The Kikuyu Home Guard was named after the
British Home Guard from
World War II. The Kikuyu Guard was formed from several hundred
Tribal Police and the
private armies created by
loyalist leaders in the wake of
Mau Mau attacks. Clayton calls these early,
ad hoc anti-Mau Mau groups the Kikuyu Resistance Groups, which appeared in the last part of 1952. Its creation was an extremely divisive development within
Kikuyu society. Its divisive nature was ensured by
Sir Evelyn Baring's government's tentative desire to give the Home Guard the appearance of being a
Kikuyu-led initiative. Many joined voluntarily for a variety of reasons, but particularly once the battle had begun to shift decisively against Mau Mau by late 1954; however, in some districts, up to 30% of Home Guard members were
press-ganged. Major-General Sir
William Hinde put the Home Guard under command of European
district officers—these district officers were not trained military personnel, but rather settlers or career, often quite junior, colonial-officers. Hinde recruited Colonel Philip Morcombe to head up the Home Guard. Once set up, it began working alongside the
British military. Within a month of the
Lari massacre, 20% of the Home Guard were armed with shotguns and given a uniform, and eventually nearly all of them would be supplied with precision weapons of some kind and uniformed. By 1955, the majority of the Guard were stood down, since Mau Mau no longer constituted a major threat, and the remainder of the guard were absorbed into the Tribal Police. ==Organisation==