The role of the corps is to provide specialists, who are usually on the Special List or General List.[1] These lists were used in both World Wars for specialists and those not allocated to other regiments or corps.[2] In World War II, they were used for male operatives of the Special Operations Executive (female operatives joined the FANY).[3][4]
History
The General Service Corps itself was formed in February 1942.[5] From 2 July 1942, army recruits were enlisted in the corps for their first six weeks so that their subsequent posting could take account of their skills and the Army's needs.[6][7] A similar role, holding some recruits pending allocation to their units, continues today.[8][9][10][11]Bermuda Militia Infantry soldiers absorbed into the Bermuda Militia Artillery before demobilisation in 1946 wore the General Service Corps cap badge instead of the Royal Artillery cap badge.[12]
^Williams, Heather (2002). Parachutes, patriots and partisans: the Special Operations Executive and Yugoslavia, 1941 - 1945. C Hurst & Co Publishers Ltd. pp. 65–69. ISBN1-85065-592-8.
^van den Vat, Dan (9 March 2004). "Walter Freud Obituary". THe Guardian. Retrieved 9 November 2017.