A rare original c1965 ladies iconic pale blue PVC raincoat by MARY QUANT/ALLIGATOR collaboration. Satin lined with original belt. Fits UK M-L. Alligator Rainwear was a British company, whose main factory was based in Stockport. It was best known for its 1960s collaborations with Mary Quant in the design and production of her "Wet Look" collection of PVC raincoats. Similar seen at the Victoria & Albert Museum - photos of exhibits as shown.Please note lot contains mac only, any additional items in the images are included for illustrative purposes only. Condition Report: Good condition commensurate with age
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Tobias Weiss and Rev W. Kreiten - Sceptra Mortis, a scriptural Dance of Death, printed and published B. Kuhlen M. Gladback, circa 1891, fifteen drawings from the original cartoons for the fresco paintings, loose in folio, board covers with gilt title, also Outlines of Celebrated pictures by James Dickson, and Life Songs - illustrated and illuminated by Louisa Marchioness of Waterford and The Countess of Tankerville, pub. James Nisbet & Co 1884, a book of original poemsLocation:BWR
Taxidermy: A Wall Cased Black-headed Seagull (Larus ridibundus), dated 2001, by M. Latchford, Taxidermy, a full mount adult female in winter plumage, in hovering pose with wings outstretched above a painted seaweed covered rock, set above natural seashells and seaweed, mounted against a graduated pale blue painted back drop, enclosed within a picture frame style five-glass wall hanging display case, 50cm by 13.5cm by 76cm excluding outer frame, signed and dated to interior lower right.
Canada General Service 1866-70, 1 clasp, Red River 1870 (Pte. J. M. Beattie, Que. R.) Canadian style impressed naming, polished, otherwise nearly very fine £1,800-£2,200 --- Joseph M. Beattie is confirmed on the roll for Red River 1870, one of approximately 136 clasps to the Quebec Rifles, and is also shown on the roll for Fenian Raid 1866 with the Toronto Field Battery.
Queen’s South Africa 1899-1902, 3 clasps, Modder River, Orange Free State, Transvaal (4725 Pte. M. Mc.Namara. Munster Fus:) edge bruising, otherwise good very fine £260-£300 --- Modder River clasp scarce to the Royal Munster Fusiliers. Cresswell’s Irish Medals states only one half company present, comprising 2 officers and 69 other ranks; British Battles and Medals gives a total of 75 clasps to the regiment. Sold with copied research.
Queen’s South Africa 1899-1902, 5 clasps, Tugela Heights, Orange Free State, Relief of Ladysmith, Transvaal, Laing’s Nek (3077 Pte. M. Smyth, Rl. Dublin Fus:) number and surname both officially corrected, nearly extremely fine £100-£140 --- Michael Smyth (recorded as Smith on the medal roll) was born in Dublin in 1870 and attested for the Royal Dublin Fusiliers on 4 September 1888. Posted to the 1st Battalion, he deserted on 25 July 1893, but re-joined in 1899, forfeiting all previous service. He served with the 1st Battalion in South Africa during he Boer War from 10 November 1899 to 9 November 1900, and was discharged medically unfit on 13 April 1901. Sold with copied record of service and medal roll extract.
1914 Star (M. A. Hayes. B.R.C.S. & O. St. J.J.) good very fine £100-£140 --- Mary Alice Hayes served as a Theatre Sister with the British Red Cross and Order of St. John of Jerusalem, Brussels Unit, from 15 September 1914. She was awarded the Royal Red Cross 2nd Class for this work (London Gazette 3 June 1918: ‘Theatre Sister, B.R.C.S.’). Sold with copied research.
The 1914-15 Star awarded to Major N. M. Moncreiff, 2nd Canadian Mounted Rifles, who was wounded in action on the Western Front, 30 September 1916, and succumbed to those wounds, 15 November 1916 1914-15 Star (Lieut: N. M. Moncreiff. 2/Can:Mtd:Rif:); Canadian Memorial Cross, G.V.R. (Major N. H. Moncrieff [sic]) generally very fine or better (2) £160-£200 --- Norman Halliday Moncreiff was born in Edinburgh, Scotland in September 1886. He was the son of The Hon. F. Moncreiff of 8 Magdala Place, Edinburgh, and grandson of the 1st Baron Moncreiff. He initially served with the British Columbia Horse, before transferring to the 2nd Canadian Mounted Rifles. Moncreiff served with the latter on the Western Front, and was wounded in action, 30 September 1916. Major Moncreiff died of wounds at No. 2 Red Cross Hospital, Rouen, 15 November 1916, and is commemorated at the St. Sever Cemetery, Rouen. He is also commemorated on the Lavington Cenotaph, Canada.
British War Medal 1914-20 (3) (3056553 Pte. A. Tremblay 38-Can. Inf.; 3204466 Pte. D. J. Molyneux. N.S.R.) third erased; Police L.S. & G.C., E.II.R., 1st issue (Sergt. Albert S. Molden) in Royal Mint case of issue; Canadian Forces Decoration, E.II.R. (Cpl. J. M. J. C. Tremblay) last in case of issue, generally very fine (5) £80-£120 --- Adelard Tremblay was born in Cornwall, Ontario, Canada in July 1895. He was a Stenographer by trade, and served during the Great War with the 38th Battalion (Ottawa), Canadian Infantry. Private Tremblay was killed in action on the Western Front, 2 September 1918, and is buried in the Dury Mill British Cemetery, Pas de Calais, France. Daniel John Molyneux was born in Dundas, Prince Edward Island, Canada in June 1887. He served during the Great War in the UK with the 1st Depot Battalion, Nova Scotia Regiment.
General Service 1918-62, 1 clasp, Palestine (3055402. Pte. M. Rosie R. Scots.) solder repair to suspension, surname officially corrected, nearly very fine £50-£70 --- M. Rosie served with the 1st Battalion, Royal Scots in Palestine. He subsequently served with the 2nd Battalion during the Second War, and was taken prisoner of war at the fall of Hong Kong, 25 December 1941.
Imperial Service Medal (5), G.V.R., Circular issue, 1st ‘coinage head’ issue (2) (Richard Clemence; Frederick David Bailey.) G.V.R., Circular issue, 2nd ‘Coronation robes’ issue (2) (Caleb Phillips.; John Henry Martin); G.VI.R., 1st issue (George Giles Bolden.) very fine or better (5) £70-£90 --- I.S.M. London Gazette, 8 June 1923, Clemence, Richard, Ship Fitter, H.M. Dockyard, Devonport. I.S.M. London Gazette, 11 September 1925, Bailey, Frederick David, Hammerman, H.M. Dockyard, Portsmouth. I.S.M. London Gazette, 18 December 1934, Phillips, Caleb, Smith, H. M. Dockyard, Devonport. I.S.M. London Gazette, 22 September, 1936, Martin, John Henry, Skilled Labourer (Transporter Operator), H.M. Dockyard, Portsmouth. I.S.M. London Gazette, 8 December 1942, Bolden, George Giles, Shipwright. H.M. Dockyard, Chatham. Sold with copy research.
Regimental Sporting Medallions (11), Army Athletic Club, Public Schools Gymnastic Competition (Cheltenham College F, R. Jones M. G. Salter 1904); Royal Military Academy; North China Company Team Championship (Winners 1928 C. Coy. 1 E. York. R.); R.A.F. Hendesford Boxing (H. Hines 1943); R.A.F. No. 23 Group Swimming Championships; Tug of War 1929; Territorial Force Athletic Sports Championships (Edinburgh 1914 Wrestling Dr. J. Johnstone); Dollar Acadamey (Scott Lang Cup 1940 Sgt. G. M. Short); Army Football Association (2); Royal Air Force Athletic & Cross Country Association (1931 120 Yds. Hurdles Championship Second), the last silvered bronze, the rest all silver, some edge bruises, generally very fine (11) £80-£100
Miscellaneous Documents, booklets and ephemera, mainly of military interest. Comprising a Soldier’s ‘Brown Book’ Service and Pay Book, Regular Army Soldier’s ‘Red Book’ Certificate of Service, Record of Service Sheet, and Parchment Royal Warrant, on appointment as Warrant Officer, relating to Warrant Officer Class II, Company Sergeant Major A. M. Williams, Royal Engineers and Royal Signals, together with a group photograph supposedly including the recipient; a Parchment Certificate of Service (Army Form D.426), Parchment Certificate of Discharge (Army Form B.2077), and Certificate of Employment During the War (Army Form Z. 18), relating to Regimental Sergeant Major G. R. Marsden, 4th Dragoon Guards; a small bundle of letters home, mainly from India and Burma in the early 1890s, relating to Lance Sergeant R. Scott, Cheshire Regiment, including a parchment Camp Cookery Certificate issued by the Deputy Assistant Quarter Master General, Aldershot Camp, this all giving an interesting snapshot of military life on campaign in India and Burma; a R.A.F. Form 2520B Airwoman, Royal Air Force Service and Release Book, and letter from the Royal College of Music, London, relating to Flight Sergeant H. M. Klein, B.E.M., Women’s Auxiliary Air Force; a Home Guard Service Certificate, 1952-56, named to G. E. A. Bourne; two National Registration Identity cards, one named to W. J. J. Haynes, of Brierly Hill, with a Gloucestershire Regimental Association Life Membership Card; an Army Booklet ‘Health Memoranda for British Soldiers in the Tropics’ 1941; and other ephemera; together with a British cast copy of the Sinking of the S.S. Lusitania Medal by K. Goetz, 55mm, unboxed, generally good condition £60-£80 --- Alexander Mitchell Williams was born in 1904, and enlisted at Cork into the Royal Engineers on 2 February 1920. He transferred into the Royal Signals on 6 November 1920, and remained in the Royal Signals for his military career. He served at Home, in Egypt, India and served with the B.E.F. in France from September 1939 to June 1940, the remainder of his Second World War Service being ‘at Home’. His Certificate of Service confirms that he had served 25 years and 253 days with the Colours and seven years in the Reserve, having a combined service of 33 years. He received the Long Service and Good Conduct Medal in 1938, the 1939-45 Star and the Defence and War Medals. He was discharged from the Army Reserve in 1953. George Richard Marsden was born in Ashford, Kent. He enlisted into the Dragoons of the Line as Private No. 4802, 4th Dragoon Guards, at London on 13 May 1898. He transferred to the Army Reserve at Gosport on 20 April 1905, and was recalled for service in the Great War being promoted Regimental Sergeant Major on 13 October 1917. Robert Scott received the India General Service Medal 1854, with clasp Chin-Lushai 1889-90, for service in India as Colour Sergeant, 1st Battalion, Cheshire Regiment. Miss Hilda Minnie Klein was born in Bow, London, in October 1896. A talented pianist, she entered the Royal College of Music on 23 September 1915 and studied there for 19 terms. She won numerous prizes, became an Associated Board examiner and held a teaching post until the late 1960s. Miss Klein enlisted in the Women’s Auxiliary Air Force at Harrogate on 30 September 1940. Promoted to Corporal on 24 January 1941, she was trained as a Photographic Interpreter (P.I.) and transferred to R.A.F. Medmenham in Buckinghamshire on 17 April 1942; the station was the R.A.F.’s Central Interpretation Unit, responsible for analysing air photographs and producing reports of enemy positions. The unit issued target maps to 617 Squadron prior to the Dambusters Raid, and kept close tabs upon the movements of the Tirpitz in Norway. For her services she was Mentioned in Despatches (London Gazette 1 January 1945) and additionally awarded the British Empire Medal, Military Division (London Gazette 1 January 1946). She was discharged on 14 September 1945 and died at Hove, Sussex, on 7 June 1981.
The mounted group of three miniature dress medals attributed to Major-General H. M. Wemyss, 1st Bengal Fusiliers, who was severely wounded in the attack on the Lahore Gate during the assault of Delhi The Most Honourable Order of the Bath, C.B. (Military) Companion’s badge, gold and enamel, with integral silver-gilt riband buckle; Indian Mutiny 1857-59, 1 clasp, Delhi; Afghanistan 1878-80, no clasp, mounted as worn, good very fine (3) £300-£400 --- Provenance: The recipient‘s full-sized awards were sold in these rooms, as part of the Brian Ritchie Collection, in March 2005. C.B. London Gazette 22 February 1881. Henry Manley Wemyss was born at Cupar on 8 November 1831 and was educated at Edinburgh Academy and at Addiscombe. He was appointed Ensign on 9 December 1848 and landed in India in January 1849, when he was directed to do duty with the 57th Bengal Native Infantry at Dinapore. In June of that year he was posted to the 1st Bengal European Fusiliers at Cawnpore, and was promoted Lieutenant on 18 April 1853. At the outbreak of the Great Sepoy Mutiny the 1st Bengal Europeans were directed to form part of the 1st Ambala Brigade, Delhi Field Force. Wemyss, who was then holding a staff appointment, immediately rejoined his regiment and reached it in time to take part in the battle of Badli-ki-Serai on 8 June. He subsequently advanced with the British force to Delhi Ridge. Before Delhi on 14 July 1857, he was wounded while leading his regiment in the sortie which cleared the suburb of Subzi Mundi. ‘During these operations’, in which the Fusiliers lost sixty-four killed and wounded, ‘Lieutenant H. M. Wemyss, the Adjutant of the Regiment, was hit by a musket-ball on his side; but he refused to go to the rear, and continued to perform his duties.’ Besides participating in numerous engagements between 8 June and 11 September, ‘including the cutting out of a Battery of Light Guns at Ludlow Castle, on the 12 August, by a column under command of Brigadier G. D. Showers’, he was present at the rout of the enemy at the Nudjufghur canal on 25 August when Brigadier John Nicholson’s force killed eight hundred rebels and captured thirteen guns. At the storm of the city on 14 September, the Fusiliers were selected by Nicholson to lead the First Column in the escalade of the shattered wall near the Kashmir Bastion and climb down to the main-guard by St James’s Church. Here Wemyss was asked by Lieutenant Noel Money, commanding the leading men of the regiment, how to proceed. Wemyss showed him a narrow lane leading to the Kabul Gate and told him to pass down it under the wall for safety’s sake. Wemyss and regimental headquarters were delayed in following by having to clear some buildings near the Kashmir Gate. When this was accomplished they moved on and were themselves passing down another narrow lane when the commanding officer, Major George Jacob, fell mortally wounded. Captain Greville, the next senior officer, took command and at length headquarters caught up with Money near the Kabul Gate. The next objective was the heavily defended Lahore Gate. Greville suggested breaking into some houses in order to take the enemy in the rear but Nicholson ignored him and called for a direct assault. Three desperate and costly charges followed. ‘Anything I had been in before was child’s play’, wrote Money afterwards, ‘It was here that I saw about twelve officers knocked out in five minutes.’ ‘General Nicholson, now in front, shook his sword in defiance at the multitude of the enemy around, who, with shouts and yells, poured grape bullets, and stones on the party below. Nicholson, “our best and bravest,” was struck down mortally; wounded; Speke, “gentle everywhere but in the field” fell mortally wounded; Greville, in re-forming the Regiment, was shot through the right shoulder. Captain Caulfield (doing duty), Lieutenants Wemyss, Butler, and Woodcock, all fell at this time; as well as a large proportion of the rank and file.’ Following the capture of Delhi, Wemyss was granted leave but returned to the fray in January 1858 as Brigade Major of the Ambala Brigade and held that appointment until October. In spite of his prominent role at Delhi he was denied public recognition. An official source states: ‘Not mentioned in despatches published of the Siege, from it is believed, the deaths of General Nicholson and Major Jacob and the despatches of the 1st Brigade not having been sent in from so many of the senior Officers being killed and wounded.’ Wemyss rejoined his regiment in December 1859, following a period of leave in England, and transferred to the Bengal Staff Corps on its creation. He afterwards held a succession of staff appointments in the ‘new’ Oudh Division until 1867, when he was posted officiating second-in-command of the 39th Native Infantry, his former regiment having joined the Home Establishment as the 101st (Royal Bengal) Fusiliers in 1861. Advanced to Captain in 1861 and Major in 1868, he succeeded to the command of the 39th Native Infantry in 1872, and the next year was given command of the Jhansi district in addition. During the first phase of the Second Afghan War Wemyss commanded the 39th Native Infantry at Ali Musjid in March and April 1879. From 11 April to August he commanded the Bhopal Battalion on garrison duties at Landi Kotal, and commanded a reconnaissance of cavalry and infantry to Kam Shiliman to watch the movements of the Mohmands. During the second campaign he served as Deputy Assistant Quartermaster General, Khyber Line Force, and accompanied the 1st Brigade in its advance to meet the Kabul troops at Kita Sang. In January and February 1880, he took part in the Lughman expedition against the Wazir Kugianis, and in April participated in the Hissarak Valley expedition. For services in the Afghan War he was appointed a Companion of the Order of the Bath, was Mentioned in Despatches, and was promoted Brevet Colonel. Advanced to the rank of Honorary Major-General in 1890, he died at Stanmore, Canterbury, on 17 November 1915.
German Second World War Army Qualification Trade Badges. Comprising Medical NCO. Panzer driver NCO. Radio operator NCO. Schirmeister NCO. Pigeon postmaster, mans. Supply Administration mans. Medical mans. Weapons specialist. Ordnance mans. Qualified farrier in field grey. Qualified Farrier M.36 style. Ordnance mans field grey. Signals personnel yellow on green background. Signals personnel light blue on green background. Signals personnel white on field grey background. Signals personnel black on green background. Signals personnel, pink on green background. Signals personnel red on green background. All have glue and paper residue on the reverse side where previously attached to a collectors display board, generally good condition (lot) £140-£180
German Second World War Army Rank Insignia. Three items of insignia for the light brown herringbone twill uniform. Three M.36 rank insignia, silver and subdued lace on dark green background. Three items of rank insignia on mid war field grey backing material. Three items of insignia on HBT herringbone twill material. Two items of rank lace without any backing. Two separate Oberschutz rank patches, one on HBT material, one of field grey, generally good condition (lot) £60-£80
German Second World War Shoulder Boards and Numbered Tabs. Comprising 3 pairs of scarce numbered slip-ons. Regiment 448, Training Regiment L19, Training Regiment 715. Infantry slip-on boards Senior NCO with gothic letters ‘UV5’ for Army Preparatory School. Army stitch-on D6, which is headquarters of a division. M36 infantry shoulder board, plain, slip-on. M.36 NCO infantry board, slip-on. M.43 field grey centred infantry board, slip-on. Reichwehr period Regiment 18 with NCO tab, slip-on. Reichwehr period light green centre slip-on. Regiment No.14 Senior NCO. M.36 stitch-on Infantry Regiment 58. Infantry stitch-on M.36 Regimental number ‘2’ to the centre, generally good condition (lot) £140-£180
German Second World War Infantry Shoulder Boards. Comprising Slip-on, Regiment 47 M.36. Slip-on Regiment 58 with NCO stripes. Infantry Regiment 58 NCO M.36 stitch-on. Infantry Regiment 39, stitch-on, NCO. Reichswehr period Regiment 18 slip-on. Early third Reich pointed board, stitch-on Regiment 55. Early Third Reich pointed board, unpiped, slip-on Regiment 47. Possibly Reichswehr period M.15 shoulder board, white piped with Regiment 4. Early Third Reich NCO Regiment 20, slip-on with slight moth, generally good condition (lot) £140-£180
German Second World War Police Insignia. Comprising one pair and six single shoulder boards. Bevo woven Auxiliary Police silver on black overseas cap badge. Police M.43 Bevo woven eagle and cockade set. Police silver on black overseas cap eagle. Green on black Police arm badge with paper glue residue on the reverse side where previously applied to a collectors display board, generally good condition (lot) £100-£140
A German Second World War SA M.33 Enlisted Mans Dagger. An extremely nice condition SA Model 33 mans dagger with the early Eickhorn trademark. The blade has been polished as have all the fittings. Wood grip perfect. Undamaged enamel SA inset with high quality national eagle. Fitted into its early anodised scabbard, which still retains a lot of the lacquer but with ageing lines coming through from the base metal below. Complete with its single hanger and belt loop, the upper grip loop is a modern addition. On the lower rear cross guard the letters ‘HA’ for Gruppe Hansa, good condition £400-£500 --- This is an age restricted lot: the successful buyer will be required to either collect in person, or arrange specialist shipping.
A German Second World War Kriegsmarine Bulkhead Clock. A fully functional Kriegsmarine bulkhead clock, numbered ‘3319’ on the reverse side. Numbered ‘19’ to the closing lock. The face has all its original finish present, some slight rubbing. Eagle and swastika over ‘M’. ‘8795’ over ‘N’ indicating this is a Nordsee issue ship. All three bulkhead fixing lugs in brass are present, the body also good with very minor indentations, with its original key, good overall condition £1,400-£1,800 --- Note: At the end of the Second World War many of these bulkhead clocks were captured by British forces and were sold off in the 1950s through Admiralty Auctions.
A German Second World War Kriegsmarine Junghans Bulkhead or Office Clock. A nice condition Junghans produced clock having stepped case very similar to the bulkhead clocks in brass, in a blackened finish with a 12 and 24 hour dial. Eagle and swastika engraved over ‘M’ with number ‘13841’ over ‘N’ for Nordsee. The clock appears to be fully functional and is with its original key. Two of the three wall fixing lugs are present, one is missing, overall good condition £600-£800
A Great War ‘Western Front’ M.C. group of four awarded to Captain Lord Mowbray, 8th Hussars, later Grenadier Guards and Premier Baron of England Military Cross, G.V.R., the reverse contemporarily engraved ‘Hon. W. M. Stourton 8th. Hussars Morcourt. 27.3.18’; British War and Victory Medals (Lieut. Hon. W. M. Stourton.); Coronation 1937, unnamed as issued, mounted court-style as worn; together with the related miniature awards, these including a Defence Medal, generally very fine (4) £1,200-£1,600 --- M.C. London Gazette 26 July 1918: ‘When on patrol he came under heavy rifle and machine-gun fire, but remained in touch with the enemy all day, displaying great coolness and initiative, and sending back most valuable information. It was due to his gallantry that a trooper whose horse had been shot was able to rejoin the patrol.’ William Marmaduke Stourton, 25th Baron Mowbray, 26th Baron Segrave, and 22nd Baron Stourton was born on 31 August 1895, the son of Charles Stourton, 24th Baron Mowbray &c., and a direct descendant of of Geoffrey de Mowbray, an adviser to William the Conqueror, and also of William de Mowbray, one of the 25 Barons who forced King John to sign the Magna Carta. Educated at Downside School and the Royal Military College, Sandhurst, he was commissioned Second Lieutenant in the 8th Hussars on 23 December 1914 and served with them during the Great War on the Western Front from 3 January 1916, being promoted Lieutenant on 1 July 1917. For his gallantry at Morcourt on 27 March 1918 during the first week of the German Spring Offensive he was awarded the Military Cross. Stourton transferred to the Grenadier Guards on 11 August 1918, and was promoted Captain on 13 October 1923, before resigning his commission in 1928. He succeeded to the Baronies of Mowbray, Segrave, and Stourton upon the death of his father on 29 July 1936, and saw further service as a Captain with the Grenadier Guards during the Second World War, before being discharged from the Reserve of Officers having reached the upper age limit on 10 November 1945. He died at Claro, Yorkshire, on 7 May 1965, and was succeeded to the baronies by his son. Sold with copied research. For the medals awarded to the recipient’s son, see Lot 68.
An Order of St. John group of three awarded to Miss Mary C. Coulcher, C.B.E., Lady District Superintendent, St. John Ambulance Association, and Vice-President, Suffolk Branch, British Red Cross Society The Order of St. John of Jerusalem, Officer’s (Sister’s) shoulder badge, silver, with heraldic beasts in angles, on lady’s bow riband; Coronation 1911, St. John Ambulance Brigade (Lady Supt. M. C. Coulcher.); Service Medal of the Order of St John, with two additional ‘5 Years Service’ bars (Lady Supt. Miss M. C. Coulcher. Ipswich Corps. 1909) contact marks to last, generally very fine (3) £300-£400 --- C.B.E. London Gazette 30 March 1920: Miss Mary Caroline Coulcher, O.B.E., Lady District Superintendent, St. John Ambulance Association, and Vice-President, Suffolk Branch, British Red Cross Society. O.B.E. London Gazette 7 January 1918: Miss Mary Caroline Coulcher, Vice-President and Lady District Superintendent, St. John Ambulance Brigade; Commandant, Broadwater Auxiliary Hospital, Suffolk. Miss Mary Caroline Coulcher was born in Lynn Regis, Suffolk, in 1852, the daughter of the The Reverend George Coulcher, and moved to Ipswich in 1870. She was one of the initial members of the St. John Ambulance Association movement in Ipswich, becoming Hon. Local Secretary of the Ipswich Centre, S.J.A.A., in January 1880, and was appointed to the Order of St. John of Jerusalem in 1902. Appointed a Lady Supervisor, St. John Ambulance Brigade, in 1904, she served as a town councillor from 1909 to 1912, and during the Great War was Commandant, Voluntary Aid Detachment, Suffolk 22; Commandant of Broadwater Auxiliary Hospital, Ipswich, from 21 October 1914 to 12 February 1919, and also Commandant of Gippeswych (Isolation) Hospital, Ipswich, from 20 March to 6 September 1915. It was her enthusiasm and financial support that led to the town’s first motorised ambulance. She was also a Vice-President of the British Red Cross Society for Ipswich, and a member of the East Suffolk War Relief Committee Executive. For her services during the Great War she was appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire in 1918, and was advanced a Commander of the Order of the British Empire in 1920. She died in Ipswich on 15 June 1925. Sold with copied research, including a photographic image of the recipient; and also details of the publicity behind the play Dread Zeppelin, for which she was one of the inspirations, and in which she features.
A Great War 1916 ‘Mesopotamian theatre’ I.D.S.M. awarded to Havildar Sahib Singh, 21st Field Company, 3rd Sappers and Miners Indian Distinguished Service Medal, G.V.R., 1st issue (3120 Naik Sahib Singh. 21st. Field Co. 3rd S. & M.) suspension loose, nearly very fine £300-£400 --- I.D.S.M. G.G.O. 1385 of 1916 (Mesopotamia).
Egypt and Sudan 1882-89, dated reverse, 3 clasps, Tel-El-Kebir, The Nile 1884-85, Abu Klea (....M Woods, R....) very heavy edge bruising, pitting from star and polishing, suspension slack, therefore poor £200-£240 --- Possibly 635 Private M. Woods, Royal Horse Guards, sold as found and not subject to return.
Eight: Regimental Sergeant Major R. M. Newsham, Durban Light Infantry, late British South Africa Police and Natal Rangers British South Africa Company Medal 1890-97, reverse Rhodesia 1896, no clasp (Troop’r R. M. Newsham. B.S.A. Police.); Queen’s South Africa 1899-1902, 2 clasps, Relief of Ladysmith, Transvaal (484 Serjt. R. M, Newsham. Durban L.I.); Natal 1906, 1 clasp, 1906 (Rgt. Sgt. Maj. R. M. Newsham, Natal Rangers.); 1914-15 Star (Clr. Sjt. R. M. Newsham 1st Infantry); British War Medal 1914-20 (2nd C/W.O. R. M. Newsham. B.D.C.); Bilingual Victory Medal 1914-19 (2nd C/W.O. R. M. Newsham. 1st Infantry.); Coronation 1911, unnamed as issued; Colonial Auxiliary Forces Long Service Medal, G.V.R. (No F.2347. Col. Sgt. R. M. Newsham. 1st Infy. (D.L.I.)) contact marks and edge bruising, especially to the first three, overall very fine and better (8) £800-£1,000 --- Reginald Medland Newsham was born circa. 1872 near Wisbech, Isle of Ely, Cambridgeshire. A coachbuilder by trade, he emigrated to South Africa where he served as Trooper No. 138 in the British South Africa Police in Rhodesia in 1896 and in 1897. On 1 November 1897 he enlisted in the Colonial Auxiliary Forces, to the Durban Light Infantry. He was promoted Corporal in 1898, Sergeant in 1899, and Colour Sergeant in 1904. During the 1906 Natal Rebellion he served in the Natal Rangers, attaining the rank of Regimental Sergeant Major. At the outbreak of the Great War Newsham was employed by the South African Railways as a coachbuilder and aged 44 attested for service with his old regiment the Durban Light Infantry, until he was discharged and recalled to his civilian duties in the Carriage Department of the South African Railways, in July 1918, having served as Provost Sergeant and Company Sergeant Major. He was awarded the Colonial Auxiliary Forces Long Service Medal in March 1918. His discharge papers confirm service with the Base Depot Company, prior to his discharge, being the unit named on his British War Medal. With copied research, including medal roll pages, Great War copy attestation and discharge papers, recommendation and approval letters for the Long Service Medal.
Four: Captain L. W. Armstrong, Imperial Yeomanry, later Army Service Corps, who was wounded during the V.C. action at Tafel Kop on 20 December 1901, where according to Kitchener his unit sacrificed themselves almost to a man to save Damant’s guns Queen’s South Africa 1899-1902, 4 clasps, Cape Colony, Orange Free State, South Africa 1901, South Africa 1902, unofficial rivets between state and date clasps (Lieut: L. W. Armstrong, Imp: Yeo:) engraved naming; 1914-15 Star (Capt. L. W. Armstrong, A.S.C.); British War and Victory Medals (Capt. L. W. Armstrong.) good very fine and better (4) £500-£700 --- Lionel Wellesley Armstrong was born on 8 June 1880. He served two years in the Queen’s Westminster Rifle Volunteers and then over two years in the Imperial Yeomanry during the Boer War. Serving with the 91st Company (Sharpshooters), he acted as Transport Officer to Colonel Damant’s Column for the greater part of his time in South Africa. He was wounded at Tafel Kop on 20 December 1901, during an action in which a large Boer force, disguised as British infantry, infiltrated a smaller British force. The latter composed of 2 guns 55 men under Colonel Damant, protected by 40 men of 91 Company Imperial Yeomanry. In the action that followed, the artillery horses and limbers were saved but at a cost - out of the 95 men of the column, Damant’s Horse and 39th Battery RHA lost 43 killed and wounded including Lieutenant-Colonel Damant himself who was wounded in four places. In this truly heroic action, 91st Company Imperial Yeomanry had 32 hit out of 40, and, in the words of Lord Kitchener, ‘sacrificed itself almost to a man to save Damant’s guns.’ For his gallantry that day Shoeing-Smith Ind was awarded the Victoria Cross. The following particulars of this gallant fight were obtained from the men engaged in it by the correspondent of the Central News: ‘The columns under Colonel Damant and Colonel Rimington left Frankfort on the 19th inst. and proceeded in the direction of Vrede. The force trekked all night through a most severe thunderstorm, during which three of our men were struck by lightning and killed. On reaching the neighbourhood of Tafelkop, Damant rushed a Boer piquet, killing one man and capturing Commandant Gyter. At daybreak the transport waggons were laagered, and were left behind in charge of a small escort, while Damant with two guns of the 39th Battery, and one pom-pom and ninety-five men all told, rushed forward. The little force deviated on the left flank, where a number of Boers had been located. On reaching a ridge Colonel Damant observed a party of seventy men dressed in British uniform busily engaged driving cattle in his direction. The strangers were at first taken to be a part of Rimington’s column which had gone out on the right flank. The mistake was soon discovered, however, and almost immediately another body of the enemy was located further to the left of the British laager. Our guns were speedily unlimbered, and quickly came into action. We had only been able to fire two shots when the Boers in charge of the cattle abandoned them and galloped boldly forward towards the British position. The enemy opened a galling fire on the gunners at a range of two hundred yards, and simultaneously another party of 150 Boers who had remained carefully concealed in ambush in the long grass at the foot of the ridge enfiladed the position. A large number of the gallant defenders fell at the first few volleys, but the survivors fought tenaciously, and the enemy were only able to rush and capture the position after all the men on the ridge had been either killed or wounded except three. Previous to this, however, some of the gallant gunners and the escort had succeeded in getting away the limbers of the guns, notwithstanding the heavy fire. The only gunner who had escaped the bullets then effectually destroyed the breech-blocks of the guns and rendered them utterly useless to the enemy. Out of a total force of 95 in action we had 75 killed and wounded, the 91st Yeomanry losing one officer and 14 men were killed and one officer and 16 men wounded. The Boers, who were under Commandants Wessels, Ross, and M. Botha - the latter the son of the Commandant-General - also lost heavily. They had Commandant Vandermerwe and 30 men killed. Three of the Boer dead were buried by our men, and the remainder were carried away. Later in the day a Boer came in under a flag of truce and asked for an armistice in order to allow the enemy to attend to their wounded and bury their dead. The survivors on our side state that the Boers behaved badly to our wounded on the ridge after the position had been rushed. Every one who made a movement while lying on the ground was fired at. An officer of the Yeomanry (Armstrong??) asked permission from a Boer dressed in khaki to get water for our wounded. For reply the Boer discharged his Mauser point blank at the officer’s head, but fortunately missed him. Several more of the enemy robbed and stripped our wounded and dead, and were only restrained from perpetrating further outrages by their commandants. The Boers were terribly angry when they discovered they were unable to move or use the guns which they had captured. Meanwhile Captain Scott had got together a small force and came up to the assistance of Damant’s men. Scott prepared to charge the position, when the enemy, mistaking his men for Rimington’s column, hastily retreated. The fleeing Boers, however, fell right into the arms of Rimington’s force, which was coming up to Damant’s support. Rimington opened fire, and the enemy lost a few killed, while five were captured. Rimington, with the remainder of Damant’s force, chased the flying enemy across the Wilge River. There appears to have been lately a large concentration of the enemy under De Wet at Tafelkop. Large parties of determined fighters under the immediate command of M. Botha, Meintjes, Tallvaard, Steenkamp, and Bucknill are now laying in ambush about the district, waiting to attack small columns.’ During the Great War Armstrong served as an officer in the Royal Army Service Corps from 20 September 1914 until August 1916 when he relinquished his commission due to ill-health. Though never fully fit thereafter, he was re-gazetted to the A.S.C. in April 1917 and served until demobilized in March 1919. Sold with research and an original group photograph.
Family Group: Queen’s South Africa 1899-1902, 5 clasps, Cape Colony, Orange Free State, Transvaal, South Africa 1901, South Africa 1902, unofficial rivets between state and date clasps (1687 Tpr: E. M. Hoops. S.A.C.); together with a silver prize medal, the reverse engraved ‘3rd Prize Boys Championship Race Won by E. M. Hoops.’; and the recipient’s South African War Veterans Association lapel badge, gilt and enamel, toned, good very fine Pair: Staff Nurse E. C. Hoops, Queen Alexandra’s Imperial Military Nursing Service Reserve
British War and Victory Medals (S/Nurse E. C. Hoops) surname officially corrected on VM; together with the recipient’s silver identity bracelet, nearly extremely fine (lot) £140-£180 --- Ernest Mostyn Hoops was born in Donegal, Ulster in September 1878, and was the son of a Doctor, and brother of Eilsea Hoops. The family moved to Canada in the 1890’s, and Hoops subsequently resided in South Africa, Argentina and Canada retiring to White Rock - where he died in 1964. Eilsea/Eileen Constance Hoops was born in Wrexham, Wales in 1885. She trained as a nurse in Vancouver, Canada, and served as a Staff Nurse with Queen Alexandra’s Imperial Military Nursing Service Reserve during the Great War on the Western Front from 24 September 1917. After the war she resided in Palo Alto, California, and died in Vancouver General Hospital in February 1963. Sold with a commemorative ‘horseshoe’ brooch badge for Queen Victoria’s Golden Jubilee 1887, silver and enamel; and a commemorative brooch badge for King George VI’s Coronation 1937, bronze-gilt; and copied research including photographic images of both recipients.
Five: Lieutenant-Colonel M. J. Quirke, Indian Medical Service Africa General Service 1902-56, 1 clasp, Somaliland 1908-10 (Captain. M. J. Quirke, M.B., I.M.S.); 1914 Star (Capt. M. J. Quirke, I.M.S.); British War and Victory Medals, with M.I.D. oak leaves (Major M. J. Quirke); Defence Medal, good very fine (5) £400-£500 --- Provenance: Dix Noonan Webb, September 2003. Michael Joseph Quirke was born at Handsworth in 1879 and qualified as a M.B. and Ch.B. at Birmingham in 1901. Prior to his military service he was House Surgeon at Queen’s Hospital and a ship’s Surgeon on the Blue Funnel Line. A Lieutenant with the I.M.S. in 1904 and Captain in 1907, he took part in the Somaliland Expedition as Chief Medical Officer, and was Mentioned in Despatches ‘for general good work’ (London Gazette 17 June 1910). He gained the Diploma of Tropical Medicine at London in 1907 and a Diploma of Public Health at Cambridge in 1913. Promoted Major in July 1913, he served in H.M. Hospital Ship Sicilia, in France and Gallipoli, 1914-15, and the North West Frontier, 1916-17, and then took part in the Mesopotamia Campaign 1917-19, serving for a time as Acting Lieutenant-Colonel. For his services during the Great War he was again Mentioned in Despatches (London Gazette: 7 February 1919). On the Retired List in 1921, Quirke transferred to the Indian Medical Service as Divisional Sanitary Commissioner and Inspector of Vaccination, Central Range. He was in practice at Felsted, Essex during 1926-30 and was Medical Officer of Health for Upton-upon-Severn Rural District, part-time, from 1932 to 1945. During the Second World War he served in the Home Guard. He died at Hanley, Worcestershire in 1968. Sold with the recipient’s original Great War M.I.D. certificate, some copied research and a copy portrait photographic image of the recipient in uniform.
Three: Staff Nurse E. M. Price, Queen Alexandra’s Imperial Military Nursing Service Reserve 1914 Star (Miss E. M. Price. Q.A.I.M.N.S.R.); British War and Victory Medals (S. Nurse E. M. Price.) with the recipient’s Queen Alexandra’s Imperial Military Nursing Service Reserve cape badge light contact marks overall, therefore generally nearly very fine or better (3) £300-£400 --- Approximately 175 ‘1914 Stars’ issued to Q.A.I.M.N.S.R. Edith M. Price resided at New Hook Cottage, Eastchurch, Isle of Sheppey. She joined the Queen Alexandra’s Imperial Military Nursing Service Reserve in September 1914, and served with the 9th General Hospital. She had to leave service due to ill health, 5 August 1915.
Family group: Pair: Private G. Attwood, 12th (Service) Battalion (Bristol), Gloucestershire Regiment, who was killed in action on the Western Front, 3 September 1916 1914-15 Star (20054 Pte G. Attwood. Glouc: R.); British War Medal 1914-20 (20054 Pte. G. Attwood. Glouc. R.); Memorial Plaque (George Attwood) last in card envelope of issue, good very fine 1914-15 Star (406902 Pte M. Attwood. 4/Can: Mtd: Rif:) nearly extremely fine (4) £100-£140 --- George Attwood was born in 1882, and was the son of Mr and Mrs J. Attwood of Bristol, both of whom were deceased by the time of the Great War. He emigrated to Canada with his younger brother Morely, and resided in Ontario. Attwood returned to the UK to visit family before the outbreak of the Great War, and was then unable to return. As a consequence he enlisted in the British Army, and served with the 12th Battalion, Gloucestershire Regiment, and was killed in action on the Western Front, 3 September 1916. Private Attwood is commemorated on the Thiepval Memorial. Morely Abraham Attwood was the younger brother of the above, and was born in 1893. He served during the Great War with the 4th Canadian Mounted Rifles, and was killed in action on the Western Front, 2 June 1916. Private Attwood is commemorated on the Ypres (Menin Gate) Memorial. Sold with photographic images of recipients.
Three: Mabel M. K. Harre, Voluntary Aid Detachment 1914-15 Star (M. M. K. Harre. V.A.D.); British War and Victory Medals (M. M. K. Harre. V.A.D.) good very fine (3) £100-£140 --- Mabel Mary Kendall Harre was born in 1878 in Spalding Lincolnshire, daughter of the Reverend Alfred Harre, a Church of England vicar. According to her British Red Cross cards, her permanent address was Binstead Rectory, Arundel, Sussex, and that she served in France as a nurse from 20 November 1915 to 21 May 1916, and again from 20 April to 5 November, 1917. In the 1939 register she is shown as an Assistant Commandant of Sussex Red Cross, and is on the Assistant Nurses roll for 1947-48. She died in 1968, aged 90. Sold with copied research.
Six: Captain M. A. Cassidy, British Red Cross Society 1914-15 Star (M. A. Cassidy. B.R.C. & St. J.J.); British War and Victory Medals (Capt. M. A. Cassidy.); Jubilee 1935, unnamed as issued; Coronation 1937, unnamed as issued; Belgium, Kingdom, King Albert Medal, with Humanity ribbon, mounted as worn, good very fine (6) £100-£140 --- Maurice Alan Cassidy served in France with the British Red Cross Society from 3 December 1914, and was engaged in tending Belgian wounded. Sold with copied Medal Index Card.
Pair: Private A. G. Cann, 9th Battalion, Manchester Regiment, who was taken prisoner at Beline Brei, on 29 March 1918 British War and Victory Medals (49271 Pte. A. G. Cann. Manch. R.) in named card box of issue with original torn envelope, very fine (2) £50-£70 --- Alfred George Cann attested for the Manchester Regiment and served with the 1st/9th Battalion during the Great War on the Western Front. He was taken prisoner of War at Beline Brei on 29 March 1918, and held in Güstrow prisoner of war camp, Germany. Sold together with original Buckingham Palace facsimile letter from H. M. King George V dated 1918, sent to returned prisoners of war.
Pair: Staff Nurse M. A. Brown, Queen Alexandra’s Imperial Military Nursing Service Reserve British War and Victory Medals (S/Nurse M. A. Brown) with named lid from card box of issue, extremely fine (2) £60-£80 --- Mary Ann Brown was born in about 1894 and probably lived at Darnall, Sheffield. She embarked for France on 23 April 1918, having served at Southwark Military Hospital. She served at No. 6 General Hospital and Nos. 29 and 18 Casualty Clearing Stations. In 1922 she married Horace Gramshaw Payne Ovenden, R.A.F., whose medals sold in these rooms on 19 June 2013. Sold with copied research.
Pair: Staff Nurse I. M. Buck, Queen Alexandra’s Imperial Military Nursing Service Reserve British War and Victory Medals (S. Nurse I. M. Buck.) together with the recipient’s Q.A.I.M.N.S.R. silver cape badge, nearly extremely fine (3) £80-£100 --- Isabel/Isabella Buck was born in Haggerston, London, in 1883. She served in Queen Alexandra’s Imperial Military Nursing Service Reserve at the London Hospital and on temporary duties on the Hospital Ships Wandilla and Llandovery Castle from 31 August 1916, before going out to Salonika from 15 July 1917, where she served in No. 42 General Hospital. However, having succumbed to sandfly fever and afterwards contracted dysentery and malaria, she was invalided form Salonica in November 1917. She then underwent a long period of transition to England via various military hospitals. In her continuing service declaration her nearest relative is shows as Lieutenant Ralph Buck, R.A.F. She joined the Nursing register in 1922 (No. 5007) and latterly lived at ‘Wandilla’, Earlswood Road, Redhill. She died in 1975. Sold with copied research.
Pair: Ward Maid R. M. du Boulay, Voluntary Aid Detachment British War and Victory Medals (R. M. Du Boulay. V.A.D.) nearly extremely fine (2) £60-£80 --- Rhoda Mary du Boulay was born in 1886 at Bembridge, Isle of Wight, daughter of Ernest de Vismes du Boulay, late Captain, Royal Artillery. She served in France, from 7 November 1918 to 1 June 1919, as a ‘pantry maid’ at the Hostel for Relations, Rouen. The medal roll shows that she was at the Indian Hospital in Alexandria from March to October 1915 but notes “Not then a V.A.D.”. She was afterwards at the Hazlewood Red Cross Hospital, Ryde, I.O.W., until 19 June 1916. Sold with copied research.
Pair: Private M. Bradley, Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders India General Service 1908-35, 1 clasp, North West Frontier 1935 (2977831 Pte. M. Bradley, A. & S.H.); India General Service 1936-39, 1 clasp, North West Frontier 1936-37 (2977831 Pte. M. Bradley, A. & S.H.) nearly extremely fine (2) £140-£180
Four: Regimental Sergeant-Major I. M. Barlass, Royal Artillery France and Germany Star; War Medal 1939-45; General Service 1918-62, 2 clasps, S.E. Asia 1945-46, Malaya (14746515 Gnr. I. M. Barlass. R.A.); Army L.S. & G.C., E.II.R., 2nd issue, Regular Army (14746515 W.O. Cl. 2. I. M. Barlass. RA.) mounted as worn, very fine (4) £160-£200 --- I. M. Barlass served in South East Asia as a Gunner in 178 Field Regiment, Royal Artillery. He was promoted to Regimental Sergeant Major on 28 march 1963. Sold with copied medal roll for S.E. Asia and Army List for promotion to R.S.M.
Five: Staff Sergeant J. K. M. MacDougall, Royal Signals 1939-45 Star; France and Germany Star; Defence and War Medals 1939-45; General Service 1918-62, 1 clasp, Malaya, E.II.R. (2596946 Sgt. J. MacDougall. R. Sigs.) mounted as worn, good very fine (5) £80-£100 --- John Keith Ramsey MacDougall was born in 1905 and first served in the Royal Signals, T.A., from 10 January 1941 as Signalman, being wounded in the left arm on 9 November 1944. Following the Second World War he re-enlisted for two additional periods of Regular Army Short Service Engagements, being finally discharged as Staff Sergeant, in February 1959, his conduct being described as ‘Exemplary’. His service books confirm his Second World War and G.S.M. medal entitlements and confirm his being wounded in November 1944. Sold with the recipient’s two soldiers ‘Red Book’ Certificates of Service relating to his post war re-engagements in April 1947 and April 1951
Six: Lieutenant-Colonel Mary A. Thompson, Queen Alexandra’s Royal Army Nursing Corps 1939-45 Star; Africa Star; Defence and War Medals 1939-45; General Service 1918-62, 1 clasp, Malaya, E.II.R. (Major M. A. Thompson. Q.A.R.A.N.C.); Efficiency Decoration, E.II.R., Territorial, reverse officially dated 1954, with integral top Territorial riband bar, this lacking pin and stitched to riband; contact marks, nearly very fine and better (6) £300-£400 --- Provenance: Dix Noonan Webb, December 2008. Mary Avril Thompson was born on 17 April 1913 and was granted a commission as Sister in the Territorial Army Nursing Service on 30 May 1941. Appointed to the Queen Alexandra’s Imperial Military Nursing Service as a Sister in 1942; she was promoted Captain, Queen Alexandra’s Royal Army Nursing Corps in 1949; Major in 1952; and Lieutenant-Colonel in 1964. She was awarded the Efficiency Decoration in 1954 (London Gazette 20 July 1954), and retired in 1968.
Three: Corporal R. Pickersgill, Royal Army Medical Corps, attached Royal Fusiliers, who was twice wounded in Korea, firstly whilst taking part in Operation Pimlico on 25 November 1952 Korea 1950-53, 1st issue (22548407 Cpl. R. Pickersgill. R.A.M.C.); U.N. Korea 1950-54, unnamed as issued; General Service 1918-62, 1 clasp, Near East (22548407 Pte. R. M. N. Pickersgill. R.A.M.C.) small edge bruise to the first, and some spotting to last, generally very fine and better (3) £300-£400 --- R. Pickersgill attested for the Royal Army Medical Corps and served in Korea attached to 10 Platoon, ‘D’ Company, Royal Fusiliers, taking part in Operation Pimlico, a raid on enemy lines at Kigong-Ni on 25 November 1952. The operation was intended to inflict casualties on opposing Chinese forces, carry out demolitions and capture a prisoner for interrogation. After initial successes, the Platoon’s position faced a fierce Chinese counter attack which it resisted heroically but unsuccessfully. Second Lieutenant P. R. M. Hoare and 13 others were killed, and Pickersgill was wounded on the raid. He was wounded again for a second time on 13 December 1952. Sold with copied research.
Pair: Rifleman R. A. M. Snell, Rifle Brigade Africa General Service 1902-56, 1 clasp, Kenya (23233432 Rfn. R. A. M. Snell. R.B.); General Service 1918-62, 1 clasp, Malaya, E.II.R. (23233432 Rfn.R. A. M. Snell. R.B.) traces of lacquer, slight contact marks, very fine (2) £160-£200 --- Provenance: Dix Noonan Webb, March 2009.
A collection of 12" singles & pop, soundtrack/ musical, and classical LPs. 12" singles: Kajagoogoo "Too Shy", Laura Branigan "Gloria", Sting "Love Is The Seventh Wave", The Brothers johnson "Stomp!" and a Pre Release 12" Neneh Cherry "Inna City Mamma". LPs: Tina Turner, Carpenters, Shirley Bassey, The Humblebums, Carole King, Ian Dury and the Blockheads, Olivia Newton john, Donna Summer, ELO, The Three Degrees, Abba, Joe Jackson, U2, Elton John, Mott the Hoople, Derek and Clive, Queen, Thompson Twins, Michael Jackson, Eric Clapton, Randy Crawford, Barbara Dickson, Barbra Streisand, Boney M, Hot Chocolate, David Soul, Sade, Lionel Richie, Neil Diamond, Peters and Lee, Nana Mouskouri, Harry Secombe and Johnny Mathis, and various compilation albums including Now That's What I Call Music Vol II. Soundtracks including: Oliver!, The Sound of Music, Doctor Zhivago, My Fair Lady, Carousel, South Pacific, Hello Dolly, Evita & The Woman in Red. Also various classical music.

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