mainwaring with a curt I think you re wandering into the realms of fantasy Jones Jones is notably brave eagerly volunteering for even the most suicidal of missions for example when the platoon was discussing torture he declared loudly and excitedly that the platoon should torture him to see what they were up against In this instance he failed to calm down when grabbed by other members of the platoon only returning to normal after being slapped by Frazer Jones uses odd turns of phrase such as It would be more tasty for us to tell him instead of tasteful and I would go through fire and brimstone and treacle for you sir Despite his advanced years and physical failings Jones is extremely excitable and active Whenever action or danger is imminent he becomes near hysterical and runs around frantically shouting Don t panic DON T PANIC at the top of his voice usually at some inappropriate moment such as when holding an armed landmine or hand grenade until someone manages to calm him down to a state in which he is useful This is often not evidence of fear however but of extreme eagerness a courageous man Jones is always the first to volunteer for any activity regardless of any potential danger and is extremely keen when doing so he is known to sulk if someone else is chosen the one time he did not volunteer Frazer accused him of only volunteering to impress Captain Mainwaring who was not with them and infuriated Jones into volunteering after all If awoken suddenly from sleep or if someone tries to take his bayonet Jones will attempt to strangle the culprit for which he profusely apologises afterwards nbsp Tom Courtenay in the role of Corporal Jones in the 2016 Dad s Army film In one episode The Two and a Half Feathers Jones has to confront his past when a former comrade from the Sudan Private Clarke joins the Walmington on Sea platoon Clarke accuses Jones of leaving him to die following an incident many years before in which both men were attacked and kidnapped by dervishes After his courage is doubted by the town and the platoon Jones later vindicates himself with the true story of what happened which he had nobly held back to spare a third party unnecessary pain or scandal After Jones reveals the truth Clarke later flees without explanation leaving Jones honour and respect intact The platoon uses Jones delivery van as transport and improvised IFV for their manoeuvres Jones is very proud of his van and is often reluctant to allow various modifications needed for the platoon s activities The instances when Mainwaring causes the van to get damaged are the very rare occasions when Jones becomes upset with the captain at one point threatening to blacklist Mainwaring from his sausage list to which Mainwaring replied carefully Steady Jones However Mainwaring generally dismisses the matter insisting There s a war on As well as keeping Mainwaring and Wilson buttered up with bribes of meat Jones often does the same with various other townsfolk when needed His assistant in the shop is my boy Raymonde with the accent on the e Relationships editJones appears to have reasonably good relationships with both Mainwaring and Wilson whom he often bribes with meat when he wants his own way Although Jones over keen and sometimes bungled efforts sometimes annoy Mainwaring the captain is nonetheless admiring of his ever enthusiastic approach and considers him one of his best men often discussing matters with him and Wilson before addressing the rest of the platoon In an episode where an unexploded bomb is stuck at the top of a telegraph pole after an air raid Jones volunteers to climb up and retrieve it causing Mainwaring to say that Jones is brave as a lion if every one of our men were like him no one could stop us His relationship with Mainwaring is also doubtlessly improved by Jones tendency to flatter his superior officer and remains steadfastly loyal to him However there have been few occasions where Jones has shown doubt and even mistrust towards Mainwaring Notably in the episode The King was in His Counting House Jones disdains Mainwaring s claim that his father was a renowned tailor and member of The Master Tailors Guild by revealing that Mainwaring s father merely owned a poky little drapery shop up a side alley and sold poor quality workman s trousers His main rivalries are with Frazer and the Verger whom he often calls a troublemaker On informal occasions Jones is often accompanied by Mrs Fox his love interest Mrs Fox is a busty middle aged widow and a regular customer at Jones butcher s shop He has also been known to court the attention of Mrs Prosser on occasion In the final episode Jones and Mrs Fox get married Military service editJones is seen throughout the series wearing his ribbon bars which recognise his previous service in the British Army From the beginning of series 4 they are as follows c nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Egypt Medal 1882 1889 Indian General Service Medal 1895 1902 Queen s Sudan Medal 1897 Queen s South African War Medal 1899 1902 King s South African War Medal 1901 1902 India General Service Medal 1909 1914 Star or 1914 15 Star British War Medal Allied Victory Medal Army Long Service and Good Conduct Medal with post 1918 ribbon Khedive s Star 1882 1891 Khedive s Sudan MedalNotes edit Ribbon for the India Medal 1895 1902 Ribbon for the India General Service Medal 1909 Jones wears these medal ribbons from the first episode of series 4 The Big Parade filmed in 1970 References edit Richards Jeffrey 15 September 1997 Films and British National Identity From Dickens to Dad s Army Manchester University Press p 361 ISBN 0 7190 4743 9 permanent dead link In the 1968 pilot episode The Man and the Hour Jones informs Mainwaring that he left the army in 1915 I was invalided out the old minces mince pies eyes I couldn t quite focus Battle of the Giants Season 4 Episode 14 Webber Richard Croft David 2000 The Complete A Z of Dad s Army Orion Publishing Group ISBN 978 0752818382 Croft David Perry Jimmy Webber Richard 2003 Dad s Army The Complete Scripts Scripts 1 8 Orion Publishing Group ISBN 978 0752860244 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lance Corporal Jones amp oldid 1222339364, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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