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Lot 104

Twenty Original Star Wars Trilogy Plastic Model Action Figures, including Walrus Man, Darth Vader, Chewbacca, Nien Numb, Princess Leia Organa, Admiral Ackbar, no weapons/accessories.

Lot 194

A Circa 1960's Action Man, hard plastic head with brown painted hair, brown eyes, scar to cheek, masking tape to both feet/ankles, right foot damaged, sellotape to right hand, reverse torso marked 'Made In England by Palitoy under license from Hasbro 1964'; together with a quantity of Action Man accessories, including clothing, dive tanks, divers helmet, weapons.

Lot 201

A Circa 1960's Action man, hard plastic head with blonde painted hair, brown eyes, scar to cheek, masking tape to ankle/foot (repaired)? together with a quantity of Action Man accessories, including clothing, weapons, dinghy, rucksack.

Lot 21

A Vintage Palitoy Action Man Black Horse, with saddle and tack, The Royal Canadian mounted police uniform, clothing accessories including ceremonial jacket, red winter jacket, lifeguards tall black boots, a cardboard sentry box (damaged) and signage.

Lot 387

Two Palitoy Action Man Figures, comprising of a 1960's moulded hair Action Man, wearing a silver zip up space suit with boots and gloves, a flock haired bearded Action Man, wearing a black jumper, green trousers, green jacket, white belt, black boots; together with a quantity of Action Man accessories including radio back pack, scuba gear, clothing, weapons, life raft, field telephone.

Lot 414

Three Palitoy Flock Haired Action Man Figures, including Action Man Red Devil (left arm broken) helmet, goggles, red jump suit, black boots. A bearded Eagle Eye Action Man, long overcoat, green trousers, black boots, a blonde haired Action Man (non-Eagle Eyes), flying jacket, grey jumper, green trousers, black boots; together with a small quantity of accessories.

Lot 47

Seventeen Original Circa 1980's He-Man Masters Of he Universe Plastic Action Figures, including He-man, Skeletor, Webstor, Zodac, Trap Jaw, Whiplash, plus a green/orange Battle Cat, small parts may be missing.

Lot 5

A Vintage Action Man Marx Jeep and Searchlight Trailer, damage to steering wheel, trailer hitch, front bumper missing spare wheel to bonnet.

Lot 6

Action Man Interest - to include plastic armoured vehicle (playworn - small parts missing - require cleaning), a flock haired Action Man figure, two Masbro 'Moulded Hair' Action Man figures (one missing elbow/hand), all playworn, together with a small quantity of Action Man accessories.

Lot 7

A Palitoy 'Action Man' Scorpion Tank, original box (box tatty).

Lot 248

A BOX CONTAINING PLASTIC FIGURES ETC, to include 9" and 12" together with a vintage Action Man figure and various clothing

Lot 1187

2 vintage 1964 Palitoy action man figures, together with clothes and accessories

Lot 1188

A vintage 1964 Palitoy Action Man in army uniform with boots and gun, together with a 2007 Action Man in similar attire, with eagle eyes, and a small quantity of hand painted figures depicting photographer etc

Lot 96

Star Wars - x2 original vintage Kenner / Palitoy made Star Wars action figures. Both 'Cantina' playset related, comprising Walrus Man (GMFGI 1978, scarred COO) (EX to NM) and Hammerhead (GMFGI 1978, no COO - mint). Both with their original weapons / blasters. 

Lot 376

Toys to include a 1960's Action Man doll, diecast and other vehiclesLocation:

Lot 262

Three: Coder K. J. W. Wison, Royal Navy, who was killed in action in H.M.S. Firedrake when she was sunk on 17 December 1942 1939-45 Star; Atlantic Star; War Medal 1939-45, with named Admiralty enclosure; Memorial Scroll ‘Coder K. J. W. Wilson, Royal Navy’, extremely fine (3) £100-£140 --- Kenneth Joseph William Wilson, was serving in H.M.S. Firedrake, an 'F' class Destroyer, and lead escort to convoy ON153, with 43 ships bound for Canada sailing in a Force 12 storm, the worst the Atlantic had seen for a very long time. At around 17.00 the ASDIC operator picked up a contact. HMS Firedrake tracked the contact to about 5 miles south of the convoy, when at 20.10, she was hit by a torpedo fired by U-boat U211, breaking her in two. The bow section sank immediately, with the stern just managing to stay afloat. Lieutenant D. J. Dampier RN had found that there were 35 hands still on board and quickly got the men to work shoring up the bulkheads of No. 3 boiler room, and making safe and jettisoning the depth charges and torpedoes. The gun crew were ordered to fire star shells to attract the attention of the other escorts because all the radio and signalling equipment had gone with the bow part of the ship. Around 22.00 one of the other escorts - HMS Sunflower, a Flower class Corvette, was attracted by the star shells so she made towards them, firing star shells herself. The skipper first thought that H.M.S. Firedrake’s stern section was a U-boat and was about to fire at it before realising what he saw. He tried to get Sunflower as close as possible to H.M.S. Firedrake in order to get the survivors off, but the weather was so bad and the sea too rough. There were 60 foot waves breaking over the two ships, which were bobbing about like corks, so he decided to stand by and hope the weather would get better. At about 0040 on the 17th December, the weather worsened and the bulkheads started to give way under the tremendous battering. H.M.S. Firedrake’s stern started to sink, so the men had no option but to take to the water, and at 00.45 the stern sank. H.M.S. Sunflower moved in quickly to pick up the men in the water, a Newfoundland rating, G. J. Furey, had a rope tied around his waist and was lowered down the side of Sunflower. He would swim out to a man and grab hold of him, then his mates on board would heave them back to the ship and get him onboard. He and his mates managed to get 27 hands on board, but one later died. H.M.S. Firedrake was lost with the 168 men. Wilson is commemorated on the Chatham Naval Memorial. Sold with a file of copied research, a copy photograph of the recipient; and a hardback third edition of the book ‘Firedrake’ by A. D. Divine.

Lot 345

Naval General Service 1793-1840, 4 clasps, 12 Octr. 1798, St. Domingo, Java, Algiers (John Boon.) good very fine £4,000-£5,000 --- Approximately 75 clasps issued for this action by Sir John Borlase Warren’s squadron off the north-west coast of Ireland which resulted in the capture of the French 74-gun ship-of-the-line Hoche, and three 36-gun frigates, Bellone, Coquille and Ambuscade, all loaded with troops and stores for the intended invasion of Ireland. Approximately 104 medals issued with 4 clasps, this combination being unique. John Boon was born at Modbury, near Plymouth, Devon, and is confirmed on the rolls for all four clasps. He entered H.M.S. Canada as a Landman on 16 August 1795, aged 21, and was present in her during the action on 12 October 1798. He entered H.M.S. Acasta as an Able Seaman on 1 May 1805, aged 30, and was present in her at St Domingo on 6 February 1806. He entered H.M.S. Scipion as an Able Seaman on 1 March 1811, aged 36, and was present in her in August and September 1811, during the reduction and capture of Java. He entered H.M.S. Granicus as an Able Seaman on 18 July 1815, aged 41, and was present in her during the action at Algiers on 27 August 1816. One other man with this name is shown on the roll as a Private Royal Marines aboard the Conqueror at the battle of Trafalgar. Sold with various copied muster list and medal roll entries.

Lot 371

The Crimea campaign medal to Lieutenant-Colonel Thomas Shadforth, 57th Regiment, who was killed in action in the First Attack on the Redan, at the head of his regiment leading the “Forlorn Hope”; his father had commanded the 57th at Albuhera, where he fell wounded Crimea 1854-56, 1 clasp, Sebastopol (Lieut. Col. T. Shadforth. 57th Regt.) officially impressed naming, with original frayed ribbon, a few marks but generally good very fine £2,000-£2,400 --- The assault on 18 June, 1855, was initially led by Major General Sir John Campbell, 2nd Bart, temp. Commander of the 4th Division. Hearing that elements of his 4th (including the 57th Regiment) were to take part in the assault, he dismissed his A.D.C.'s and led the assault from the trenches only to fall killed after a few paces. Command of the left column of assault therefore fell to Shadforth almost immediately, Shadforth himself had barely time to give the order: 'Colonel Warre, you mind the right, I will take the left, and Major Inglis the centre', when he too fell shot dead. Sergeant-Major G. Cumming, 57th Regiment, in a poignant letter to the Colonel’s widow stated (Reading Mercury, 18 August 1855): ‘He was our father and friend, and watched over the Regiment and its wants in a manner that gained for him the adoration of his men; and never did I see a more genuine grief among a body of men than that seen in the 57th Regiment. The poor old Colonel and the memory of his many acts of kindness, of his unflinching courage at the head of his own “Die-Hards”. His glorious death will long be a theme in the 57th Regiment. Such are the feelings of the Regiment - they have lost their best friend; but I have lost, if possible, more than any of them, for I never experienced such kindness as he invariably showed to me and my welfare. He lost no opportunity in advancing me in my profession and not only did he look after my temporal but my spiritual welfare; and if ever a man died a Christian he did. I spoke to him a few minutes before he fell; the last words I heard him say were “Now, Colonel Ware, you mind the right, I will take the left, and Major Inglis the centre.” This was said amid a shower of missiles of every kind, and he was then as cool and collected as if on parade. Poor Colonel! It was the last order I heard him give, and the last time I saw him alive. He could not have suffered much pain from the nature of his wound.’ Thomas Shadforth was the second son of Lieutenant-Colonel Thomas Shadforth, who had been wounded in the Peninsula whilst commanding the 57th Foot in their celebrated action at Albuhera. Following in his father’s footsteps, Thomas was appointed an Ensign in the 57th Foot in 1825, which at that time was still commanded by his father. He sailed for Sydney aboard the Minstrel in the same year, in the company of his elder brother, Henry, a fellow officer of the “Die-Hards”. When the 57th were ordered to India in 1828, their father, then 60, resigned his commission and settled in New South Wales. He subsequently purchased the 640-acre Ravenswood Estate at Mulgoa, and became ‘a leader in the commercial and social life of Sydney for the next thirty years.’ (He died in 1862, aged 91) Thomas Shadforth also eventually rose to the command of the old 57th and he commanded the Regiment in the Crimea. As reported in the Hampshire Advertiser on 18 August 1855, he wrote to his wife and children on the eve of the first attack on the Grand Redan: ‘My own beloved Wife and dearly beloved Children. At one o’clock tomorrow morning I head the 57th to storm the Redan. It is, as I feel, an awfully perilous moment to me, but I place myself in the hands of our gracious God, without whose Will a sparrow cannot fall to the ground. I place my whole trust in him. Should I fall in the performance of my duty, I fully rely in the precious blood of our Saviour, shed for sinner that I may be saved through Him. Pardon and forgive me, my beloved ones, for anything I may have said or done to cause you one moment’s unhappiness. Unto God I commend my body and soul; which are his; and should it be His Will that I fall in the performance of my duty, in the defence of my Queen and country, I most humbly say, “Thy will be done.” God bless and protect you; and my last prayer will be, that He, of His infinite goodness, may preserve me to you. God bless you, my beloved Eliza, and my dearest children; and if we meet not again in this world, may we all meet in the mansion of our Heavenly Father, through Jesus Christ. God bless and protect you; and ever believe me. Your affectionate husband and loving father.’ Queen Victoria granted his widow and children the use of a royal cottage in Hampton Court Park, in addition to an annual pension of £200.

Lot 393

The Second Afghan War medal to Colour-Sergeant John Yule, 72nd (Seaforth) Highlanders, mentioned in Lord Roberts’ despatch for being ‘first man up’ in the assault on the Takht-i-Shah, when he captured two enemy standards, but was sadly killed in action the following day in the attack on ‘Conical Hill’ Afghanistan 1878-80, 2 clasps, Charasia, Kabul (1400 Cr. Sgt. J. Yule, 72nd Highrs.) hairline scratch in obverse field, otherwise brilliant extremely fine £2,600-£3,000 --- Following the massacre of the British embassy at Kabul in September 1879, the 72nd Highlanders were ordered to form part of the brigade under Brigadier-General T. D. Baker in the Kurram Division of the Kabul Field Force. On 6 October they were employed in the action at Charasia, as one of the two leading battalions in Baker’s outflanking movement, which contributed to the rout of the army of Kabul and the capture of nearly all its guns. Roberts entered Kabul on the 10th and the force prepared to go into winter quarters, but in the second week of December a local uprising took place under Mahomed Jan, who having welded together a strong and dangerous force of 45,000 men, began to occupy the surrounding heights. On the morning of the 13th, a force under Lieutenant-Colonel Gerald Money, consisting of the 72nd Highlanders, 3rd Sikhs and 5th Gurkhas, made a second attempt to assault the ‘craggy eminence’ atop the Takht-i-Shah, in conjunction with a force under Baker co-operating from the Beni Hissar side. The assault on the Takht-i-Shah could clearly be seen by General Roberts in the Sherpur Cantonment who wrote: ‘The slopes leading up to it were covered with huge masses of jagged rock, intersected by perpendicular cliffs, and its natural great strength was increased by breastworks, and stockades thrown up at different points. A brilliant charge by the combined troops now took place, the two Highland corps [72nd and 92nd] vying with each other for the honour of reaching the summit first. It fell to the 72nd, Colour Sergeant Yule of that regiment being the foremost man on the top. The enemy made a most determined stand, and it was only after a severe struggle and heavy loss that they were driven off the heights’. Besides being the first man on the summit, Yule also captured two Afghan standards, and received a mention in Roberts’ despatches (London Gazette 4 May 1880): ‘Colour-Sergeant John Yule, 72nd Highlanders, was the first man up, and captured two standards. This gallant non-commissioned officer was, I regret to say, killed on the following day.’ On the 14th, Yule was assigned to take part in the seizure and retention of Conical Hill during Baker’s storming of the Asmai Heights, to the east of Kabul. The hill was assaulted by sixty-four men of the 72nd, under Captain Nathaniel Spens, together with the Guides Infantry, all under Lieutenant-Colonel W. H. J. Clarke, and was successfully held despite repeated attempts to regain it by the Afghans. At length the enemy reassembled and, reinforced, came on in great numbers. Spens, accompanied by Colour-Sergeant Yule, volunteered to meet them at the head of a charge made by the Guides, and dashing headlong into the mass of the enemy, killed the front man before being cut down himself. Colour-Sergeant Yule was himself killed by a gunshot wound to the pelvis. John Yule had enlisted in the Aberdeen District as a Private with H.M. 72nd Highlanders on 18 May 1868, aged 21 years.

Lot 53

A Great War 1916 ‘Thiepval Ridge - Hessian Trench’ D.C.M. group of four awarded to Sergeant J. Moir, 5th Battalion (Western Cavalry), Canadian Infantry, who was also wounded in action at Armentieres, 27 February 1915 Distinguished Conduct Medal, G.V.R. (13394 Sjt: J. Moir. 5/Can: Inf: Bn:); 1914-15 Star (13394 Pte J. Moir. 5/Can: Inf:); British War and Victory Medals (13394 Sjt. J. Moir. 5. Can. Inf.) mounted as originally worn, generally very fine or better (4) £800-£1,000 --- D.C.M. London Gazette 24 November 1916: ‘For conspicuous gallantry in action. He assumed command of his Company and organised the line, displaying great courage and initiative. Later, with an officer, he rescued a severely wounded man under very heavy fire.’ John Moir was born in Liverpool, England in April 1884. He served during the Great War with the 5th Battalion (Western Cavalry), Canadian Infantry on the Western Front. Moir received a gun shot wound to the head and left arm at Armentieres, 27 February 1915, Moir died in June 1972, and is buried in the Mount Ida Cemetery, Salmon Arm, British Columbia, Canada. Sold with copied service papers.

Lot 643

The V.C. group of nine miniature dress medals worn by Major-General E. H. Sartorius V.C., 59th Foot, who was awarded the Victoria Cross for conspicuous bravery at Sliah-jui, Afghanistan, on 24 October 1879, and who was gifted his miniature V.C. by his brother (and fellow V.C. recipient) R. W. Sartorius Victoria Cross, the reverse of the suspension bar contemporarily engraved ‘R. S. to E. S. 25.5.81’; The Most Honourable Order of the Bath, C.B. (Military) Companion’s badge, gold and enamel, with integral gold riband buckle; Jubilee 1887, silver; Coronation 1902, silver; Coronation 1911, silver; Afghanistan 1878-80, no clasp; Egypt and Sudan 1882-89, dated reverse, no clasp; Ottoman Empire, Order of Osmanieh, Fourth Class badge, silver, gold, and enamel, with rosette on riband; Khedive’s Star, dated 1882, mounted as worn and housed in a wooden box with plaque inscribed ‘Major General Euston Henry Sartorius, VC., G.C.B. [sic]’, green enamel damage to Medjidieh, generally very fine (9) £2,400-£2,800 --- V.C. London Gazette 16 May 1881: ‘For conspicuous bravery during the action at Sliah-jui, on the 24th October 1879, in leading a party of five or six men of the 59th Regiment against a body of the enemy, of unknown strength, occupying an almost inaccessible position on the top of a precipitous hill. The nature of the ground made any sort of regular formation impossible, and Captain Sartorius had to bear the first brunt of the attack from the whole body of the enemy, who fell upon him and his men as they gained the top of the precipitous pathway; but the gallant and determined bearing of this Officer, emulated as it was by his men, led to the most perfect success, and the surviving occupants of the hilltop, seven in number, were all killed. In this encounter Captain Sartorius was wounded by sword cuts in both hands, and one of his men was killed.’ Euston Henry Sartorius was born in Cintra, Portugal, on 6 June 1844, the younger son of Admiral Sir George Rose Sartorius, G.C.B., and the younger brother of Reginald William Sartorius V.C., C.M.G. Along with his brothers, he was educated at Victoria College, St. Helier, Jersey, then Woolwich, and later at the Royal Military College, Sandhurst. First serving as an Ensign in the 59th Foot, he was gazetted Lieutenant on 29 June 1865. He served as a Staff Officer and Instructor at Sandhurst from December 1869 until 1874, during which time, on 29 June 1869 along with two other men, he helped to save three girls from drowning at Broadstairs, Kent, and was awarded the Royal Humane Society Medal in Bronze. When he left for India in 1874, he served as a Company Commander during the Second Afghanistan War, and for his gallantry at Shahjui on 24 October 1879 was awarded the Victoria Cross. Lieutenant Irwin of the 59th, who was under Sartorius’ command, wrote of the action: ‘Captain Sartorius ordered his men to fix bayonets, and to clamber up. The hill was very steep, and when they got to within a few feet of the top the Afghans sprang up with a yell, and, sword in hand, slashing right and left, simply jumped down upon our fellows. For a few moments, all was confusion, friend and foe falling down together, but it was speedily all over. We had gained the hill, and the standards on it, not one of the enemy having escaped. We lost one man, and Captain Sartorius was wounded in both hands. The fanatics were splendid, though ferocious-looking scoundrels, and fought like fiends, having evidently made up their minds to die, and to do as much damage as possible before doing so.’ Sartorious was invested with his Victoria Cross by Queen Victoria on 1 July 1881. Due to wounds received during his V.C. action, he partially lost the use of his left hand; unable to continue as an active field officer, he was appointed to a staff post at Aldershot. In the 1882 Anglo-Egyptian War he was appointed Deputy Assistant Adjutant-General and Quartermaster-General, responsible for base and communications, and was afterwards promoted brevet Lieutenant-Colonel; was Mentioned in Despatches; and was awarded the Fourth Class of the Ottoman Order of Osmanieh. He was promoted Colonel in 1886, and was Assistant Adjutant-General in Portsmouth from 1891 to 1894. He then served as Military Attaché to Japan, and was appointed a Companion of the Order of the Bath in 1896. Promoted Major-General in 1899, he retired in August 1901, although he continued to serve as a Colonel of a volunteer battalion of the South Lancashire Regiment. The inscription on the reverse of the Victoria Cross ‘R. S. to E. S.’, presumably refers to the fact that Euston Sartorius was gifted his miniature V.C. by his brother Reginald Sartorius, himself a recipient of the V.C. during the Ashantee War. The Sartorius brothers are one of only four sets of brothers to both be awarded the Victoria Cross (the others being C. J. S. and H. H. Gough; G. N. and R. B. Bradford; and A. B. and V. B. Turner).

Lot 81

A Second War M.M. group of five awarded to Sergeant F. Boothman, 2nd Battalion, Lincolnshire Regiment, who at the capture of Kervenheim, Germany, went to the aid of casualties despite extremely intense gun-fire and succeeded in bringing in the wounded men at great risk to himself, 1 March 1945 Military Medal G.VI.R. (4348892 Sjt. F. Boothman. Linc. R.) with named Buckingham Palace enclosure, and card box of issue; 1939-45 Star; France and Germany Star; Defence and War Medals 1939-45, about extremely fine (5) £1,400-£1,800 --- M.M. London Gazette 21 June 1945: ‘In recognition of gallant and distinguished services in North West Europe.’ The original Recommendation, for an immediate award, states: ‘On March 1st 1945 this NCO, normally a Carrier Platoon NCO, was attached to “A” Company 2 Lincolns as an additional stretcher bearer NCO for the operation connected with the capture of Kervenheim, in conjunction with 1 Royal Norfolks. During the advance to the village one platoon of the Company suffered several casualties from German machine gun fire whilst crossing an exposed length of road. Sjt Boothman with his fellow Stretcher Bearers went to the aid of these casualties immediately, although the machine gun fire was extremely intense, and he had previously been told to wait until the firing thinned. At great risk to himself, and with complete disregard for his own personal safety, he succeeded in bringing in the wounded men. For his bravery coolness and fine example to his fellow Stretcher Bearers I strongly recommend this NCO be granted an immediate award of the Military Medal.’ From the withdrawal of the BEF in France and Belgium in 1940 (which saw around 75% of the battalion captured at Poperinge) and the evacuation at Dunkirk, to the 1944 Normandy landings, Caen, the Normandy Bocage and the campaign through Belgium and Holland, the 2nd Battalion The Lincolnshire Regiment had, by early 1945, seen more fighting in the Second World War than most British Army battalions. Crossing from Holland into Germany, the 2nd Lincolns were to be next engaged in Operation Veritable, the clean up of the last remaining pockets of German resistance in the area west of the Rhine. On 1 March 1945, with other infantry, the 2nd Lincolns took part in the night capture of the village of Kervenheim; it was here on this day that Pte. J. Stokes, 2nd KSLI, won a posthumous Victoria Cross for his conspicuous gallantry in launching three consecutive attacks on German strongpoints until brought down by his wounds. The 2nd Lincolns suffered several casualties of their own and had little time for rest or food before, just the following afternoon, they were ordered into attack again, the objective this time being the village of Winnekendonk, about 2 miles south of Kervenheim, which they famously took with a frontal attack across open country. It was two successful battles within the space of 24 hours for the battalion and the regimental history appears not to distinguish between them as regards the awarding of honours. The History of the 10th Foot 1919-1950 by Major-General J. A. A. Griffin D.S.O. recounts the assault on Winnekendonk and concludes by attributing Boothman’s M.M. award also to this action: ‘Immediately the Battalion emerged from the cover of the woods, which had screened the start line, it met heavy machine-gun fire from the right flank, combined with considerable mortar and shell-fire. Anti-tank guns of varying calibres concentrated on the tanks, and the battle was on. One Churchill was knocked out, another had its turret blown off. A third accounted for the S.P. gun causing the damage. Two German Mark IV tanks were also destroyed. Twelve hundred yards of open ground had to be crossed before the cover of buildings was reached, and the Battalion surged forward under pitiless fire. Many fell including Major P. H. W. Clarke, M.C., killed by a grenade as he moved from platoon to platoon cheering on his men, but the remainder did not waiver. By twenty minutes past six the road junction at the near approach to the village had been reached. But still the parachutists fought back grimly. Snipers fired from first floor windows, and Spandaus shot through loopholes made in the walls at ground level. Now the light was going fast, and the infantry and tanks went into the village in billows of smoke, punctuated by orange flashes of the enemy 88’s, and criss-crossed in all directions by red lines of tracer. It was a great and terrible spectacle. By this time the Battalion had really got its teeth in and was not to be denied, and while Battalion Headquarters itself was fighting its way into a house, the leading company had reached the centre of the town. “C” Company headquarters, with Major G. C. A. Gilbert, M.C., in charge, found a Boche bazooka team stalking through the back gardens towards them. They held their fire until the leading man was only five yards away and then let fly. Eight Germans met sudden death. Savage fighting continued until the parachutists had had enough. It is reckoned that thirty were killed and fifty wounded; eighty surrendered, and the following morning, when the village was finally cleared, seventy more gave themselves up. The Commanding Officer, Lieutenant-Colonel Firbank, received a bar to his D.S.O. for this action, and Captain P. Smith, who was twice wounded during the battle and was evacuated, much to his disgust, the second time, was awarded an M.C. Sergeant Nicholson of “B” Company, Sergeant Boothman of “S” Company, Corporal Spye of “D” Company and Private Connor of “C” Company were all awarded the M.M.’

Lot 3115

A COLLECTION OF ACTION MAN FIGURES AND VEHICLES

Lot 3341

A HM ARMED FORCES ACTION MAN SCALE VEHICLE

Lot 3418

VARIOUS VINTAGE TOYS TO INCLUDE A DOLL, ACTION MAN, TEA SET, JACK STRAWS, DOMINOS, VEIWER ETC

Lot 182

Four large boxes of board games, children's books, Action Man by Palitoy; plastic farm animals, card jigsaws, golden casket, other plastic toys and board games etc. Qty: four large boxes

Lot 137

A BOXED ACTION MAN 'ASSAULT CRAFT' AND 'HELICOPTER' with a collection of looses outfits and other accessories

Lot 4045

A late 1970's Palitoy Action Man, blonde flock hair, blue 'Eagle eyes' with mechanism, gripping hands, marked 'MADE IN ENGLAND BY PALITOY, UNDER LICENSE FROM HASBRO © 1964', 29cm high, unboxed; another Palitoy Action Man, with brown flock hair and beard, blue eyes, gripping hands, 29cm high, unboxed; a collection of unboxed vehicles, clothing and accessories (quantity)

Lot 1241

Postcards, Military, a fine collection of approx. 54 early coloured vignette cards published by Blum & Degen. The majority illustrated by F O'Beirne. The cards are numbered to the front and listed in Geoff White's book 'Collecting British Army Postcards'. This set is almost complete with nos. 1129 15th Hussars, 1138 R.E pontooning, and R.N Man o' War boat all missing. Also includes unlisted no. 1117 R.N gun in action (mixed condition)

Lot 1437

An Action Man tank, helicopter, motorcycle and sidecar, and artillery gun, and a small quantity of accessories and figures

Lot 1086

A quantity of Action Man figures (some a/f) with assorted accessories and clothing to include; deep sea diving, skiing, lifeboat, parachute, commando's handbook, Sindy coat, Action Man intelligence manual, etc.

Lot 125

Large collection of action figures and toys including Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, The Iron Giant, The Bionic Woman, Dinky, The Man from UNCLE Corgi Thrush-Buster (part box), Star Wars and others. Provenance: The Phil Eason Collection. No copyright is assigned with this lot.

Lot 136

Action Figures - Large collection of action figures and accessories, mainly Action Man. Provenance: The Phil Eason Collection. No copyright is assigned with this lot.

Lot 1238

A Norwich City commemorative flag, World Cup final film reels and an action man

Lot 1419

A collection of Perspex cased die-cast cars including Solido, Wiking and Pilen together with an Action Man Space Speeder and horse

Lot 148

SIDESHOW 12" Collectible action figure ROGER MOORE as JAMES BOND from The Man With the Golden Gun , the figure is sealed in original box

Lot 695

NORTHERN SOUL; five singles comprising Barbara George 'Send for Me', Theola Kilgore 'I'll Keep Trying', Jimmy Hughes 'Goodbye My Love' and Irma Thomas 'Don't Mess With My Man', all on UK Sue Records, also Little Carl Carlton '46 Drums 1 Guitar', UK original on Action 1968 (5). CONDITION REPORT: The Sue records need a clean, after which all five will be Very Good.

Lot 176

A fine group of b&w British motor racing action photographs, circa 1930 and 1940s,comprising of 19 b&w photographic images mounted on card, some bearing handwritten titles and six signed in pencil by motor racing photographer Colin Brightman, to include Era 100 M.P.H. on Brighton Front, 25 by 30cm.; Era No.16 in action, 36 by 39cm.; Bugatti No.7 motor racing in Isle of Man, 30 by 40cm.; 1949 Ferrari 25 F1 No.8 racing, 38 by 40cm.; Era No.12 racing, 36 by 38.; Talbot-Lago racing possibly at Silverstone in 1949, 38 by 40cm.; Maserati 4CLT No.11 racing, 36 by 38cm.; Maserati No.18 racing, possibly Luigi Villoresi, 36 by 38cm.; Ferrari 125 F1 engine, possibly at Silverstone in 1949, 36 by 38cm.; Talbot-Lago T26C No.3 racing, possibly at Silverstone in 1949, 36 by 38cm.; Maserati 4CLT No.18, possibly Luigi Villoresi, 36 by 38cm.; two Ferrari 125 F1 No.8 racing possibly Alberto Ascari in 1949, 38 by 40cm.; the following signed in pencil by Colin Brightman on the mounts, No.11 racing car, 40 by 40cm.; ERA No.142 racing car, 40 by 50cm, photograph exhibited at North Middlesex P.S. exhibition in 1939; Mercedes Benz W125 No.3 racing car, 40 by 50cm.; Nuvolai No.4 winners Donnington 1938, 40 by 50cm.; No.8 racing car, photograph exhibited at Olympia Motor Show 1936 and No.7 racing car, 40 by 50cm, photograph exhibited at North Middlesex P.S. exhibition 1938, each mount and photograph bearing some foxing and minor wear, (19)

Lot 680

A comprehensive collection of Action Man vehicles. Including jeeps, motorbikes tanks and lorries.

Lot 254

A Palitoy Action Man Training Tower, with escape slide and crane, in box; together with an Action Man Figure; and an Action Man trunk containing related accessories.

Lot 183

Quantity of 1970's Action Man figures and loose accessories

Lot 251

Box containing an Action Man cavalry set including horse, figure, clothes etc.

Lot 937

A box containing various soft toys and Action Man figures etc.

Lot 127R

Action Man - A collection of 8 unboxed figures, 1 boxed X Robot unopened, Accessories. 8 loose Action Man figures appear to be in good condition with clothing and various accessories. Unopened, X Robot appears to have slight storage wear on box but otherwise appears in good condition.(This does not constitute a guarantee)

Lot 251

Palitoy, Action Man, Airfix, Other - Two painted head Action Man figures with a an unboxed collection of Action Man weapons, uniform parts and accessories. Lot includes a brown painted hair and black painted hair Action Man figures - both with hard heads and hands - both appear Fair Plus - Good with cracks to limbs, and signs of play wear. Accessories include Grease gun; Firemans harness, paddles Firefighters coat, boots and similar. Lot also includes two boxes of 1:32 Airfix plastic soldiers and a vintage Sekidden plastic toy BB firing gun - latter items all with play wear and are unchecked for completeness40. (2

Lot 622

TWO BOXES OF COMICS INCLUDING 2000AD NO.1, comics include 2000AD Numbers 1, 4-11, 15-24, 26-27, 30-48, 52-72, 74-83, 85-109, 111-122, 124-140, 142, 144, 148-163 and 166-174; also includes a small quantity of Beano comics, a small quantity of Battle comics, three Harry Potter calendars and other comics, condition ranges from poor to good, full list avaliable on request, together with a quantity of unboxed toys all playworn condition with [aint loss, damage and wear, to include scratch built, wooden O gauge station with platform, two ramps, and fencing, has been wired for electric light, not tested, has some damage and wear, a damaged incomplete Action Man helicopter, two Playmobil G gauge Freight Wagons, one appears to be missing doors but both in fairly good condition, a tinplate and plastic battery operated Tower Crane, not tested and in need of some attention, modern toys tinplate and plastic piston Silver Mountain Locomotive, Cheng Shing toys plastic battery operated locomotive, neither tested and both damaged (4 boxes)

Lot 235

Denys Fisher The Six Million Dollar man action figure doll with his Bionic Repair station transport. The figure has all original costume and shoes  and has the eye mechanism and the station is playworn and has a poor original box. (2)

Lot 302

Action man Palitoy Hasbro 2006 boxed Horse; Excellent with accessories as a licensed replica toy with horse and equipment as shown(1)

Lot 303

Action Man Man nostalgic collection 40th anniversary collection; Unopened action pilot and space suit outfit all boxed -action figure doll and contents all unopened, (1)

Lot 315

Palitoy Action Man; Large 1960s Private  collection owned from Childhood. The figures are from First issue to the flock hair, static eyes. Some are complete and others playworn and missing limbs which require reattaching-see all images. The Outfits include German storm trooper sets. military , and a vast array of clothing pieces and guns and military pieces from Outfits to add to sets,including large bag of boots. The condition of all pieces is play worn and from 1966-69. An interesting Childhood lot.

Lot 623

A collection of Action Man (circa 2000's) Toys, together with Meccano and Mega Blocks sets and Robosapien Robot (qty)

Lot 63

Marvel Comics - Fantastic Four 1972, #120 March "The Air-Walker"; #122 May "Galactus Unleashed"; #124 July "The Return of the Monster"; #131 February "The Human Torch Goes Wild,,,"; #132 March "Omega The Ultimate Assassin"; #134 May "The Dragon Man..."; #135 June "Face It Action-Lover"; #136 "The Wild One Cometh"; #139 October "Target Tomorrow".

Lot 44

Various comics, including Warren Magazine Spirit #14; Tower Action Series Thunder Agents #7; Classics Illustrated #161, 158, 134, 124, 114, 111, 101, 6; Marvel Hellstorm #1 April, Fantastci Four Chronicles 1982, Marvel Annual Fantastic Four #22 1989; #20 1987, #21 1988, Fantastic Four Annual #18 1984, Fantastic Four Annual #17 1983, Giant-Size Fantastic Four #4; Special King Size Annual #3; King Size Annual The Amazing Spider-Man #2, King Size Annual The Amazing Spider-Man #4, Amazing Stories of Suspense #52 and #179 and Double-Sized X-Men Classic #90 Dec together with Spider-Man The Icon Steve Saffel. 

Lot 43

MIXED MARVEL LOT (35 in Lot) - (MARVEL) - Includes ULTIMATE SPIDER-MAN (2001) #3, 5, 6 + GHOST RIDER (1979) #36 + ROM (1980) #2 & 3 + BATTLESTAR GALACTICA (1979) #2 + MICRONAUTS (1979) #10 & 11 + MARVEL TRIPLE ACTION: AVENGERS (1976/78) #28 & 43 + SPIDER-WOMAN (1978) #5 + HOWARD THE DUCK (1976/78) #4 & 23 + HUMAN FLY (1977/78) #2 & 6 + SGT. FURY (1979) #152 + OMEGA (1976) #3 + TARZAN (1979) #25 + JOHN CARTER (1979) #24 + KA-ZAR (1975) #8 + MARVEL SUPER-HEROES: HULK (1979) #80 + AVENGERS (2004) #492 + X-FORCE (1992) #8 + FORCE WORKS (1995) #10 + X-FACTOR (1993) #92 + FACTOR X (1996) #1 & 2 + NAMOR ANNUAL (1992) #2 + MARVEL FANFARE (1989) #44 + IRON MAN (1996) #2 + QUIXCKSILVER (1998) #3 + X-MEN CLASSICS (1995) #105 + WEAPON X (1995) #2 + X-MEN ADVENTURES (1995) #4 - Flat/Unfolded

Lot 691

An Action Man and accessories and a box of plastic soldiers, cowboys and Native Americans, etc.

Lot 978

Action man and related figures, approximately 16

Lot 104

Star Wars - an original vintage c1983 Palitoy made Star Wars minirig action figure playset ' One Man Sail Skiff Vehicle '. 100% complete, including used decal sheet. Housed within its original Return Of The Jedi tri-logo box. 

Lot 241

Star Wars - An original vintage 1983 Kenner made Star Wars carded MOC action figure ' Logray - Ewok Medicine Man '. Factory sealed upon its original 77 back Return Of The Jedi card. The bubble with no splits or dents. Card back EX to NM..

Lot 59

Star Wars - An original vintage 1983 Kenner made Star Wars carded MOC action figure ' Logray - Ewok Medicine Man '. Factory sealed upon it's original 77 back Return Of The Jedi card. The bubble with no splits or dents. Card back NM..

Lot 96

Star Wars - x2 original vintage Kenner / Palitoy made Star Wars action figures. Both 'Cantina' playset related, comprising Walrus Man (GMFGI 1978, scarred COO) (EX to NM) and Hammerhead (GMFGI 1978, no COO - mint). Both with their original weapons / blasters. 

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