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Lot 849

Four: Private E. Brewer, 5th Battalion Hampshire Regiment British War Medal 1914-20 (1316 Pte., Hamp. R.); Territorial Force War Medal 1914-19 (1316 Pte., Hamps. R.); India General Service 1908-35, 1 clasp, Afghanistan N.W.F. 1919 (240119 Pte., Hamps. R.); Territorial Force Efficiency Medal, G.V.R. (240119 Pte., 5/Hamps. R.) mounted court style for wear, good very fine (4) £180-220 Awarded the T.F.E.M. by Army Order August 1919. Sold with some copied research.

Lot 850

Six: Private F. Reed, Hampshire Regiment, a prisoner-of-war of the Germans India General Service 1908-35, 1 clasp, North West Frontier 1935 (6395970 Pte., Hamps. R.); India General Service 1936-39, 2 clasps, North West Frontier 1936-37, North West Frontier 1937-39 (6395970 Pte., Hamps. R.); 1939-35 Star; Africa Star; Italy Star; War Medal 1939-45, mounted court style for wear, some contact marks, very fine and better (6) £300-360 Private F. Reed, Hampshire Regiment, was captured and held by the Italians and thence the Germans. Latterly held in Stalag 344 at Lamsdorf. .

Lot 851

Pair: Private P.G. Mead, Royal Hampshire Regiment General Service 1962, 1 clasp, Borneo (24005047 Pte., R. Hamps.); U.N. Medal, UNFICYP ribbon, mounted court style for wear, nearly extremely fine (2) £50-70.

Lot 852

Pair: Private C. G. Dormon, 1st Battalion Royal Hampshire Regiment General Service 1962, 2 clasps, Borneo, Northern Ireland (23879561 Pte., R. Hamps.); U.N. Medal, UNFICYP ribbon, mounted court style for wear, good very fine (2) £70-90 Charles Graham Dormon was born on 18 January 1945 in Southgate, London. He served for 12 years with the 1st Battalion Royal Hampshire Regiment and was discharged in 1975 having seen service in Borneo and Northern Ireland. Living at St. Margarets Avenue, Chichester and employed as a security officer, he was killed in a road traffic accident on 14 August 1985. Sold with copy of Death Certificate and extract from Hampshire Regimental Journal.

Lot 855

A Great War ‘Western Front’ D.C.M. group of three awarded to Serjeant F. J. Smith, 14th Battalion Hampshire Regiment Distinguished Conduct Medal, G.V.R. (15153 L. Cpl., 14/Hants. R.); British War and Victory Medals (15153 Sjt., Hamps. R.) mounted court style for wear, slight contact marks, very fine (3) £700-900 D.C.M. London Gazette 21 December 1916. ‘For conspicuous gallantry in action. He rendered most valuable assistance to his Company Commander in organising the company and marking out the line of trench to be dug out’. Serjeant Frederick J. Smith later served with the Labour Corps. Sold with copied gazette extract and m.i.c.

Lot 856

A Great War ‘Western Front’ D.C.M. group of three awarded to Warrant Officer Class 2 F. T. Williams, 15th Battalion Hampshire Regiment Distinguished Conduct Medal, G.V.R. (27019 C.S. Mjr., 15/Hamps. R.); British War and Victory Medals (27019 W.O. Cl.2, Hamps. R.) mounted court style for wear, nearly extremely fine (3) £700-900 D.C.M. London Gazette 1 January 1919; details 3 September 1919. ‘For conspicuous gallantry and devotion to duty during the two years he has served in this battalion, especially during the attack on the enemy position which straightened out the line S.E. of La Clytte on the night 8th/9th August, 1918. On the latter occasion, before and after he was seriously wounded, his cheerfulness and utter disregard of personal danger under extremely trying conditions, was a splendid example to all ranks’. Frank Tyler Williams, from Deptford, enlisted in to the Hampshire Regiment on 16 November 1914. He was discharged due to wounds on 7 December 1918 and was awarded the Silver War Badge. Williams, then living at Elsie Villas, Fleming Avenue, Leigh-on-Sea, Essex, was presented with his D.C.M. at the Clock Tower Barracks, Shoeburyness on 6 May 1919. Sold with copied gazette and roll extracts and original slip notifying the presentation of the D.C.M. with copy citation.

Lot 857

A Great War ‘Western Front’ M.M. and Second Award Bar awarded to Private J. H. Cook, 2nd Battalion Hampshire Regiment Military Medal, G.V.R., with Second Award Bar (8-4120 Pte., 2/Hants. R.) nearly extremely fine £350-450 M.M. London Gazette 19 March 1918. Bar to M.M. London Gazette 14 May 1919. Private James H. Cook, 2nd Battalion Hampshire Regiment, entered the France/Flanders theatre of war on 27 December 1914. The recipient came from Southampton. In addition to the above he was entitled to the 1914-15 Star, British War and Victory Medals. Sold with copied gazette extracts, M.M. card and m.i.c.

Lot 858

A Great War ‘Western Front’ M.M. group of four awarded to Private F. W. H. Ferrey, 2nd Battalion Hampshire Regiment Military Medal, G.V.R. (15357 Pte., 2/Hants. R.); 1914-15 Star (15357 Pte., Hamps. R.); British War and Victory Medal (15357 Pte., Hamps. R.) mounted court style for wear, good very fine and better (4) £350-400 M.M. London Gazette 18 June 1917. Francis William Henry Ferrey enlisted into the Hampshire Regiment on 23 January 1915 and entered the Balkan theatre of war on 15 June 1915. He was awarded the Military Medal for service with the 2nd Battalion in France and was discharged on 25 September 1918 as a result of wounds. Entitled to the Silver War Badge. Sold with copied roll and gazette extracts, M.M. card and m.i.c.

Lot 859

A Great War ‘Western Front’ M.M. group of four awarded to Private C. G. Foot, 11th Battalion Hampshire Regiment Military Medal, G.V.R. (11260 Pte., 11/Hants. R.); 1914-15 Star (11260 Pte., Hamps. R.); British War and Victory Medal (11260 Pte., Hamps. R.) mounted court style for wear, some contact marks, very fine (4) £350-400 M.M. London Gazette 21 August 1917. Private Cecil G. Foot, 11th Battalion Hampshire Regiment entered the France/Flanders theatre of war on 18 December 1915. Later serving in the Devonshire Regiment, he was discharged on 5 March 1919. Sold with copied gazette extracts, M.M. card and m.i.c.

Lot 860

A Great War ‘Western Front’ M.M. group of four awarded to Colour Serjeant H. J. Smith, 11th Battalion Hampshire Regiment Military Medal, G.V.R. (11336 C.Q.M. Sjt., 11/Hants. R.); 1914-15 Star (11336 Q-M. Sjt., Hamps. R.); British War and Victory Medal (11336 C. Sjt., Hamps. R.) mounted court style for wear, some contact marks, nearly very fine and better (4) £350-400 M.M. London Gazette 17 June 1919. Company Quartermaster Serjeant Henry J. Smith, Hampshire Regiment, entered the France/Flanders theatre of war on 18 December 1915. Awarded the M.M. as a C.Q.M.S. with the 11th Battalion. The recipient came from Chichester. Sold with copied gazette extracts, M.M. card and m.i.c.

Lot 861

A Great War ‘Western Front’ M.M. group of three awarded to Private S. Seymour, 4th Battalion Hampshire Regiment Military Medal, G.V.R. (54888 Pte., 4/Hamps. R.); British War and Victory Medals (54888 Pte., Hamps. R.) mounted court style for wear, good very fine (3) £300-340 M.M. London Gazette 14 May 1919. The recipient came from Hexham. Sold with copied gazette extracts, M.M. card and m.i.c.

Lot 862

A Great War ‘Western Front’ M.M. group of three awarded to Private A Buist, 11th and 13th Battalions Hampshire Regiment Military Medal, G.V.R. (33361 Pte., 11/Hants. R.); British War and Victory Medals (33361 Pte., Hamps. R.) mounted court style for wear, good very fine and better (3) £320-360 M.M. London Gazette 13 March 1918. ‘33361 Pnr. A. Buist, Hamps. R. (Wool)’. Alexander Buist jointed the Hampshire Regiment in July 1916 and in December that year was drafted to France, where he took part in many engagements. He saw action at the Battles of Ypres, Arras, Messines and Cambrai. He also played a prominent part in the retreat of 1918, and was awarded the M.M. for conspicuous gallantry and devotion to duty in rescuing comrades from a blown-in trench whilst under heavy shell-fire. He was demobilised in March 1919 and went to live at 46 Aylesbury Road, Copnor, Portsmouth. Sold with copied gazette and National Roll extracts, M.M. card and m.i.c.

Lot 863

A Great War ‘Western Front’ M.M. group of three awarded to Private M. C. Moy, 2/4th and 11th Battalion Hampshire Regiment, killed in action 26 August 1918 Military Medal, G.V.R. (33361 Pte., 11/Hants. R.); British War and Victory Medals (33361 Pte., Hamps. R.) mounted court style for wear, nearly very fine (3) £380-420 M.M. London Gazette 16 November 1916. Henry Charles Moy was born in Great Ryburgh, Norfolk. Living in Chichester, Sussex, he enlisted at Canning Town, Essex. As a Private in the 11th Battalion Hampshire Regiment, he entered the France/Flanders theatre of war on 19 December 1915. The following year he won the M.M. for bravery in the field. Serving with the 2/4th Battalion Hampshire Regment, he was killed in action on 26 August 1918. He was buried in the Mory Abbey Military Cemetery, Mory, Pas de Calais. He was the son of William and Harriet Moy of Curry Rivel Cottage, Old Churchway, West Langport, Somerset. Sold with copied gazette extracts, M.M. card, m.i.c. and other research; also with an original letter re. the award of the M.M. dated 7 February 1919. .

Lot 864

A Great War ‘Western Front’ M.M. group of three awarded to Private L. M. McKerrell, 15th Battalion Hampshire Regiment Military Medal, G.V.R. (28089 Pte., 15/Hants. R.); British War and Victory Medals (28089 Pte., Hamps. R.) mounted court style for wear, good very fine (3) £320-360 M.M. London Gazette 13 November 1918. Lyle Manus McKerrell came from Leith and enlisted into the Hampshire Regiment on 14 May 1915. Serving with the 15th Battalion Hampshire Regiment in France he gained the M.M. for bravery in the field. He was discharged on 6 May 1918 as a result of wounds and was awarded the Silver War Badge. Sold with copied gazette and roll extracts and M.M. card.

Lot 865

A Great War ‘Western Front’ M.M. group of three awarded to Private E. Shires, 15th Battalion Hampshire Regiment Military Medal, G.V.R. (18851 Pte., 15/Hants. R.); British War and Victory Medals (18851 Pte., Hamps. R.) mounted court style for wear, edge bruising and contact marks, nearly very fine (3) £280-320 M.M. London Gazette 18 July 1917. Sold with copied gazette extract, M.M. card and m.i.c.

Lot 866

A Great War ‘Western Front’ M.M. awarded to Private H. Parkinson, 2nd Battalion Hampshire Regiment, killed in action, 26 September 1917 Military Medal, G.V.R. (15935 Pte., 2/Hants. R.) good very fine £280-320 M.M. London Gazette 21 September 1916. Harrison Parkinson was born and lived in Rotherham, Yorkshire and enlisted at Attercliffe, Yorkshire. Serving with the Hampshire Regiment, he entered the Balkan theatre of war on 5 December 1915. Serving with the 2nd Battalion, he gained the M.M. for bravery in the field. Serving with the 14th Battalion, he was killed in action on 26 September 1917.Having no known grave, his name is commemorated on the Tyne Cot Memorial at Zonnebeke, West-Vlaanderen, Belgium. Sold with copied gazette extract, M.M. card, m.i.c. and other research. .

Lot 867

A fine Peninsula War group awarded to Major-General Sir Charles Bruce, K.C.B., 39th (Dorsetshire) Regiment (a) The Most Honourable Order of The Bath, K.C.B. (Military) Knight Commander’s neck badge, 22 carat gold and enamels, hallmarked London 1814, maker’s mark ‘IN’ for John Northam, with its original 110mm investment neck cravat with gold clasp (b) Army Gold Cross 1806-14, for Vittoria, Nivelle, Nive, Orthes (Lieutt. Coll./Chas. Bruce/39th Foot) complete with swivel-ring bar suspension and gold ribbon buckle (c) Field Officer’s Gold Medal 1808-14, for Vittoria, 1 clasp, Nivelle (Lieut. Colonel Charles Bruce) extremely fine (3) £25000-30000 Charles Bruce was born in the East Indies on 24 March 1777, and joined the army aged fifteen as an Ensign in the 52nd Foot in February 1792; Lieutenant, 99th Foot, August 1793; Captain 105th Foot, April 1794; Captain 39th Foot, October 1795; Brevet Major 1803; Major 39th Foot, March 1805; Lieutenant-Colonel 39th Foot, July 1810. Captain Bruce served with the 39th in the West Indies at Surinam and Antigua and was present at the capture of Demerara, Berbice and Essequibo in 1796, and remained in the West Indies until December 1803. Returning home he served at Malta from December 1805, and in Sicily, as Major, in 1809. In 1810 the 39th joined Wellington’s army in the Peninsula, and Bruce was present in the battles of Vittoria, 21 June 1813, where he commanded the 1st Battalion of the 39th, and had his horse shot under him, and at Nivelle, Nive and Orthes. During the invasion of France he was severely wounded in the face in the attack on the Heights of Garris, near St Pallais, on 15 February 1814, and received a gratuity of one year’s pay. He was, on this last occasion, mentioned in Wellington’s dispatch, dated ‘St Jean de Luz’, 20 February 1814: ‘On the 15th .. towards St Palais .. the 2nd division .. should attack in front. Those troops made a most gallant attack upon the enemy’s position, which was remarkably strong, but which was carried without very considerable loss .. the enemy .. made repeated attempts to regain the position, particularly in two attacks, which were most gallantly received and repulsed by the 39th regiment .. The Major-General [Pringle], and Lieutenant-Colonel Bruce, of the 39th, were unfortunately wounded.’ After the battle of Toulouse, 10 April 1814, where the regiment unfortunately played no part, Bruce sailed for Canada with the 1st Battalion of the 39th from Bordeaux, and returned the following year to command the 2nd Battalion in France. He was made C.B. in 1815, and remained serving with the army before Paris and with the Army of occupation until 1816, when he was placed on half-pay by reduction. Made Brevet Colonel in August 1819, he went on full pay as Lieutenant-Colonel of the 69th Foot in March 1820, went on half-pay again in April 1826, by reduction, before returning to full pay as Lieutenant-Colonel of the 64th Foot in May 1828. Advanced to K.C.B. in 1831, Major-General Bruce died in 1832.

Lot 868

Three: Private Christopher Lindert, 1st Hussars, King’s German Legion Military General Service 1793-1814, 4 clasps, Pyrenees, Nivelle, Orthes, Toulouse (Christoph Lindert, 1st Hussars K.G.L.); Waterloo 1815 (Christoph Lindert, 1st Reg. Hussars [K].G.L.) naming a little weak in parts; K.G.L. Volunteer Medal 1841, unnamed as issued, mounted as worn with the last medal taking precedence, contact marks, nearly very fine or better (3) £1800-2200 Christopher Lindert is first traced on the muster rolls for the 1st Light Dragoons (later Hussars) in June 1813, serving in Spain and France. He served until 24 February 1816 when the regiment was disbanded at Hannover. Sold with copies from Waterloo Prize, Muster and Medal rolls.

Lot 869

Three: George Smith, Ship’s Cook, Royal Navy Naval General Service 1793-1840, 1 clasp, Syria (Geo. Smith); Royal Navy L.S. & G.C., Anchor obverse (George Smith, Ships Cook, H.M.S. Excellent. 26 Years); St Jean d’Acre 1840, bronze, this with traces of having been sometime silvered, very fine (3) £1400-1600 Nine men of this name on the roll for Syria, any one of whom could have become a ship’s cook later in their career. Long Service medal confirmed on Douglas-Morris’s roll as having been issued on 26 June 1847, and as being entitled to medal for Syria.

Lot 872

Pair: Quartermaster Sergeant N. G. Ford, Royal Marine Artillery Baltic 1854-55, unnamed as issued; Royal Navy L.S. & G.C., V.R., wide suspension (Ns. G. Ford, Qr. Mr. Sergt., R.M.A. 21 Yrs.) minor contact marks, very fine and better (2) £400-500 Nicholas Goss Ford, a Mason by occupation, from Hobeton, Plymouth, enlisted at Plymouth on 29 November 1851, aged 20 years, 9 months. During the Baltic campaign he served as a Private in H.M.S. Hogue. He transferred to the Artillery Companies on 13 January 1855. He was discharged in February 1872 and was awarded the Royal Navy L.S. & G.C. Medal with a gratuity of £10.

Lot 873

Three: Private J. Blythe, Coldstream Guards Crimea 1854-56, 1 clasp, Sebastopol (3199 Joseph Blythe, 1st Battn. Coldm. Guards) privately impressed naming; Army L.S. & G.C., V.R., 3rd issue (3199 Josh. Blythe, 1st Battn. Coldm. Guards); Turkish Crimea 1855, Sardinian issue (3199 Cm. Gds.) - no name, plugged, fitted with ‘Indian Mutiny’ style suspension, contact marks, nearly very fine and better (3) £220-260 Joseph Blythe was born in the Parish of Longe Melford, Sudbury, Suffolk. A Servant by occupation, he attested for the Coldstream Guards at Sudbury on 14 September 1846, aged 18 years, 4 months. With the regiment he served in the Crimean War. He was awarded the L.S. & G.C. Medal in 1865. He was discharged at London at his own request on 28 March 1868. Blythe was admitted as Inpensioner on 1 July 1897 and was later in convalescent homes at Sandgate and Limpsfield. He died on 27 January 1902. Sold with copied service papers. .

Lot 876

Three: Sergeant D. Ryder, 47th Foot Crimea 1854-56, 3 clasps, Alma, Inkermann, Sebastopol (47th Regt.) contemporary engraved naming; Canada General Service 1866-70, 1 clasp, Fenian Raid 1866 (3106 Sgt., 47/Lan. R.) engraved naming; Army Meritorious Service Medal, V.R. (Sergt., 47/Foot); together with a renamed Army L.S. & G.C., V.R., 3rd issue, small letter reverse (Sergt., 47th Regt.) and a renamed Turkish Crimea 1855, Sardinian issue (Regt. No. 3106 Sergeant, 47th Regt.), swivel ring suspension, nearly very fine and better (5) £600-700 Darby Ryder was born in Longhsea, Co. Galway. A Labourer by occupation, he attested for the 9th Regiment at Galway on 29 December 1852, aged 17 years, 6 months. He was transferred to the 47th Regiment in April 1854 and served with them in the Crimea War and in North America. He attained the rank of Sergeant in January 1862 and was detached for duty with the South Cork Militia, September 1871-June 1874. Ryder was discharged at Preston on 15 June 1874. He was awarded the M.S.M. with an annuity of £10 on 22 May 1896 and died on 8 February 1900. Sold with copied discharge papers.

Lot 879

Pair: Rear-Admiral A. D. S. Denison, Royal Navy China 1857-60, 1 clasp, Fatshan 1857 (Lieut. Hon. A. D. S. Denison, R.N.) engraved naming; Royal Humane Society Medal, large, silver (Hon. A. D. S. Denison, Mate, R.N., 15 Novr. 1856) contact marks mainly to first, nearly very fine and better (2) £350-400 The Hon. Albert Denison Somerville Denison was born in 1835, the second son of the 1st Baron Londesborough, the younger brother of William Henry Forester Denison, 1st Earl of Londesborough. He entered the Royal Navy in 1851. As an Acting Mate he was awarded the Royal Humane Society Medal for effecting a rescue in November 1856: ‘On the 15th of November 1856, as boats belonging to H.M.S. Hornet were leaving to attack the Bogue Forts, in the Canton River, China, a private of marines stepping from the ship into the boat missed his footing and fell overboard, being at the time fully accoutred, and with sixty rounds of ammunition in his pouch, he could not keep on the surface of the water, and a strong tide running, which carried from reach of the boat’s crew. When the Hon. Albert D. S. Denison acting mate, H.M.S. Hornet (at that time officer of the boat), gallantly jumped overboard, swam to his relief, and succeeded in keeping him afloat until the boat came their assistance’. He served in the China Expedition of 1857-60. His service paper recording: ‘While a Mate was wounded in an engagement with Chinese (Sir M. Seymour 14 Jan. 57). 24 Mar. 57 Sir M. Seymour reports creditable conduct in engagement with Chinese Junks. 1 Aug. 57 Gazetted as engaged in 2 boat actions with Chinese Junks. 14 Jan. 59 Sr M. Seymour reports his being engaged in expedition against Chinese ? near Canton’. He was appointed an Acting Lieutenant in August 1857 and Lieutenant in November the same year. Promoted to Commander in August 1866 and Captain in September 1873. He was placed on the Retired List at his own request on 4 October 1881 and was advanced to Rear-Admiral on the Retired List on 29 November 1889. Rear-Admiral Denison died on 2 September 1903. Sold with copied research.

Lot 884

Four: Private M. D. O. Swart, Railway Regiment, late Cape Police Cape of Good Hope General Service 1880-97, 1 clasp, Bechuanaland (568 Pte. M. D. E. Swart, C. Pce.); Queen’s South Africa 1899-1902, 4 clasps, Relief of Mafeking, Defence of Kimberley, Orange Free State, Transvaal (568 Pte. M. D. O. Swartz, Cape P.D.1.); King’s South Africa 1901-02, 2 clasps (568 Pte. M. D. O. Swart, C.P. Dist 1.); British War Medal 1914-20 (Pte. M. D. O. Swart, Railway Rgt.) note variation in initials and surname, contact marks, nearly very fine and better (4) £350-400.

Lot 890

Five: Chief Gunner W. S. Cox, Royal Navy Egypt and Sudan 1882-89, undated reverse, 1 clasp, The Nile 1884-85 (W. S. Cox, A.B.); Queen’s South Africa 1899-1902, no clasp (Gunr., R.N., H.M.S. Barracouta); British War Medal 1914-20 (Ch. Gnr., R.N.); Royal Navy L.S. & G.C., V.R. (P.O. 1st Cl., H.M.S. Canada); Khedive’s Star 1884-6, unnamed, contact marks, nearly very fine and better (5) £400-500 William Samuel Boon Cox was born in Devon on 24 September 1865. He entered the Royal Navy as a Boy 2nd Class on the training ship Impregnable in January 1882 and was advanced to Boy 1st Class on the training ship Lion in November the same year. He was promoted to Ordinary Seaman when on the Monarch in August 1883 and Able Seaman on the same vessel in July 1884. He was with the Monarch again during October 1884-June 1885, during which time he saw service with the Nile Flotilla. Cox was promoted to Leading Seaman in August 1888 when on the Rupert and was appointed Petty Officer 1st Class on the Audacious in May 1890. He was awarded the L.S.& G.C. Medal whilst serving on the Canada during the period December 1892-March 1896. He served on the Excellent, January-March 1897 and was promoted to Acting Gunner on 5 February. As Gunner on the Barracouta, June 1897-October 1900, he saw service in the Boer War and his service papers record, ‘Mr Cox has performed the duties of Gunnery Officer with great zeal and ability’. Sold with some copied service papers and roll extract.

Lot 892

Seven: Warrant Officer Class 1 F. Day, Royal Army Medical Corps, late Medical Staff Corps Egypt and Sudan 1882-89, undated reverse, 1 clasp, Suakin 1885 (5267 Bugr., M.S. Corps); Queen’s South Africa 1899-1902, 4 clasps, Cape Colony, Orange Free State, South Africa 1901, South Africa 1902 (5267 Sjt. Maj., R.A.M.C.); British War Medal 1914-20 (57913 W.O. Cl.1, R.A.M.C.); Army L.S. & G.C., V.R., 3rd issue (5267St. Sgt. 1st Cl., R.A.M.C.); Khedive’s Star 1884-6, unnamed; Montenegro, Medal for Zeal, Nicholas I, silver-gilt, unnamed, mount and ring suspension; British Red Cross Society’s Balkan War Medal 1912-13, for Montenegro (Frank Day), silver-gilt and enamel, unmounted, first pitted, with edge bruising, fine; the others nearly very fine and better (7) £550-650 Sergeant-Major Frank Day, Royal Army Medical Corps, served with the British Red Cross Society’s Unit 1 in Montenegro during the Balkan War of 1912-13. One of 31 recipient’s of the B.R.C.S. Medal for Montenegro. Sold with copied research.

Lot 896

Eight: Warrant Officer P. Fitzgerald, Supply & Transport Corps, late 19th Hussars India General Service 1854-95, 1 clasp, Chin Hills 1892-93 (2957 Corpl. P. Fitzgerald, S. & T. Corps) officially re-engraved as issued; India General Service 1895-1902, 1 clasp, Relief of Chitral 1895 (2957 Sergt. R. Fitzgerald, 19th Hussars) note incorrect initial; Tibet 1903-04, no clasp (Sergt. P. Fitzgerald, S. & T. Corps); 1914-15 Star (Sub Condr., S. & T. Corps); British War and Victory Medals (Condr., S.T.C.); General Service 1918-62, 1 clasp, Iraq (W.O. Cl. 1, S. & T. Corps); Army L.S. & G.C., E.VII.R. (Sergt., S. & T. Corps) contact wear, otherwise nearly very fine or better (8) £600-800 The first two medals earned in the 19th Hussars whilst attached to the Supply and Transport Corps. Only 1 officer and 3 men of the 19th Hussars were entitled to the clasp for Chin Hills 1892-93, and only 5 men for the Relief of Chitral 1895. The Chin Hills clasp was not authorised until 1903 and a great number were issued using unclaimed medals re-engraved with new details. Sold with medal roll details.

Lot 902

Pair: Private C. Saddington, Northamptonshire Regiment India General Service 1895-1902, 3 clasps, Punjab Frontier 1897-98, Samana 1897, Tirah 1897-98 (3050 Pte., 1st Bn. North’n. Regt.); King’s South Africa 1901-02, 2 clasps (3050 Pte., Nthptn. Regt.) contact marks, nearly very fine (2) £200-240 Charles Saddington was born in Northamptonshire. A Groom by occupation and serving in the 3rd Battalion Northamptonshire Regiment, he enlisted into the Northamptonshire Regiment on 12 March 1891, aged 18 years, 6 months. He served in India, October 1892-January 1899, before being transferred to the Army Reserve. Recalled soon after for service in the Boer War, he served in South Africa, October 1899-June 1900 and May 1901-September 1902. Returning to England, he was discharged after completing his period of service on 11 March 1903. In addition to the above, Private Saddington was awarded the Queen’s medal with clasps for Belmont, Modder River, Orange Free State and Transvaal. Sold with copied service papers.

Lot 906

Five: Captain D. J. Gibbons, Rhodesian Forces, late Imperial and Union Forces Queen’s South Africa 1899-1902, 1 clasp, Cape Colony (Pte., I.D.); 1914-15 Star (Lt., 4th Infantry); British War and Bilingual Victory Medals (Lt.); Colonial Auxiliary Long Service, G.V.R. (Capt., S. Rhod. T.F.), mounted as worn, the first renamed and the last with corrected rank and loose suspension, somewhat polished, thus good fine or better (5) £180-220 David James Gibbons, who is believed to have served in the South Wales Borderers and the Intelligence Department in the Boer War, settled in South Africa and served as a member of the Prince Alfred Guard at Port Elizabeth, and as an Embarkation Officer in South-West Africa during the Great War. Moving to Umtali in Rhodesia in 1925, he was appointed a Lieutenant in the Southern Rhodesia Volunteers in May of the same year and was awarded his Colonial Auxiliary Long Service Medal in 1929. ‘Well known at weapon meetings as a range officer’, he was re-employed from the Reserve of Officers in September 1939 and appointed District Recruiting Officer at Salisbury, but he died suddenly a few weeks later. Sold with two original portrait photographs, both with the recipient in uniform, together with birth and baptism certificates for his daughter, born in Port Elizabeth in 1910, and a local newspaper obituary cutting. Also see Lot 1070 for the campaign awards to his Son-in-Law.

Lot 907

Four: Warrant Officer Class 2 G. T. Barton, Derbyshire Yeomanry Queen’s South Africa 1899-1902, 1 clasp, Cape Colony (5092 Pte., 8th Coy. 4th Imp. Yeo.); British War and Victory Medals (29 W.O. Cl.II, Derby. Yeo.); Territorial Force Efficiency Medal, E.VII.R. (29 S.S. Mjr., Derby. Yeo.) some edge bruising and contact marks, very fine (4) £220-260 T.F.E.M. awarded by Army Order January 1909.

Lot 910

Five: Warrant Officer Class 2 A. E. Day, Royal Field Artillery Queen’s South Africa 1899-1902, 2 clasps, Cape Colony, Orange Free State (97829 Gnr., 87th Bty. R.F.A.); 1914 Star, with clasp (97829 Sd. S. Sjt., R.F.A.); British War and Victory Medals (97829 W.O. Cl. 2, R.A.); Army L.S. & G.C., G.V.R., 1st issue (97829 Sd. Sjt., R.F.A.) minor contact marks on first and last, very fine and better (5) £200-240 Arthur Ernest Day was born in Dover, Kent. He attested for service in the Royal Artillery at London on 19 June 1893, aged 14 years, 3 months. Serving initially as a Boy, he was advanced to Gunner and posted to the 87th Battery R.F.A. in April 1897. With them he served in South Africa, January-July 1900, being invalided to England suffering from Enteric Fever. Returning to active duty, in November 1901 he was injured during the course of his duty in England, being kicked on the knee by a horse. He returned to South Africa, June 1904-June 1907 and was promoted to Saddler Corporal in April 1904, Saddler Sergeant in February 1910 and Saddler Staff Sergeant in June 1913. With the onset of the Great War he entered the France/Flanders theatre of war on 23 August (?) 1914. Appointed Saddler Quartermaster Sergeant in February 1915, he attained the rank of Warrant Officer 2nd Class Quartermaster Sergeant in June 1918. For his wartime services he was awarded the Meritorious Service Medal (London Gazette 18 January 1919). He was discharged on 18 April 1919. Sold with copied service papers.

Lot 911

Pair: Captain A. M. Mac G. Bell, Royal Scots Fusiliers, late Argyll & Sutherland Highlanders Queen’s South Africa 1899-1902, 2 copy clasps, Cape Colony, South Africa 1902 (Lieut., A. & S. Highrs.); 1914 Star (Capt., R. Sc. Fus.) very fine (2) £300-350 Alexander Murray MacGregor Bell was born in Weymouth on 4 September 1880, the second son of William Bell of Stirling, late Lieutenant-Colonel, 56th Regiment. Educated at Queen Elizabeth Grammar School, Kingston and Stirling High School, he was gazetted into the 3rd (Militia) Battalion Argyll & Sutherland Highlanders on 30 December 1901. With them he served in South Africa and was awarded the Queen’s medal with two clasps. He was gazetted into the Royal Garrison Artillery in February 1903 and was transferred to the Dorset Regiment in May 1905. He was promoted to Lieutenant and transferred to the Royal Scots Fusiliers in January 1907 and advanced to Captain in May 1912. From May 1904 to May 1905 he was A.D.C. to the Governor of Natal and was Superintendent Gymnasia, Scottish Command, February 1913-November 1914, when he rejoined his battalion in Flanders. He was appointed Adjutant in December 1914. Captain Bell was wounded at Ypres on 19 February 1918 and died of his wounds in London on 28 April 1918 and was buried in All Saints Cemetery, Kensall Green, London. He was mentioned in Field Marshal Sir John French’s despatch of 31 May 1915. The officer commanding his battalion, writing to his parents, said of him, ‘The regiment was moving across some open ground under heavy shell fire, and your son and I were together at the moment we were both knocked over. He was hit on the back and right arm. I can only assure you that his gallantry and devotion to duty has been most marked’. Sold with copied research and photograph.

Lot 914

Three: Lieutenant-Colonel W. T. Barry, Indian Army Queen’s South Africa 1899-1902, 3 clasps, Cape Colony, Orange Free State, Transvaal (Lieut., I.S.C.); King’s South Africa 1901-02, 2 clasps (Lieut., I.S.C.); British War Medal 1914-20 (Lt. Col.) minor contact marks, good very fine and better (3) £280-320 William Thornburn Barry was born on 10 May 1874. He received his first commission in the East Surrey Regiment in June 1894. and was advanced to Lieutenant in December 1896. Appointed to the Indian Army and the 2nd (Queen’s Own) Rajput Light Infantry in December 1898. Serving in the Boer War with the I.S.C., he was present in operations in Cape Colony, south of the Orange River, 1899-1900, including the action at Kheis, 29 May; operations in the Orange River Colony, May-November 1900, including actions at Lindley, 1 June, Rhenoster River, 11 June, and Lindley, 26 June. Served also in operations in Transvaal, west of Pretoria, July-November 1900, including the action at Ventes Kroon, 7 & 9 August, and operations in Transvaal, November 1900-May 1902. Barry was promoted to Captain in June 1903 and Major in June 1912. Appointed a Magistrate in the Lahore Cantonment in January 1904, he was transferred to the Supernumary List in January 1914. In January 1918 he was ranked as a 2nd Class Magistrate. Promoted to Lieutenant-Colonel in June 1920, he retired on 3 June 1924. Sold with copied roll extract, m.i.c. and other research.

Lot 918

Three: Corporal T. G. Day, 8th Battalion London Regiment, late Army Post Office Corps Queen’s South Africa 1899-1902, 3 clasps, Orange Free State, Laing’s Nek, Belfast (388 Pte., A.P.O. Corps); King’s South Africa 1901-02, 2 clasps (388 Corpl., A.P.O.C.); Territorial Force Efficiency Medal, E.VII.R. (5752 Cpl., 8/London Regt.) slight contact marks, very fine (3) £200-240.

Lot 933

Four: Warrant Officer Class 2 E. Cook, Royal Fusiliers Queen’s South Africa 1899-1902, 5 clasps, Cape Colony, Tugela Heights, Orange Free State, Relief of Ladysmith, Transvaal (5111 Cpl., 2nd Rl. Fus.); King’s South Africa 1901-02, 2 clasps, South Africa 1901, South Africa 1902 (5111 Serjt., Rl. Fusiliers); Army L.S. & G.C., G.V.R., 1st issue (5111 C. Sjt., R. Fus.); Army Meritorious Service Medal, G.VI.R., 2nd issue (5111 W.O. Cl. 2, R.F.), mounted as worn, together with a presentation shooting cup, silver, gilt interior, hallmarks for Birmingham 1910, of bowl shape with scallop design, engraved inscription to outer front, ‘Winners of the Prince of Wales Cup, 1909 / Sgt. E. Cook’, the Boer War pair joined by a shared suspension post, light contact marks and edge bruising, nearly very fine and better (Lot) £400-500 Ernest Cook was born in London and enlisted in the Royal Fusiliers at Hounslow direct from the 3rd (Militia) Battalion, Middlesex Regiment in October 1894, aged 18 years. Advanced to Corporal in the 2nd Battalion shortly after the outbreak of hostilities in South Africa in 1899, he remained actively employed in that theatre of war until October 1902, in which period he was promoted to Sergeant in late 1901 and qualified for the above described Medals and clasps (copy service record refers). Subsequently employed in the East Indies 1904-07, he returned to the U.K. to take up an appointment in the 6th Battalion in the latter year, and remained continuously employed in that unit until attached to the R.F.C. Cadet Wing at St. Leonard’s-on-Sea in September 1917, a period that witnessed his advancement to Colour Sergeant in August 1910 and to Company Sergeant-Major in September 1914 - and the award of his L.S. & G.C. Medal in AO 117 of 1913. Cook was finally discharged in February 1919, having latterly returned to his duties in the 6th Battalion.

Lot 945

Three: Gunner J. Husband, Royal Marine Artillery China 1900, no clasp (Gunr., R.M.A.); British War and Victory Medals (R.M.A. 6966 Gr.) good very fine and better (3) £160-200 China Medal confirmed on the ‘North West Fort, Taku’ roll - one of 194 medals awarded to the unit.

Lot 946

Six: Temporary Warrant Officer Class 2 A. H. Ealey, Royal Engineers Africa General Service 1902-56, 1 clasp, Somaliland 1902-04 (8704 Sapr., R.E.); 1914 Star, with clasp (8704 Cpl., R.E.); British War and Victory Medals (T.W.O. Cl. 2, R.E.); Army Meritorious Service Medal, G.V.R. (8704 Sjt. - A.C.S. Mjr., R.E.); Army L.S. & G.C., G.V.R. (8704 Sjt., R.E.), mounted as worn, contact marks and a little polished, otherwise generally very fine (6) £350-400 Ealey was awarded his Meritorious Service Medal ‘in recognition of valuable services rendered with the Armies in France and Flanders’ (London Gazette 3 June 1919 refers).

Lot 949

Four: Quartermaster Duffadar Fazal Ahmed, Horse Transport Company, late 15th Mule Corps Tibet 1903-04, no clasp, silver issue (611 Driver Fazl Ahmed, 15th Pack Mule Corps); British War Medal (611 K-Dfdr. Fazal Ahmed, 15 Mule Cps.); India General Service 1908-35, 1 clasp, Afghanistan N.W.F. 1919 (1620 Q-M-D. Fazal Ahmed, 1 Horse Transpt. Coy.); Indian Army Meritorious Service Medal, G.V.R., 1st issue (T.C.59469 Tr. Dfdr. Fazal Ahmed, 3 C.B.T. Coy.) nearly very fine (4) £300-350.

Lot 951

Four: Acting Corporal F. A. Tooze, Worcestershire Regiment 1914 Star , with clasp (10140 L. Cpl., 2/Worc. R.); British War and Victory Medals (10140 A. Cpl., Worc. R.) B.W.M. suspension a little slack; National Fire Brigades Association L.S. Medal, 1 clasp, Ten Years (11120 Frederick A. Tooze), bronze, fine and better (4) £160-200 Frederick Arthur Tooze was born in Worcester. A General Labourer by occupation and a member of the 5th Battalion Worcestershire Regiment (Militia), he attested for the Worcestershire Regiment on 10 September 1906, aged 18 years, 1 month. He was transferred to the Army Reserve in 1912. Mobilized in August 1914 he was taken onto the strength of the 2nd Battalion Worcestershire Regiment and entered into the France/Flanders theatre of war on 12 August 1914. He was invalided back to England on 27 January 1915 having contracted certain illnesses. He was discharged because of sickness on 7 May 1917 and was awarded the Silver War Badge. In 1922 he joined the Worcester Fire Brigade and was awarded the N.F.A. Long Service Medal in 1934. Sold with copied service papers, medical papers and m.i.c.

Lot 952

Three: Warrant Officer Class 2 D. M. Glass, Royal Highlanders, who died on 31 March 1916 1914 Star , with clasp (1461 Sjt., R. Highrs.); British War and Victory Medals (1461 W.O. Cl.2, R. Highrs.); Memorial Plaque (David Menzies Glass) pitted, fine; Black Watch Prize Medal, 1 clasp, 1912, reverse inscribed, ‘Inter-Coy. Challenge Shield won by ‘D ‘Coy. Cpl. D. N.(sic) Glass’, silver and enamel, hallmarks for Birmingham 1912, minor enamel damage; good very fine except where stated (5) £250-300 David Menzies Glass was born in Newburgh, Fifeshire and enlisted at Dundee. Serving as a Serjeant in the 1st Battalion Royal Highlanders (Black Watch) he entered the France/Flanders theatre of war on 13 August 1914. As a Warrant Officer Class 2 with ‘D ‘Company 1st Battalion Royal Highlanders he died in France on 31 March 1916, aged 27 years. He was buried in St Sever Cemetery, Rouen. He was the son of Alexander and Christina Glass of 28 King Street, Dundee. Sold with commemorative scroll mounted on card and forwarding slips for the 1914 Star, clasp and war medals. Also with copied m.i.c. and other research.

Lot 958

Pair: Private J. Courtney, Royal Munster Fusiliers 1914 Star (7753 Pte., R. Muns. Fus.); Victory Medal 1914-19 (7753 Pte., R. Mun. Fus.) Pair: Private M. Fitzgerald, Royal Munster Fusiliers British War and Victory Medals (6621 Pte., R. Mun. Fus.) extremely fine (4) £80-100.

Lot 959

Pair: Trooper E. P. Castle, 1st Life Guards, killed in action, 13 May 1915 1914 Star , with copy clasp (2802 L. Cpl., 1/Life Gds.); Victory Medal 1914-19 (2802 Tpr., 1-L. Gds.); together with a renamed British War Medal 1914-20 (2802 Tpr., 1-L. Gds.) very fine (3) £120-160 Edward Percy Castle was born in Walthamstow, Essex and enlisted at Stratford. Serving with the 1st Life Guards, he was killed in action on 13 May 1915, aged 23 years. Having no known grave, his name is commemorated on the Ypres (Menin Gate) Memorial. He was the son of William Moody and Elizabeth Castle of 19 Cleveland Park Crescent, Walthamstow, London. Sold with copied research. .

Lot 963

Four: Lieutenant-Colonel A. E. Johnson, 4th (Denbighshire) Battalion Royal Welsh Fusiliers 1914 Star (Major, R.W. Fus.); British War and Victory Medals (Major); Territorial Decoration, G.V.R., unnamed, hallmarks for London 1911, complete with brooch bar; together with Masonic Medal 1914-18, reverse inscribed, ‘Bro. Col. A. E. Johnson, No.4417’, silver, hallmarks for Birmingham 1925, good very fine (5) £280-320 Algernon Edward Johnson was appointed a 2nd Lieutenant in the 1st Volunteer Battalion Royal Welsh Fusiliers in May 1896. He was advanced to Lieutenant in December 1896, Captain in July 1898 and Major in February 1900. In April 1908 he was posted to the 4th (Denbighshire) Battalion Royal Welsh Fusiliers. Major Johnson was awarded the T.D. by the London Gazette of 13 January 1914. Still with the 4th Battalion, he was advanced to Lieutenant-Colonel in November 1915. He retired, retaining his rank, on 30 September 1921. Sold with some copied reseach. .

Lot 974

Three: Private H. Day, 14th Battalion Canadian Infantry, killed in action, 26 September 1916 1914-15 Star (63271 Pte., 14/Can. Inf.); British War Medal 1914-20 (63271 Pte., 14-Can. Inf.); Canadian Memorial Cross, G.V.R. (63271 Pte. H. Day) nearly extremely fine (3) £140-180 Private Henry Day, 14th Battalion Canadian Infantry (Quebec Regiment), was posted missing (killed in action) on 26 September 1916. Having no known grave, his name is commemorated on the Vimy Memorial. .

Lot 975

Pair: Private A. W. Wood, Royal Sussex Regiment 1914-15 Star (4-1198 Pte., R. Suss. R.); British War Medal 1914-20 (1198 Pte., R. Suss. R.) Pair: Private L. G. Wanstaff, Army Service Corps British War and Victory Medals (M-298995 Pte., A.S.C.) good very fine (4) £40-50.

Lot 976

Pair: Captain L. V. Kahn, Royal Air Force, late Royal Naval Air Service 1914-15 Star (F.4058 P.O.M., R.N.A.S.); British War Medal 1914-20 (Capt., R.A.F.); together with an erased Victory Medal, good very fine (3) £100-140 Leslie Victor Kahn was born in Westminster, London. Engaged as a Student, he enlisted into the R.N.A.S. as a Petty Officer Mechanic (E) on 15 April 1915. Based at President II, he served with the Armoured Car Division in the Dardanelles, being discharged to shore on 18 December 1915. Later a Captain in the R.A.F. with 247 Squadron, he was placed on the Unemployed List on 11 February 1919. Sold with copied service papers.

Lot 978

Four: Chief Stoker C. E. Kirk, Royal Navy 1914-15 Star (162074 Ch. Sto., R.N.); British War and Victory Medals (162074 Ch. Sto., R.N.); Royal Navy L.S. & G.C., E.VII.R. (162074 Ch. Sto., H.M.S. Albion) Three: Petty Officer 1st Class J. Tall, Royal Navy 1914-15 Star (117029 P.O.1, R.N.); British War and Victory Medals (117029 P.O.1, R.N.) good very fine (7) £90-110 Charles Edward Kirk was born in Charlton, Kent on 24 August 1870. A Stoker by occupation, he entered the Royal Navy as a Stoker 2nd Class on 19 August 1891. He was promoted to Stoker when at Pembroke, March 1892; Leading Stoker 2nd Class when at Pembroke II in December 1897 and Leading Stoker 1st Class when on Diadem in October 1899. Advanced to Acting Chief Stoker when on the Rupert in April 1902 and Chief Stoker when on the Anson in April 1903, he received his long service medal when serving on the battleship Albion, June 1904-February 1907. After further service on the battleships Majestic, Venerable and Implacable he was pensioned ashore in August 1913 and joined the Royal Fleet Reserve. He was recalled to service with the Royal Navy in August 1914 and served throughout the war at various shore bases being demobilized in October 1919. Sold with copied service papers.

Lot 980

Three: Private W. R. Adamson, 3rd Battalion London Regiment 1914-15 Star (2417 Pte., 3/Lond. R.); British War and Victory Medals (2417 Pte., 3-Lond. R.) Three: Private H. Broomfield, Hampshire Regiment 1914-15 Star (15338 Pte., Hamps. R.); British War and Victory Medals (15338 Pte., Hamps. R.) good very fine and better (6) £100-120 Private William R. Adamson, 3rd Battalion London Regiment, entered the Balkan theatre of war on 13 September 1915. He later served with the Labour Corps (Pte., 473372), was entitled to a Silver War Badge and was discharged on 9 March 1919. With damaged lids of medal card boxes of issue, two associated papers - one addressed to ‘W. R. Adamson 473372, Ivy Side, Grove Road, New Southgate, N’, and with copied m.i.c. Private Harry Broomfield, 2nd Battalion Hampshire Regiment, enlisted on 19 January 1915 and entered the Balkan theatre of war on 15 June 1915. He was discharged on 25 April 1916 as a result of wounds and was entitled to a Silver War Badge. With copied m.i.c. and roll extracts.

Lot 981

Three: Corporal J. T. Harrington, Army Service Corps 1914-15 Star (M2-019268 Pte., A.S.C.); British War and Victory Medals (M2-019268 Cpl., A.S.C.); together with a mounted set of three miniature dress medals Three: Driver G. Adsett, Army Service Corps 1914-15 Star (T4-041209 Dvr., A.S.C.); British War and Victory Medals (T4-041209 Dvr., A.S.C.) Pair: 2nd Corporal F. Marriott, Royal Engineers 1914-15 Star (88049 Spr., R.E.); Victory Medal 1914-19 (88049 2 Cpl., R.E.) minor edge bruising and contact marks, very fine and better (lot) £80-100 Private James T. Harrington, A.S.C., entered the France/Flanders theatre of war on 11 December 1914. Sold with identity disk; Princess Mary Christmas tin (empty) - inside inscribed with the recipient’s name, unit and number; cap badge; riband bar and copied m.i.c. Driver George Adsett, A.S.C., entered the France/Flanders theatre of war on 25 September 1915. Sold with copied m.i.c. Sapper Fred Marriott, R.E., enlisted on 5 May 1915 and entered the France/Flanders theate of war on 21 May 1915. Latterly serving with the Railway Transport Department, he was discharged due to sickness on 19 August 1918 and was entitled to the Silver War Badge. Sold with copied m.i.c. and roll extract.

Lot 983

Three: Private A. E. Day, Grenadier Guards 1914-15 Star (22523 Pte., G. Gds.); British War and Victory Medals (22523 Pte., G. Gds.) nearly extremely fine (3) £40-60 Arthur Edwin Day was born in Holdfast, near Upton-on-Severn, Worcestershire. He attested for the Grenadier Guards on 1 December 1893, aged 21 years, 4 months. Serving in the the Boer War as Private 4635 he was awarded the Queen’s medal with clasps for Cape Colony and South Africa 1902. Transferred to the Army Reserve in July 1902, he was discharged in November 1905. Believed to be the same person, with the start of the Great War, he rejoined the Grenadier Guards as Private 22523. With them he entered the France/Flanders theatre of war on 16 March 1915. Sold with copied service papers and copied m.i.c.

Lot 984

Family group: Three: Second Lieutenant H. V. Day, 13th Battalion Royal Fusiliers, late 7th Battalion London Regiment, killed in action at the Battle of Arras, 9 April 1917 1914-15 Star (3040 Pte., 7-Lond. R.); British War and Victory Medals (2 Lieut.); Memorial Plaque (Hubert Victor Day) Three: Private A. E. Day, 7th Battalion London Regiment, awarded the D.C.M. for the Battle of Festubert; mortally wounded at the Battle of Loos, 25 September 1915 1914-15 Star (3064 Pte., 7-Lond. R.); British War and Victory Medals (3064 Pte., 7-Lond. R.); Memorial Plaque (Albert Eustace Day) generally extremely fine (8) £600-700 Hubert Victor Day was born on 6 July 1893 and was the second son of the Rev. John Day and Caroline Rushton Day. His father was a Wesleyan Minister and was an officiating Chaplain to the troops at Colchester. He was educated at Jersey Modern School and at the Kingswood School, Bath. He was employed as a Clerk in the Westminster Branch of the London City and Midland Bank. He joined the 7th Battalion London Regiment on 5 October 1914 and entered France on 17 March 1915. On 25 September 1915 he was severely wounded in the attack on the Double Crassier (twin mining spoilheaps near Loos) and was invalided home. This was the same attack in which his younger brother was fatally wounded. Having applied for a commission, Hubert Day was gazetted as a 2nd Lieutenant in the 13th Battalion Royal Fusiliers on 26 January 1916. He underwent training at Oxford and Troon and was appointed Bombing Officer whilst at Portabello Camp. He accompanied the battalion to France in September 1916 and was later recommended for a Military Cross for his work during the Aisne Offensive. He was killed in the opening day of the Battle of Arras, 9 April 1917, whilst leading an attack on Monchy-le-Preux. He was buried on the battlefield but his grave was lost during the later fighting. His name is therefore commemorated on the Arras Memorial. Sold with copied research. Albert Eustace Day was born in Louth on 5 March 1895 and was the third son of the Rev. John Day and Caroline Rushton Day. He was educated at the Kingswood School, Bath. He was employed as a Clerk at the Guildhall, employed by the City of London Corporation. He joined the 7th Battalion London Regiment, two days after his brother, on 7 October 1914 and entered France in March 1915. He won the Distinguished Conduct Medal on 16 May 1915 during the first day of the battle of Festubert. His citation (London Gazette 5 August 1915) reads: For gallant conduct during an attack on German trenches, he rescued a man, Pte. Wyld, who was unable to extricate himself from a water course, and succeeded in bringing him to safety under heavy shellfire’. In a letter from Ross Wyld to the parents of Hubert and Eustace Day, dated ‘No.12 General Hospital, Rouen, 20-5-15’, Wyld makes it clear that both brothers had a hand in his rescue, and writes: ‘Dear Mr and Mrs Day, I am taking the liberty of writing to you, to tell you what your two sons did for me on Monday last. I got stuck in the mud of a communication trench, and could not move my feet, as I was in the mud up to my knees. I dared not stand upright, or I should have got a bullet through my head. Your two sons, Hubert and Eustace, at great risk, came to my aid, and by their help I managed to get free, and was very thankful, I can tell you. In order to understand the pluck of your lads, I must tell you that to reach me they had to cross several dangerous spots, with practically no cover whatever, and that the corner where I was stuck was bespattered every now and then with earth thrown up by shells, so near were they. The man next to me was shot in the arm because he could not keep down. So altogether I think you will agree with me that your two lads were very brave. ..’ On 25 September 1915, on the opening day of the Battle of Loos, Private Eustace Day was mortally wounded whilst taking part in the attack on the Double Crassier. He succumbed to his wounds on the following day, dying at the 6th London Field Ambulance Post. He was buried in the Noeux-les-Mines Communal Cemetery. Sold with copied research.

Lot 985

Five: Private H. E. Turney, 11th Battalion London Regiment 1914-15 Star (3091 Pte., 11-Lond. R.); British War and Victory Medals (3091 Pte., 11-Lond. R.); Special Constabulary Long Service, G.V.R., 2nd issue (Harold E. Turney); Serbia, Oblitch Bravery Medal, 30mm., bronze-gilt, unnamed as issued, mounted for wear, good very fine (5) £220-260 Serbia ‘Gold Medal’ London Gazette 15 February 1917. ‘3091 Rifleman Harold Edward Turney, London Regiment’. Private Turney landed at Sulva Bay, Gallipoli with the 1/11th Battalion London Regiment on 10 August 1915. Still with the Londons in January 1917 when he was given a new service number - 451018 - from the Finsbury Rifles allocated number block. At a later date he was transferred to the Royal Engineers (Service No. 549857) and remained with them until discharged to the ‘Z’ Reserve on 14 July 1919. Sold with copied service details and gazette extract.

Lot 993

Five: Lance-Corporal A. E. Standen, 2nd Rhodesia Regiment, afterwards British South Africa Police Reserve 1914-15 Star (1042 Pte., 2-Rhodesia Regt.); British War and Victory Medals (1042 L.-Cpl., 2-Rhodesia Regt.); Southern Rhodesia Medal for War Service 1939-45; Special Constabulary Long Service, G.VI.R., 1st issue (Arthur E. Standen), the earlier awards a little polished, otherwise generally very fine and a particularly rare combination of awards (5) £400-500 Arthur Edward Standen, the son of Frederick Watt Standen, a Manager of the Standard Bank of South Africa, and the grandson of a Deputy Assistant Commissary General in the British Army, first entered the African theatre of war as a Private in the 2nd Rhodesian Regiment in March 1915. He subsequently served in the 1939-45 War as a Constable in the British South Africa Police Reserve in Umtali District, Southern Rhodesia, and was awarded his Special Constabulary Long Service Medal in February 1946; also see Lot 32 for his Grandfather’s South Africa 1834-53 Medal.

Lot 996

An unusual and interesting group of nineteen awarded to Alexander Gault MacGowan, an accredited War Correspondent in the 1939-45 War, whose extraordinary career commenced with service as a subaltern in the Manchester Regiment and as an R.A.F. Observer in the Great War: having been wounded in North Africa in 1943, he was captured by the Germans in France in 1944, but escaped ‘through a series of adventures that would make a Hollywood scenarist bite his nails with envy’ - and briefly fought alongside the Maquis 1914-15 Star (2 Lieut., Manch. R.); British War and Victory Medals (Lieut., R.A.F.); 1939-45 Star; Africa Star; Italy Star; France and Germany Star; War Medal 1939-45; France, Third Republic, Legion of Honour, Chevalier’s breast badge, silver, silver-gilt and enamel; France, Croix de Guerre 1939-1940, with bronze star on ribbon; Academic Palms, Officer’s breast badge, gilt metal and enamel, with rosette on riband; War Commemorative Medal 1914-18; Somme Commemorative Medal; Colonial Medal, 2 clasps, Algerie, Maroc; War Commemorative Medal 1939-45, 1 clasp, Liberation; Medal of Liberated France 1947; Morocco, Order of Ouissam Alaouite Cherifien, Officer’s breast badge, gilt metal and enamel, with rosette on riband; Portugal, Republic, Military Order of Christ, Officer’s breast badge, silver-gilt and enamel, with rosette on riband; U.S.A., Purple Heart, gilt metal and enamel, the Legion of Honour severely chipped in places and the Portuguese piece less so, otherwise generally good very fine (19) £3000-3500 Ex Sotheby’s 6 March 1986. Alexander Gault MacGowan, who ‘crammed more dangerous adventures into his lifetime than most men would care to experience’, was born February 1894 and was educated at Manchester Grammar School. Mobilised as a pre-war member of the Cheshire Yeomanry on the outbreak of hostilities in August 1914, he was commissioned into the 24th (Oldham) Battalion, Manchester Regiment in October 1915 and is believed to have been wounded by rifle-grenade fragments in the head and legs on the Somme in July 1916. Declared as ‘unfit for anything other than mounted duty’, he transferred to the Royal Air Force and went on to serve as an Observer on the Italian front in 1918. Commencing his career as a journalist in 1922, when he worked as a correspondent for the Associated Press out in India (where MacGowan also held a commission on the Indian Army Reserve of Officers), he moved to a new appointment in Mesopotamia in the following year. Indeed for much of the 1920s and 1930s he travelled extensively, working variously for The Times and Daily Express, and others newspapers, and was credited with discovering a new pass into Little Tibet, for which he received the thanks of the Survey of India, in addition to participating in the first flight over the Orinoco Delta and the Venezuelan Ilanos, between Trinidad and Maracay, and the first flight between Trinidad and British Guiana. Added to which he had further adventures during an epic motor car trip across the desert from Kurdistan and Mosul to Syria, the first of its kind. He later reported, ‘Hold ups were frequent, and an officer who tried it after me was stripped of everything and had to walk naked into the Lebanons! ‘In 1934 MacGowan joined the New York Sun, for whom he reported on the Spanish Civil War and produced two controversial features entitled ‘The Scarlet Pimpernel of Spain ‘and ‘The Red Vultures of the Pyrenees ‘, for he had no time for the Spanish loyalists and their left-wing sympathisers. He also had an assignment with the French Foreign Legion out in Algeria and Morocco in 1937, in addition to covering the coronation of George VI in the same year. In fact, MacGowan was still working in London on the renewal of hostilities, and accordingly he was assigned to cover the events of the Battle of Britain, in addition to acting as ‘Press Observer with the Commandos in the raid on Dieppe’. As an accredited War Correspondent with the American forces, he next travelled to North Africa and was with the French when they attacked Jabel Mansour in April 1943, when he was ‘wounded in the leg .. and was awarded the Purple Heart by special order of President Roosevelt. For the same incident he was cited for bravery and awarded the Croix de Guerre by General Henri Giraud.’ Both awards were announced in the New York Times. In the following year he reported on the Allied landings in Normandy and was attached to General Omar Bradley’s forces, riding in the jeep of the first American to reach the historic island of Mont Saint Michel. But, as subsequently confirmed by German radio, such scoops were shortly thereafter curtailed, for he was captured at Chatres on 15 August 1944: ‘MacGowan’s experience, following his capture, was unusual. Upon arrival at Chalons-sur-Marne with Makin [another correspondent who had been mortally wounded when their jeep was originally fired upon by two German armoured cars], he was placed in the temporary custody of a group of German war correspondents of the Presse-kompanie. They treated him well, but eventually delivered him to a prisoner of war camp on the line of the German retreat. From there he was started on a journey eastward aboard a train, en route to Germany. At 2 a.m., after six hours in the slow-moving train, and as the guards drowsed, MacGowan opened the compartment door and jumped from the car, fell and ran, with bullets flying about him. Still in France, he was fortunate in reaching a group of Maquis, or French resistance forces. Once he had established his identity, they hid him until the U.S. forces had advanced to the area in September. Interviewed for the World’s Press News after his return to England, the publication described British-born MacGowan as the only ‘British correspondent ‘ever known to have escaped after capture, with the exception of Winston Churchill in his escape from the Boers during the South African War in 1899’ (Europe Made Free: Invasion 1944 refers). Having ‘lived a life like Robin Hood’s’ with the Maquis, and accompanied them with the advancing Americans at the capture of a local town, MacGowan duly reported to the bar of the Paris hotel that served as a press H.Q. - the rest of his colleagues almost dropped their glasses, ‘for the usually immaculate MacGowan was dressed in borrowed French civilian clothes that fitted him like Europe fits Hitler - too big in some places, too tight in others’. In October he returned to the Sun’s offices in New York, for the first time in five years, where he was hailed as a conquering hero, ‘trim and fit in his war correspondent’s uniform, with a chest full of campaign ribbons and decorations from two World Wars.’ Returning to N.W.Europe in the Spring of 1945, MacGowan accompanied General Patton’s forces and visited the scene of Hitler’s ‘Eagle’s Nest ‘at Berchtesgaden at the War’s end. He subsequently reported on the ‘Big Three ‘Potsdam conference. MacGowan - a ‘tall, dark-haired man, with a ‘devil-may-care ‘look in his eyes ‘‘ - was European Manager of the New York Sun 1946-50, during which period he reported on U.N.O. and N.A.T.O. forces, and latterly editor and publisher of European Life. In so far as his foreign Honours and Awards are concerned, it would be impossible to ascertain the validity of his entitlement to the French War Comemmorative Medal 1914-18 and Colonial Medal, although given his Great War services were purely with the British, the former seems unlikely. However, relevant editions of Who’s Who do verify the following: ‘Officier de l’Instruction Publique, 1930 [a.k.a. Palms Academic]; Officer of Military Order of Christ, Portugal, 1933; Chevalier de la Legion d’Honneur, 1934; Officer of the Order of Ouissam Alaouite, Morocco, 1938; Croix de Guerre, 1943; Medaille de la France Liberee, 1949’, together with mention of his Purple Heart. Sold with an extensive file of research, including correspondence with MacGo

Lot 997

Eight: Major E. N. Deall, Royal Engineers and Sherwood Foresters, late Seaforth Highlanders 1914-15 Star (3133 Pte., Sea. Highrs.); British War and Victory Medals (Lieut.) erasure of ‘2’? before ‘Lieut.’; 1939-45 Star; Africa Star, clasp, 1st Army; War Medal 1939-45; Coronation 1937; Efficiency Decoration, G.VI.R., 1st issue, Territorial, reverse officially dated ‘1940’, with three ‘G.VI.R.’ bars, these all dated ‘1951’, mounted as worn, nearly very fine and better (8) £160-200 Efficiency Decoration London Gazette 6 February 1940. ‘Major, Royal Engineers’. ‘3 Clasps’ to the Efficiency Decoration London Gazette 16 March 1951. ‘Major, Foresters’. Major E. N. Deall was posted to the Sherwood Foresters from the Royal Engineers, by London Gazette 12 April 1940. Sold with copied gazette extracts.

Lot 999

Four: Guardsman J. G. L. Warren, Scots Guards 1914-15 Star (5606 Pte., S. Gds.); British War and Victory Medals (5506 Pte., S. Gds.); Army L.S. & G.C., G.V.R., 1st issue (2688480 Gdmn., S. Gds. ) contact marks, very fine (4) £60-80 Four: Corporal C. Guld, Royal Field Artillery 1914-15 Star (827 Bmbr., R.F.A.); British War and Victory Medals (827 Cpl., R.A.); Territorial Force Efficiency Medal, G.V.R. (935039 Cpl., R.F.A.); with R.A. cap badge, contact marks, fine and better (9) £100-140.

Lot 1000

Three: Petty Officer 1st Class D. McCarthy, Royal Navy 1914-15 Star (186058 L.S., R.N.); British War and Victory Medals (186058 P.O.1, R.N.) last with edge bruise British War and Mercantile Marine War Medal pairs (2) (Henry Shillabeer; Edward Whyte) ‘Whyte’ latter issues, good very fine and better (7) £80-100.

Lot 1001

Four: Captain L. M. McCoy-Hill, Indian Army, late Middlesex Regiment 1914-15 Star (2 Lieut., Midd’x. R.); British War Medal 1914-20 (Capt.); Victory Medal 1914-19 (Lieut.); General Service 1918-62, 1 clasp, S. Persia (Capt. C. M. McCoy-Hill, 55-Rifles) note different initials, nearly extremely fine (4) £200-240 Lancelot McCoy McCoy-Hill was commissioned into the Middlesex Regiment in 1915 and was advanced to Lieutenant in the following year. After serving in France with the regiment he transferred to the Indian Army in 1918. With the 55th Coke’s Rifles he served in South Persia, 1918-19 and retired with a gratuity on 25 June 1922. Sold with some copied service and campaign details.

Lot 1005

Family group: Three: Private G. W. Haynes, Royal Marine Light Infantry 1914-15 Star (PO. 14959 Pte., R.M.L.I.); British War and Victory Medals (PO. 14959 Pte., R.M.L.I.), good very fine Three: Craftsman E. G. Haynes, Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers 1939-45 Star; Italy Star; War Medal 1939-45, in their card forwarding box, together with a quantity of related prize medals (6), mainly for Civil Service weight-lifting competitions in the 1950s, four enamelled and three named, and a motor-cycling contest prize shield, also named to the recipient and dated ‘13.5.1958’, generally good very fine (Lot) £100-150 George Walter Haynes was born in Battersea, London in September 1889 and enlisted in the Royal Marine Light Infantry in August 1907. A Private serving aboard the battleship H.M.S. Audacious on the outbreak of hostilities in August 1914, he quickly saw service of the active kind when she was sunk by a mine off Northern Ireland on 27 October 1914, thereby winnning the unfortunate accolade of being the first capital ship of any nation to be lost in the Great War. The mines had been laid by the Norddeutscher Lloyd liner Berlin, which had been fitted out as an auxiliary cruiser and minelayer early in August. The Audacious blew up and sank after 12 hours of buffeting by the seas and two failed attempts to take her in tow, but luckily her complement was safely taken off by the White Star liner Olympic. Joining the battleship Queen Elizabeth that December, Haynes remained similarly employed until returning home to an appointment in the Portsmouth Division in January 1918, a period in which he witnessed extensive active service in the Dardanelles and off Gallipoli. Of all the capital ships employed in that theatre, the Queen Elizabeth was one of the most actively engaged. Carrying out a successful bombardment with her 15-inch guns of the Turkish Narrows forts from a position off Gabe Tepe in early March 1915, she went on to witness the famous landings in the following month, when Sir Ian Hamilton used her as his ‘mobile H.Q.’ off the beach heads. Off Helles, as evidenced by Hamilton’s own account, one of her shells saved an advancing British unit: ‘At a trot they came on .. their bayonets glittering and their officer yards in front waving his sword, Crash! and the Queen Elizabeth let fly a shrapnel [shell], range 1200 yards, a lovely shot; we followed it through the air with our eyes. Range and fuse - perfect! The huge projectile exploded fifty yards from the Turkish right and vomited its contents of 10,000 bullets clean across the stretch whereon the Turkish company was making its last effort. When the dust and smoke cleared away nothing stirred on the whole of that piece of ground.’ A superb painting depicting the Queen Elizabeth bombarding the Turkish Narrows forts in March 1915, by Norman Wilkinson, forms part of the Imperial War Museum’s collection. Haynes was discharged in October 1919; sold with around 20 photographs of the Great War period, and four postcards, these including one or two good portraits of the recipient, and a later image of him in the uniform of the Auxiliary Fire Service. Also sold with a quantity of original documentation relating to Edwin George Haynes, including his official ‘call up ‘papers, letters and his Soldier’s Release Book, the latter dated 5 July 1947.

Lot 1006

Three: Private W. F. Bromwich, Lancashire Fusiliers 1914-15 Star (27844 Pte., Lan. Fus.); British War and Victory Medals (27844 Pte., Lan. Fus.); Memorial Plaque (William Frederick Bromwich) nearly extremely fine (4) £160-200 William Frederick Bromwich was born in Leigh, Lancashire and enlisted at Barnsley, Yorkshire, originally with the K.O.Y.L.I. Serving with the 9th Battalion Lancashire Fusiliers he was killed in action on 16 August 1917. Sold with medal forwarding slip.

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