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Four: Lance-Corporal W. Reynolds, Durham Light Infantry, later East Yorkshire Regiment and 44th Signal Company 1914-15 Star (11105 Pte. W. Reynolds, Durh. L.I.); British War and Victory Medals (11105 Pte .W. Reynolds. Durh. L.I.); India General Service 1908-35, 1 clasp, Afghanistan N.W.F. 1919 (11105 L.Cpl. W. Reynolds. 44 Sig. Coy.) unit officially corrected on last, edge bruising and contact marks, nearly very fine (4) £70-£90 --- William Reynolds attested for the Durham Light Infantry and served with them during the Great War in the Hedjaz theatre of War from 21 August 1915. He later transferred to the East Yorkshire Regiment, and saw further service during the Third Afghan War.
Three: Driver H. King, Royal Field Artillery, who was discharged due to wounds in September 1916 1914 Star (37026 Dvr: H. King. R.F.A.); British War and Victory Medals (37026 Dvr. H. King. R.A.) mounted as worn, light pitting, nearly very fine (3) £60-£80 --- Harry King attested for the Royal Field Artillery on 10 May 1905 and served with the 32nd Brigade during the Great War on the Western Front from 23 August 1914. He was discharged due to wounds on 20 September 1916, and was awarded a Silver War Badge no. 47,222.
Hong Kong Plague 1894 (Private T. Hyde, S.L.I.) rank and unit correctly impressed, name renamed (engraved), edge bruising, contact marks, nearly very fine £600-£800 --- Provenance: Dix Noonan Webb, March 2013. Thomas Hyde was born in Ledbury, Herefordshire. A Painter by occupation and a former member of the 1st Hereford Rifle Volunteers and 4th Battalion King’s Shropshire Light Infantry, he enlisted for full-time service at Shrewsbury on 28 September 1888, aged 18 years. He served in Hong Kong, India and South Africa. Transferred to the Army Reserve on 26 February 1896, he rejoined the Colours on 4 July 1898 but was discharged as unfit for further service on 12 June 1900.
Six: Major W. L. Conran, 125th Bombay Native Infantry (Napier’s Rifles), late Royal Irish Fusiliers Delhi Durbar 1903, silver; Egypt and Sudan 1882-89, dated reverse, 1 clasp, Tel-El-Kebir (Lieut. W. L. Conran, 1/R.I. Fus:); India General Service 1854-95, 2 clasps, Burma 1885-7, Burma 1887-89 (Lieutenant W. L. Conran, 23rd Bo. Infy.) small official correction to unit; India General Service 1895-1902, 2 clasps, Punjab Frontier 1897-98, Tirah 1897-98 (Captn. W. L. Conran 25th Bo. Rifles) small official correction to surname; China 1900, no clasp (Captn: W. L. Conran 25th Bo. Rifles); Khedive’s Star, dated 1882, original court-style mounting but ribbons a little distressed, toned, very fine and better (6) £1,000-£1,400 --- William Loraine Conran was born in 1862 and educated at Cheltenham College. He was first commissioned, ex-Sandhurst, on 10 May 1882, as Lieutenant in the Royal Irish Fusiliers, with whom he served at the battle of Tel-el-Kebir in 1882 (Medal with Clasp and Khedive’s Star). He was appointed to the Bombay Staff Corps on 20 October 1884, and served with the Burmese Expedition in 1885-88 in command of the Mounted Infantry of the 23rd Bombay Light Infantry (Medal with two Clasps). From April 1894 he was employed in the Foreign Department. He is listed as being 'on special duty in Rajputana' April 1895 to January 1896, and served in the campaign on the North West Frontier under Sir William Lockhart in 1897-98 with the Tirah Expeditionary Force (Medal with two Clasps). In 1899 he is listed as 'Unpaid Attaché, Intelligence Branch, Q.M.G.'s Dept.' From July 1900 to October 1905 he was a Special Service Officer with the Intelligence Branch, Q.M.G.'s Dept., serving with the Imperial Service Troops in China (Medal). He was promoted Major on l0 July 1901, and Second-in-Command, 125th Rifles, on 12 May 1903. He died in London on 30 August 1909.
Pair: Colonel J. F. Craig, Royal Artillery Egypt and Sudan 1882-89, dated reverse, 1 clasp, Tel-El-Kebir (Lieut: J. F. Craig. N/2. Bde. R.A.); Khedive’s Star, dated 1882, pitting from star, otherwise nearly very fine (2) £500-£700 --- Provenance: Jack Webb Collection, Dix Noonan Webb, December 2008. “N” Battery, 2 Brigade, Royal Artillery, was later awarded the Honour Title “The Broken Wheel” for an incident during the battle of Tel-El-Kebir. It having been decided to attack at dawn after an approach march by night, the latter difficult operation was carried out by the two infantry and one cavalry divisions moving in line, in an echelon from the left with all the seven field batteries, also in line, in an interval between the two infantry divisions. The left-hand infantry division arrived first at the enemy's entrenchments in the half light and was met by a blaze of fire. Their attack was not at first completely successful, but with the aid of their supports, they and the other division forced their way into the entrenchments where hand-to-hand fighting continued. Meanwhile, the guns had been halted until there was enough light to see what was going on; but, as dawn broke, they were ordered forward to come into action inside the entrenchments in positions from which they could engage the defences in enfilade. N/2 galloped forward with the rest and, in the words of an officer of the battery, writing just after the battle: ‘All of a sudden the smoke lifted like a curtain and we found ourselves close to a long line of entrenchments... We at once went on and Major Branker found an angle in the line just in front where the ditch was not so deep, so the right gun galloped straight at it. It went with a bump into the ditch, and stuck fast on the face of the parapet, with most of the horses over; but a lot of 42nd [Highlanders] rushed to our help, and we lifted and shoved the gun over; but found one of the wheels smashed to pieces’. Although one of its guns had thus come to grief, N/2 brought its remaining guns into action inside the entrenchments and engaged the rearward parts of the defences with effective shrapnel fire in enfilade at 1,000 yards’ range. The enemy, facing destructive fire from both their front and flank were soon broken up and with victory secured, N/2 gained their prized Honour Title. John Francis Craig was born on 26 July 1856, and entered the Royal Artillery as a Lieutenant on 2 February 1876. He was A.D.C. to the Governor of Mauritius from December 1880 to February 1881, and from April 1881 to February 1882. He served in the Egyptian war of 1882, including the battle of Tel-El-Kebir (Medal and Clasp; Bronze Star). Promoted to Captain in January 1885, he was Adjutant of the Clare Artillery Militia, from 1887 to 1894. He went on half-pay in the rank of Colonel in November 1907, retired in February 1910, and died in 1922.
Pair: Private W. G. Hardie, 29th (Vancouver) Battalion, Canadian Infantry British War and Victory Medals (629006 Pte. W. G. Hardie. 29-Can. Infy.) very fine British War Medal 1914-20 (5) (310229 C. O. Goodison. Sto. 1. R.N.; 628601 Pte. P. Bridge. C.M.G. Bde; 226566 Pte. H. Fisher. C.L..H.; 258263 Pte. F. W. Welbourn. 1-C.M.R.; 102134 Pte. F. Rasmussen 67th Can Pnr. Bn.) last officially renamed, generally very fine (7) £90-£120 --- Importation Duty This lot is subject to importation duty of 5% on the hammer price unless exported outside the UK --- --- William Ewart Gladstone Hardie was born in Barnaire Tennessee U.S.A. in June 1889. He was a Sailor prior to the Great War, and his mother resided in Lethbridge, Alberta. Hardie served with the 29th (Vancouver) Battalion, Canadian Infantry during the Great War. Harry Fisher was born in Kingston, Ontario, Canada in March 1897. He served during the Great War with the Canadian Light Horse attached to the Eaton Machine Gun Battery. Private Fisher was killed in action by enemy shelling near Lens, France, 5 August 1917, and is buried in Villers Station Cemetery, Villers-Au-Bois, France. Frederick Rasmussen was born in Denmark in March 1881, and his next of kin was listed as Mrs Clay Hansen, Mollestreet, Skjelskor, Denmark. He served during the Great War with the 67th Pioneer Battalion, Canadian Engineers in the UK.
Pair: Major A. C. Pearson, Royal Marine Light Infantry, 2nd in Command of the R.M. detachment at Abu Klea and Mentioned in Despatches Egypt and Sudan 1882-89, undated reverse, 2 clasps, The Nile 1884-85, Abu Klea (Captn. A. C. Pearson, R.M.L.I.) impressed naming; Khedive’s Star, dated 1884-6, good very fine and rare (2) £2,600-£3,000 --- Importation Duty This lot is subject to importation duty of 5% on the hammer price unless exported outside the UK --- --- Provenance: Dix Noonan Webb, September 1998. Only four Royal Marine Officers were present with the Camel Corps at Abu Klea, including Lieutenant C. V. F. Townshend who was later to come to prominence as the defender of Kut in 1915. Aylmer Charles Pearson was born in Upton St Leonards, near Gloucester, on 2 August 1849, and entered the Royal Marine Light Infantry as a Lieutenant at the age of 19 in 1868. Promoted to Captain in July 1881, he took passage aboard the S.S. Duncan in May 1884 to Egypt, where he joined the Royal Marine Battalion at Port Said, and later Suakin. He was detailed for Special Service and Second in Command of the Royal Marines Detachment, comprising 4 officers and 86 N.C.O.s and men, for service as the 4th Company of the Guards Camel Regiment, Nile Expeditionary Force. He was present at the battle of Abu Klea, the actions at Gubat and Metemmeh, and the attack on the convoy on 13 February 1885. When his Commanding Officer Major W. H. Poe was severely wounded and invalided, he commanded the Royal Marine Camel Corps from 22 January 1885, until its return to England the following July. Pearson was referred to in Lord Wolseley’s despatch in the London Gazette of 25 August 1885 as ‘deserving of special mention.’ He was promoted to Brevet Major on 15 June 1885, ‘in recognition of services rendered during the recent operations in the Sudan’, and received the medal with two clasps and the Khedive’s bronze star. He saw no further active service and retired on full pay in August 1891, and later became a Recruiting Officer at Cambridge for a brief period. He died on 4 February 1938 at the age of 88.
Four: Corporal J. Miller, Derbyshire Yeomanry, late Highland Light Infantry Queen’s South Africa 1899-1902, 5 clasps, Cape Colony, Orange Free State, Transvaal, South Africa 1901, South Africa 1902 (6423 Pte. J. Miller. Highland. L.I.); 1914-15 Star (2697 Pte. J. Miller, Derby. Yeo.); British War and Victory Medals (2697 Cpl. J. Miller. Derby. Yeo.) minor edge bruise to QSA, good very fine (4) £220-£260 --- John Miller, a packer from Ardwick, Manchester, attested into the Highland Light Infantry on 14 January 1897 and served during the occupation of Crete and in South Africa during the Boer War. Transferring to the Army Reserve on 22 October 1904, he was discharged on 13 January 1909. Whilst working as a bookmaker’s clerk in Derby, he attested into the Derbyshire Yeomanry on 14 June 1915 for service during the Great War and served in the Egyptian theatre from 17 December 1915. He saw later service in Salonika from 20 January 1916 and was discharged on 26 March 1919. Sold with copied research.
A matching pair of wall mounted brass and steel metal wall mounted gallery picture light / lamps With cylindrical curved design casing to direct light and housed in aluminium metal supports. In addition, three Art Deco-style sconces / wall lamps mounted on plastic frames, with concentric decoration to mounts, raised on stainless steel arms. Largest measures approx. 25cm x 27cm.
Three 1930s Art Deco glass flycatcher plafonnier and two marbled / mottled lamp light shades. The shade of domed form with tutti frutti glass in the colours of pink, orange and white, with original chains and brass housings. The smaller two of orange and blue marbled and mottled colourways. Largest measures approx 30cm diameter.
A Victorian mahogany collector's cabinet, the single glazed door showing a set of 13 fitted drawers, 42cm x 42cm x 20.5cmGood overall condition, some age-related marks, surface scratches etc, a couple of repaired chips and some wood slithers missing, some slight light splitting to the panels, internal drawer measurements 36.5cm x 16cm x 2cm, the bottom drawer is 5cm deep

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