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Lot 1379

Pair: Temporary Corporal A. T. Tull, Royal Australian Army Service Corps vietnam 1964 (441108 A. T. Tull); South Vietnam Medal 1964, 1 clasp, 1960- (441108 A. T. Tull), mounted as worn, nearly extremely fine (2) £180-220 Allan Thomas Tull was born in South Australia on 19 June 1936. He served in South Vietnam with H.Q., 26 Company R.A.A.S.C., 4 June-27 December 1969 and 3 January-4 June 1970. £180-£220

Lot 1380

Three: Sergeant D. P. Smith, Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers rhodesia 1980 (24395317 Cpl., REME); General Service 1962, 1 clasp, Northern Ireland (24395317 Sgt., REME), mounted as worn; Zimbabwe Independence Medal 1980 (13482), bronze, nearly extremely fine (4) £400-500 Sold with Rhodesia 1980 miniature dress medal, British Army Identity Card bearing the recipient’s photograph, and copied army statement of service taken from Army Form B108Y, ‘Sgt. Smith has been employed for the last 13 years on tasks associated with the maintenance of Army aircraft. He has carried out scheduled and unscheduled maintenance in a number of world wide locations, on both fixed wing and helicopters. ... During the latter part of his career he has confidently supervised a small team of both aircraft and avionic tradesman’. £400-£500

Lot 1382

Three: Sergeant R. L. McDonald, Parachute Regiment south Atlantic 1982, with rosette (24576223 Pte., Para); U.N. Medal, UNFICYP ribbon, unnamed; General Service 1962, 1 clasp, Northern Ireland (24576223 Sgt., Para), mounted court style as worn, nearly extremely fine (3) £1600-1800 Ex D.N.W. 18 September 1998, lot 655. robert Lee McDonald was born on 20 June 1964 and enlisted into the Parachute Regiment at Harlow on 5 August 1980. During the Falklands War he served in the Recce Platoon, ‘C’ Company, 3rd Battalion Parachute Regiment. He later served in the U.S.A., March 1983 and March-April 1986; Belize, April-October 1984; Cyprus, June-November 1986; Denmark, May-June 1987; Kenya, October-December 1990, and Northern Ireland, June 1993-January 1995. He was discharged having an exemplary record of service on 24 August 1995. Sold with copied Certificate of Service and other research derived from Pegasus magazine - one article recalls that he was ‘captured’ while on manoeuvres against Danish forces. Suffering a blow to his ego, he was strapped to the bonnet of his captors landrover and paraded through the streets of a local town in a partially disrobed state! £1600-£1800

Lot 1383

Five: Corporal E. M. C. Boyall, Royal Air Force gulf 1990-91, no clasp (Cpl. (F8233204) R.A.F.); N.A.T.O. Medal 1994, 1 clasp, Kosovo; N.A.T.O. Medal 1994, 1 clasp, Former Yugoslavia; Jubilee 2002; Royal Air Force L.S. & G.C., E.II.R., 2nd issue (Cpl. (F8233204 R.A.F.), mounted as worn, nearly extremely fine (5) £280-320 A note with the medals states that Corporal Elizabeth M. C. Boyall was a paramedic with the R.A.F. £280-£320

Lot 1384

Five: Steward 1st Class C. J. Logan, Royal Navy gulf 1990-91, 1 clasp, 16 Jan to 28 Feb 1991 (Std., D212125D RN); General Service 1962, 1 clasp, Northern Ireland (Std 1 D212125D RN); N.A.T.O. Medal 1994, 1 clasp, Former Yugoslavia; Saudi Arabia, Liberation of Kuwait 1991; Kuwait, Liberation of Kuwait 1991, 4th Grade, mounted court style for display, some edge bruising, good very fine (5) £220-260 £220-£260

Lot 1385

Six: Lance-Corporal R. H. Ainslie, Royal Scots gulf 1990-91, 1 clasp, 16 Jan to 28 Feb 1991 (24849111 Pte., RS); General Service 1962, 1 clasp, Northern Ireland (24849111 L. Cpl., RS); N.A.T.O. Medal 1994, 1 clasp, Kosovo, unnamed; Jubilee 2002, in named card box of issue; Saudi Arabia, Liberation of Kuwait 1991; Kuwait, Liberation of Kuwait 1991, 4th Grade Medal, extremely fine (9) £320-360 Sold with a mounted set of three full-size medals as the first three above; the ‘Gulf’ and ‘G.S.M.’ being named copies. Also with some background detail on the groups and a paper cutting from The Daily Record, 22 June 2004, which reports on the story that the entertainer and ‘Elvis’ impersonator, Rab. Ainslie, was attacked outside a bar. In it Ainslie states, ‘I served in the Gulf, Kosovo and Ireland and I can’t believe I have come home with injuries like these after a night at the local pub’. £320-£360

Lot 1387

Three: Lance-Corporal C. P. Clarke, Royal Army Dental Corps gulf 1990-91, 1 clasp, 16 Jan to 28 Feb 1991 (24763997 L. Cpl. RADC), mounted as worn; together with a miniature dress medal; Saudi Arabia, Liberation of Kuwait 1991; Kuwait, Liberation of Kuwait 1991, 4th Grade, nearly extremely fine, scarce unit (4) £200-240 £200-£240

Lot 1388

Three: Gunner A. M. Bradshaw, Royal Artillery gulf 1990-91, 1 clasp, 16 Jan to 28 Feb 1991 (24789046 Gnr., RA), in (damaged) named card box of issue; Saudi Arabia, Liberation of Kuwait 1991, in case of issue, in named card box; Kuwait, Liberation of Kuwait 1991, 4th Grade medal, in box of issue, extremely fine (3) £160-200 £160-£200

Lot 1390

Pair: Lance-Corporal S. J. Barker, Light Infantry n.A.T.O. Medal 1994, 1 clasp, Kosovo, unnamed; General Service 1962, 1 clasp, Northern Ireland (24973 L. Cpl., LI), mounted court style as worn, extremely fine (2) £50-70 With named card box of issue for the G.S.M. £50-£70

Lot 1391

Three: Senior Aircraftsman L. O’Brien, Joint Helicopter Support Unit, Royal Air Force n.A.T.O. Medal 1994, 1 clasp, Kosovo, unnamed, in (damaged) case of issue; Operational Service Medal 2000, 1 clasp, Afghanistan (SAC (S8433106) RAF), in card box of issue; Iraq 2003, 1 clasp, 19 Mar to 28 Apr 2003 (SAC (S8433106) RAF), in card box of issue, extremely fine (3) £750-850 A scarce trio of medals awarded to S.A.C. L. O’Brien of the Joint Helicopter Support Unit, R.A.F. The N.A.T.O. medal earned while serving with 18 Squadron; the O.S.M. for supporting 27 Squadron Chinooks during the early phases of Operation Veritas, and the Iraq Medal for service with 18, 27 and 32 Squadron helicopters during the invasion of Iraq. sold with original letters for the Operational Service and Iraq Medals addressed to R.A.F. Odiham; the recipient’s (D.P.M.) camouflage shirt (unnamed) bearing ‘Royal Air Force’, Union Flag and Joint Helicopter Support Unit (J.H.S.U.) badges; another loose J.H.S.U. badge, and two other cloth badges. £750-£850

Lot 1392

Pair: Lance-Corporal J. K. Youens, Black Watch n.A.T.O. Medal 1994, 1 clasp, Kosovo, unnamed; Iraq 2003, 1 clasp, 19 Mar to 28 Apr 2003 (25086388 Pte., BW), mounted court style as worn, extremely fine (2) £260-300 Lance-Corporal J. Youens, Black Watch, left the Army on 10 March 2006 after serving 7 years, 206 days. Sold with copied Certificate of Discharge. £260-£300

Lot 1396

Family group: the inter-war C.M.G., O.B.E. group of three awarded to H. M. G. Jackson, Chief Native Commissioner for Southern Rhodesia, late Lieutenant, Gifford’s Horse the Most Distinguished Order of St. Michael and St. George, C.M.G., Companion’s neck badge, silver-gilt and enamel; The Most Excellent Order of the British Empire, O.B.E. (Civil) Officer’s 1st type breast badge, silver-gilt, hallmarks for London 1919; British South Africa Company’s Medal 1890-97, reverse Rhodesia 1896, no clasp (Lieut. H. M. G. Jackson, Gifford’s Horse), enamel slightly chipped on motto on first, otherwise generally good very fine the Great War campaign service pair awarded to Private H. G. Jackson, Rhodesian Regiment, attached 1st South African Infantry Brigade, who was taken P.O.W. in March 1918 british War and Victory Medals, bi-lingual issue (Pte. H. G. Jackson, Rhodns. 1st S.A.I. Bgde.), officially impressed later issues, extremely fine the post-war M.B.E. awarded to Miss Natalie Jackson, Southern Rhodesia Civil Service the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire, M.B.E. (Civil), Member’s 2nd type breast badge, on Lady’s riband bow in its Royal Mint case of issue, extremely fine (6) £1700-1900 Ex A. A. Upfill-Brown collection, 4 December 1991 (Lot 208). c.M.G. London Gazette 3 June 1930. o.B.E. London Gazette 3 June 1924. hugh Marrison Gower Jackson was born in Natal in September 1870, the son of John Otter Jackson, a J.P. and Regional Magistrate, and was educated at Ardingly College, Sussex. Returning to South Africa, he joined the Natal Native Department, becoming conversant with the language and cultural customs of the Zulu nation and earning himself the nickname ‘Matshayisikoba’ - The Owl Slayer. In 1895, at the invitation of the newly appointed Chief Native Commissioner in Rhodesia, Jackson became Assistant Native Commissioner at Umzingwane in Matabeleland, making his way to Bulawayo via Port Shepstone and Pretoria in the famous ‘Zeederburg Coach’. soon after his arrival in Matabeleland, he was warned by a former warrior, Sikwaba, a survivor of the Imbizo Regiment, which body had been corporately sentenced to death for disobedience by King Lobengula, that he had had a vision in which the latter unleashed ‘supernatural forces’ on the European settlers - a vision that found credence by way of the rebellion that erupted a few months later. Jackson and a small party were cut off deep in the Matabele stronghold, the Matopos Hills, when the rebellion broke out, and, in the absence of any news, it was reported that he had been killed - luckily, as it transpired, he made good his escape and reached Bulawayo. quickly enlisting in Gifford’s Horse, he was appointed a Lieutenant in ‘B’ Troop, commanded by Captain H. P. Flynn, a fellow Native Commissioner, and boasting among its number a future Prime Minister of Southern Rhodesia, Howard Moffat. The unit had been raised by the Rt. Hon. Captain (afterwards Lieutenant-Colonel) Maurice Gifford, who was severely wounded in the action at Fonseca’s Farm on 6 April 1896, wounds that resulted in the amputation of his right arm. Nonetheless, Gifford’s Horse continued to lend valuable service with regular patrol work until a peace settlement was negotiated by Cecil Rhodes that August. having in 1900 been appointed a J.P., Jackson enjoyed a spate of appointments over the coming years, among them Assistant Magistrate for the Bulawayo District, as Superintendent of Gwelo, Selukwe, Insiza and Belingwe, and, in 1908, as a Native Commissioner and Additional Magistrate at Gwelo. Then in 1913, he became Native Commissioner and Superintendent of Natives for Bulawayo District, while in 1921 he was appointed Acting Chief Native Commissioner in Salisbury. awarded the O.B.E. in 1924, in which year he was advanced to Assistant Chief Native Commissioner, Jackson was given the portfolio of Chief Native Commissioner and Head of the Southern Rhodesia Native Department in 1928, on the retirement of Sir Herbert Taylor. And in 1930, the year of his own retirement, he also served as Chairman of the Native Affairs Committee and as Government Representative on the Board of the Native Labour Bureau. He was appointed C.M.G. jackson, who retained the ‘keenest interest in all matters affecting natives and native welfare’, and who was blessed with a ‘fantastic sense of humour’, died at his residence in Borrowdale in November 1934; sold with a large file of related research and several evocative (copy) photographs from his time as a young officer in Gifford’s Horse, so, too, with a long list of archive references to articles he published in his lifetime. hugh Gower Jackson was born in August 1898, soon after his father had returned to his duties as a Native Commissioner following service in Gifford’s Horse. Educated at Lancing College in Sussex, young Hugh returned home and enlisted in the Southern Rhodesia Volunteers in June 1916, aged 17 years. Standing a little under six feet, he was posted to the 2nd Battalion, Rhodesia Regiment, and attached to the 1st South African Infantry Brigade in France, where he was taken P.O.W. in March 1918. According to one family source, he was very badly treated during captivity, as a result of which his health suffered terribly, and he died in July 1944; sold with further details. natalie Kate Jackson was born in February 1900, about the time her father was appointed a J.P., and, having obtained a degree at Cape Town University, joined the Southern Rhodesia Civil Service in 1923. And she remained employed in a similar capacity until her retirement in 1955, the year in which she was awarded her M.B.E., and by which stage she had risen to the office of Women Inspector and Senior Women Officer on the Public Services Board. She died in December 1992; sold with portrait photographs and a file of related research. £1700-£1900

Lot 1397

An important Rhodesian pioneer’s C.M.G. group of four awarded to Lieutenant-Colonel Hugh Marshall Hole, onetime Private Secretary to Dr. Leander Jameson, and a friend of Cecil Rhodes, who described him ‘as one of the best and most loyal servants the Charter has had the good fortune to employ’: an acclaimed author, too, he wrote a definitive history of the ‘Jameson Raid’ in addition to his classic - The Making of Rhodesia the Most Distinguished Order of St. Michael and St. George, C.M.G., Companion’s neck badge, converted from breast wear, silver-gilt and enamel; British South Africa Company Medal 1890-97, reverse Rhodesia 1896, no clasp (Lieut. & Adjt. H. Marshall Hole, S.F.F.); Queen’s South Africa 1899-1902, 1 clasp, Rhodesia (Lieut. H. Marshall-Hole, S. Rhoda. Vol.); Coronation 1902, silver, edge bruising and contact marks, otherwise generally very fine (4) £3000-3500 ex A. A. Upfill-Brown collection, December 1991. c.M.G. London Gazette 1 January 1924. hugh Marshall Hole was born in Tiverton, Devon in May 1865 and was educated at Blundell’s School and Balliol College, Oxford. Having then failed to gain entry to the Chinese Consular Service, he sailed for South Africa, where, in 1889, he found employment in a Kimberley law firm. As it transpired, the same firm represented Cecil Rhodes and Dr. Leander Jameson, and, in the following year, on gaining their confidence, he became the first member of clerical staff to be appointed to the newly formed British South Africa Company. moving from the Cape to the company’s Mashonaland office in Salisbury in 1891, he was appointed Private Secretary to Jameson, while in 1893 he achieved another ‘first’ when he became a Civil Commissioner and Justice of the Peace for Salisbury District. However, on news of the Matabele raid on Victoria in July of the latter year, Jameson refused Hole permission to accompany the Mashonaland Horse, of which he was a member, instead insisting that he remain in Salisbury as Magistrate. But as Hole would later recall in his unpublished memoirs, this latter post actually led to his own chapter of ‘active service’: ‘Then came the Wilson disaster at Shangani. Just before Christmas 1893, the natives in Lomagunda District became troublesome, and had a fracas with some white men, in which one - Arthur Stanford - was fatally wounded. As Magistrate I was sent out to investigate, and in view of the disturbed condition of the country a detachment of 25 men, under Lieutenant Randolph Nesbitt (Now Major Nesbitt, V.C.), with a maxim gun, was sent as my escort. The wet season was on, and the country was in a fearful condition. I outstripped my escort and had finished my enquiry - including the dying deposition of young Stanford - before they joined me ... We were returning when we got information of the Shangani fight, and orders to proceed towards the Zambesi, in which direction it was thought that King Lobengula was fleeing with Wilson in pursuit. Nesbitt and I picked out 10 or 12 of the best mounted men in the escort and turned back. We spent many days in fruitless search, and among the Lomagunda natives, all of whom were panicky, and who gave us a lot of false information to get rid of us. The weather was awful, and for two weeks we could get nothing but kaffir food, and marched through, and slept, in mud. We had to swim rivers. Eventually, I got back to Salisbury, after three weeks of the roughest experience I have ever endured. I left on Christmas Eve and returned on 17 January. I gained nothing except a bad dose of fever; but I made a life-long chum in Randolph Nesbitt.’ Following his experiences in the troubles of 1893, and a period back in the U.K. to recover from his fever, Hole remained actively employed in Salisbury in the period leading up to, and including, the ill-fated ‘Jameson Raid’ of December 1895, a period about which, as a result of his first hand knowledge, he later wrote his much acclaimed history - as he put it in his private memoirs, ‘Rhodes was constantly in and out of our offices, and Jameson was there in the intervals between his rapid trips to the North.’ It was, however, in the following year, that he himself officially witnessed military service, for in March 1896, on the outbreak of rebellion, he attested for the Salisbury Field Force (S.F.F.): ‘On the outbreak of the rebellion, I was at once promoted from Trooper to Lieutenant in the Rhodesia Horse, and shortly afterwards, when the Salisbury Field Force was formed, I was made Adjutant of the left wing. I took part in a good many patrols at the outset and had my first experience of being under fire ... I remember one little expedition in which Colonel Alderson, my wife Ethel (mounted on one of his horses), the Judge and I went to visit some rebel villages about eight miles out ... Alderson’s action in allowing a lady to go beyond the town limits were severely criticised in the local press!’ Following further leave back in England, Hole was appointed Secretary of the company’s offices in Bulawayo in 1898, while in August of the following year he joined the newly formed Southern Rhodesia Volunteers (S.R.V.). And with the advent of hostilities a few weeks later, he departed with two S.R.V. squadrons and some B.S.A.P. to the Bechuanaland line to guard the border. Struck down by dysentery at the end of the year, he was invalided back to Bulawayo, but afterwards served as a Transport Officer for Carrington’s Field Force (The Bushmen Corps), before returning to civilian employ as Government Secretary for Matabeleland in the course of 1900. residing in Bulawayo, it was his responsibility to find a way around the great currency shortage then being experienced as a result of the war. Holding large stocks of postage stamps, he introduced his now famous ‘Money Cards’, bearing on one side his signature and the stamp of the Administrator’s Office, and on the other side a B.S.A. postage stamp of varying denominations - sold with this lot is an original example of a one shilling card. another of his duties in the Boer War was to administer native labour, and to that end he was invited to carry out talks with the new Transvaal Government at Johannesburg, in order to establish a mutual arrangement for recruitment: ‘Johannesburg was in military occupation and the war was at its height. At Wolve Hoek we were held up in the train for some hours, and were eye-witness of a big drive intended to round up General de Wet, but although a large number of Boers were captured, de Wet was not among them. Lord Kitchener was there and seemed much annoyed. Our journey to and from Johannesburg took a fearful time owing to the numerous stoppages and delays due to military operations. At one time near Mafeking, our train was shelled by Boers but they were turned by fire from the armoured train which escorted us.’ In April 1901, at Kimberley, Hole had one of his last meetings with Cecil Rhodes: ‘I was a good deal shocked at his appearance, which had altered for the worse since I had last seen him, shortly after the relief of Mafeking. Dr. Jameson was staying with him and also General Pretyman. I had some long talks with Rhodes, about the native labour question in Rhodesia mainly. We played bridge every evening and I lost £5 to Rhodes, at which he was greatly pleased, though it didn’t amuse me so much!’ Rhodes died in early 1902, following Hole’s trip to Aden, at Rhodes’ behest, in order to bring back 200 Arab coolies: ‘I was placed in charge of the arrangements for the national funeral in the Matopo Hills, and had a good deal of responsibility. For this duty I received the thanks of the Administrator, the Chartered Company and the Rhodes Trustees.’ Returning to the U.K. on leave, Hole was offered a place in the Rhodesian Coronation Contingent: ‘At once I went to the Colonial Camp at Alexandra Palace. The Contingent was composed of the B.S.A.P. and the same number of my own regiment

Lot 1398

A rare Great War East Africa operations C.M.G. group of nine awarded to Colonel C. U. Price, Indian Army, C.O. of Jacob’s Rifles and a successful Column Commander whose forces captured Dar-es-Salaam in September 1916 the Most Distinguished Order of St. Michael and St. George, C.M.G., Companion’s neck badge, silver-gilt and enamel; East and Central Africa 1897-99, 1 clasp, Uganda 1897-98 (Lieut., 3/Baluch L.I.); China 1900, no clasp (Captain, 30/Baluch L.I.); 1914-15 Star (Lt. Col., 1/130 Baluchis); British War and Victory Medals, M.I.D. oak leaf (Col.); Delhi Durbar 1903, impressed naming, ‘Colonel C. V. Price, 130th Baluchis’; Delhi Durbar 1911, unnamed as issued; Russian Order of St. Anne, 3rd class breast badge, with swords, by Osipov, St. Petersburg, gold and enamel, manufacturer’s initials on reverse, ‘56’ zolotnik mark for 1909-17 on eyelet, and other stamp marks on sword hilts, generally good very fine (9) £3500-4000 c.M.G. London Gazette 26 June 1916. mention in despatches London Gazette 30 June 1916, 7 March 1918 and 6 August 1918 (all East Africa). russian Order of St. Anne London Gazette 15 February 1917. charles Uvedale Price was born in May 1868 and was educated at the United Services College, Westward Ho! and the R.M.C., Sandhurst. Originally commissioned into the Royal Dublin Fusiliers in February 1888, he transferred to the Indian Army in January 1890 and served in the Zhob Valley on the North West Frontier in the same year, afterwards gaining an appointment as a Wing Officer in the 30th Regiment of Bombay Infantry (3rd Baluchis). in January 1897, however, he was attached to the 27th Bombay Infantry (1st Baluchis) as Adjutant, and went on to win his first campaign medal with them in the Uganda operations of 1897-98. During this latter campaign he was engaged against the Sudanese mutineers, including the operations at Jeruba and Kijangute, and in Budda and Ankoli, gaining a mention in despatches. shortly afterwards he sailed for China, and served as a Captain in the course of the Boxer Rebellion. Then in 1903, back in India, Price attended the Delhi Durbar, attached as a Political Officer to His Highness the Mir of Khairpur. He was advanced to Major in February 1906. appointed a Double Company Commander in the 130th K.G.O. Baluchis (Jacob’s Rifles) in October 1911, Price assumed command of the regiment in the rank of Lieutenant-Colonel in April 1915, and went on to serve with distinction in the operations in East Africa. in July 1915, in the fighting in the Mbuyuni region, he was appointed to the command of the flanking column, comprising Jacob’s Rifles, the 4th K.A.R. and Cole’s Scouts, sent by Brigadier-General Malleson to envelop the enemy’s left. Carrying out a well timed circuitous night march, Price attacked at daybreak on the 14th, but by 8 a.m. his force was checked by strong enemy resistance, and it became necessary to await more positive news from the main attacking force to the Germans’ front. This initiative, however, also lost momentum, and by the time Malleson’s order to call off the assault reached Price, his force had been under a lively hostile fire for at least an hour. Unperturbed, Price disengaged and ‘brought away his force in a steady and well-executed withdrawal, with slight loss’ (Official history refers). in early July 1916, as C.O. of a 500-strong force, comprising the 5th Light Infantry and a company of the 101st Grenadiers, Price was given the task of capturing Tanga. Carrying out a successful landing on the southern shore of Manza Bay on the 5th, he moved his force inland towards Amboni, ‘which was reached next day after disposing of some slight resistance on the way’. And on the 7th, he and his men crossed the Zigi River, the final natural barrier between them and their goal. Tanga, however, was found to have been deserted by the enemy, although some had remained behind in the surrounding bush from where they sniped at the British with good effect. Flushing out such opposition by means of frequent patrolling, Price moved on to Kange on the 17th. then in early August, he was given overall command of two columns, numbering in total some 1400 men, to secure the crossings of the Wami River. This he successfully accomplished in little more than a week, thereby assisting in opening up the way forward to attack Dar-es-Salaam. For the final advance on the seat of government and principal port of German East Africa, Price’s force was bolstered in strength by some 500 men and equipped with 20 machine-guns. The whole was assembled at Bagamoyo at the end of the month, and on the 31st, in two columns, it advanced on Dar-es-Salaam, while two smaller parties penetrated north to secure the railway line and some important bridges. Just four days later, having encountered little opposition, Price’s main force was assembled on the heights near Mabibo, from which the port could be seen less than three miles away. And early on that morning, after the Royal Navy had despatched a delegation aboard the Echo with a formal summons to surrender, the 129th Baluchis, which had acted as Price’s advanced guard throughout the operation, entered and took over the town. Once again, the Germans had made a hasty retreat, leaving behind 80 hospital patients and 370 non-combatants. for his part in some of the above related operations in German East Africa, Price was awarded the C.M.G and mentioned in despatches, in addition to gaining appointment to the Russian Order of St Anne. And in the later operations of that theatre of war between 1917-18, he again distinguished himself and was twice more the recipient of a ‘mention’. The Colonel, who retired to South Africa, died in May 1956. £3500-£4000

Lot 1400

A post-war C.B.E. group of six awarded to Lionel Powys-Jones, Chief Native Commissioner of Southern Rhodesia, late Rhodesia Regiment and King’s Royal Rifle Corps, in which latter regiment he was wounded as a young subaltern in the Great War the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire, C.B.E. (Civil) Commander’s 2nd type neck badge, silver-gilt and enamel; British War and Victory Medals (2 Lieut. L. Powys-Jones); Southern Rhodesia Medal for War Service 1939-45; Coronation 1937; Coronation 1953, surname officially corrected on the third, generally good very fine (6) £600-800 ex A. A. Upfill-Brown collection. c.B.E. London Gazette 1 January 1954. lionel Powys-Jones was born in July 1894, the son of Llewellyn Powys-Jones, a Resident Magistrate in Bulawayo, and was educated at Blundell’s School, Tiverton, Victoria College, Jersey and Oriel College, Oxford, where he was a Rhodes Scholar. Returning home to Rhodesia, he joined the Native Affairs Department, and in 1916 enlisted in the 2nd Battalion, Rhodesia Regiment. Subsequently commissioned as a 2nd Lieutenant in the 4th Battalion, King’s Royal Rifle Corps, he was wounded in 1918. back in the service of the Native Affairs Department by 1919, he went on to enjoy a long and distinguished career, ultimately gaining appointment as Secretary for Native Affairs and Chief Native Commissioner in 1947. he had, meanwhile, joined the Southern Rhodesia Volunteers, and attended assorted musketry courses in the period leading upto the 1939-45 War. Placed on the Reserve of Officers in March 1940, he served in a Concession Platoon from August of that year until April 1942, and is a verified recipient of the Southern Rhodesia Medal for War Service, the relevant roll stating, ‘Jones, L., X8610, Army’, which corresponds with his Q. & R. card in the archives in Harare; this award has accordingly been added to his Honours and Awards for display purposes. powys-Jones finally retired in 1954, in which year he was awarded his C.B.E. A keen tennis player who onetime represented Rhodesia, he settled in Somerset West, Cape Province, where he died in November 1966. £600-£800

Lot 1402

Family group: a Civil O.B.E. and Great War ‘Western Front’ M.M. group of four awarded to Private J. Parrish, Scottish Rifles the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire, O.B.E. (Civil) Officer’s 1st type breast badge, silver-gilt, hallmarks for London 1932, in Garrard, London case of issue; Military Medal, G.V.R. (241082 Pte., 5/6 Sco. Rif.) edge bruise; British War and Victory Medals (241882 Pte., Sco. Rif.); Silver War Badge (290622); together with a mounted pair of British War and Victory miniature dress medals, these in a Spink, London leather case six: Driver W. H. Parrish, Royal Artillery british War and Victory Medals (806096 Dvr., R.A.); 1939-45 Star; Africa Star; Defence and War Medals, these unnamed as issued, nearly extremely fine except where stated (13) £400-460 O.B.E. London Gazette, not confirmed. m.M. London Gazette 29 August 1918. private J. Parrish, Scottish Rifles, came from Hanley. Silver War Badge to Parrish not confirmed. group to W. H. Parrish sold with an unnamed ‘Air Council’ medal forwarding slip for the four Second World War Medals. £400-£460

Lot 1403

An inter-war ‘Chemical Warfare School’ M.B.E., Great War D.C.M. group of seven awarded to Warrant Officer T. O’Brien, Royal Engineers the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire, M.B.E. (Military) Member’s 1st type breast badge, silver, hallmarks for 1927; Distinguished Conduct Medal, G.V.R. (16171 Sjt.-A.C.S. Mjr., 15/F. Coy. R.E.); 1914 Star, with clasp (16171 2 Cpl., R.E.); British War and Victory Medals (16171 A.W.O. Cl. 2, R.E.); Army L.S. & G.C., G.V.R., 1st issue (1852065 W.O.Cl. II, D.C.M., R.E.); France, Croix de Guerre 1914-1918, small bronze palm on ribbon, mounted for wear, last with dented reverse, very fine (7) £1000-1200 M.B.E. London Gazette 4 June 1928. ‘’No.1852065 Warrant Officer Class II, Company Sergeant-Major, Acting Regimental Sergeant-Major, Thomas Coulthard O’Brien, D.C.M., Royal Engineers, Chemical Warfare School, Porton’. d.C.M. London Gazette 3 October 1918. ‘16171 Serjt. (A./C.S.M.) T. O’Brien, R.E. (Ealing, W.)’ ‘For conspicuous gallantry and devotion to duty in supervising the work of demolishing bridges over river and canal, and in organising parties to defend the canal bank. At one time he held a position with four men, in spite of heavy fire, and prevented the enemy from repairing one of the demolished bridges. He set a fine example of coolness and resource’. croix de Guerre London Gazette 7 January 1919. corporal Thomas Coulthard O’Brien, 2 Field Company R.E., entered the France/Flanders theatre of war on 5 November 1914. Sold with copied m.i.c. and gazette details. £1000-£1200

Lot 1405

The Second World War ‘N.W. Europe’ M.B.E. group of ten awarded to Captain W. M. Wilkins, Royal Artillery, late Rifle Brigade the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire, M.B.E. (Military) Member’s 2nd type breast badge, silver; British War and Victory Medals (5707 Pte., Rif. Brig.), extremely worn; 1939-45 Star; France and Germany Star; Defence and War Medals, these unnamed; Army L.S. & G.C., G.V.R., 3rd issue, Regular Army (..05993 Sjt., Rif. Brig.), worn; Efficiency Decoration, E.II.R., Territorial, rev. dated ‘1960’; Cadet Forces Medal, E.II.R., 2nd issue (Capt., M.B.E., TD., CCF.), mounted as worn, very fine except where stated (20) £350-400 M.B.E. London Gazette 24 January 1946. ‘Captain (Quartermaster), Royal Regiment of Artillery’. recommendation states: ‘This officer has shown outstanding devotion to duty and his untiring efforts on behalf of the unit during the early stages of the campaign in obtaining all the requirements of the Regt under exceedingly difficult conditions and at a very critical time, were of immense value to the fighting efficiency of the Regt. His efforts were a major factor in keeping all the guns and complex Radar equipment in action in defence of vital installations in the beachhead. Since the Regt moved forward into Germany this officer has on more than one occasion been responsible for uncovering illegal activities by Germans and has shewn initiative, energy and keenness of a high order which have been an inspiration to all with whom he has come into contact’. during the Great War and a period thereafter William M. Wilkins served in the Rifle Brigade. In the Second World War he was awarded the M.B.E. for his services with the 146th Heavy Anti-Aircraft Regiment, R.A., part of 80 A.A. Brigade, during the period following the Normandy landings and the later campaign into Germany. Postwar he was appointed to the Brighton Grammar School Contingent of the Junior Training Corps (London Gazette 8 January 1946). In 1947 he was granted the honorary rank of Captain (Quartermaster) in place of the same War Substantive rank which he held (London Gazette 21 February 1947). He was awarded the Efficiency Decoration in 1960 (London Gazette 19 January 1960). He retired from his post with the Brighton Grammar School Combined Cadet Force in 1970 (London Gazette 13 January 1970). Sold with copied gazette extracts, recommendation and other research. Also with ten prize medallions/medals for shooting, athletics and sports - two enamelled, some named. £350-£400

Lot 1406

A Second World War M.B.E. group of seven awarded to Purser V. A. Luff, Merchant Navy the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire, M.B.E. (Civil) Member’s 2nd type breast badge, in its Royal Mint case of issue; British War and Mercantile Marine War Medals (Victor A. Luff); 1939-45 Star; Atlantic Star; Pacific Star, clasp, Burma; War Medal 1939-45, the 1939-45 issues in their addressed card forwarding box with Minister of Transport forwarding slip, generally extremely fine (7) £300-350 M.B.E. London Gazette 15 June 1945. victor Alfred Luff, who was born in London in May 1900 and served in the Mercantile Marine in the Great War, was also entitled to the above described 1939-45 War campaign awards and ‘Burma’ clasp - official records refer and confirm service as a Purser in the S.S. Umgeni, a vessel of Bullard King & Company Ltd. from at least 1942. And he was serving in a similar capacity at the time of receiving his M.B.E., finally coming ashore in late 1959; sold with original M.B.E. warrant, framed and glazed. £300-£350

Lot 1409

A Great War ‘Western Front’ D.S.O., M.C. and Second World War O.B.E. group of eight awarded to Major H. D. Denison-Pender, 2nd Dragoons (Royal Scots Greys) distinguished Service Order, G.V.R., silver-gilt and enamel, complete with top bar; The Most Excellent Order of the British Empire, O.B.E. (Civil) Officer’s 2nd type breast badge, silver-gilt; Military Cross, G.V.R., unnamed as issued; 1914 Star, with clasp (Lieut., 2/Dns.); British War and Victory Medals, M.I.D. oak leaf (Bt-Major), War Medal with minor correction to surname; Jubilee 1935, unnamed; Coronation 1953, unnamed, mounted court style as worn, in fitted wooden glass-fronted case good very fine (8) £2800-3200 d.S.O. London Gazette 1 January 1918. o.B.E. London Gazette 1 January 1942. ‘Major, D.S.O., M.C., J.P.’ ‘Deputy Chief Censor, Telegraph Censorship Branch, Ministry of Information’. m.C. London Gazette 18 February 1915. ‘Lieutenant (temporary Captain), 2nd Dragoons (Royal Scots Greys)’. m.I.D. London Gazette 17 February 1915; 4 January 1917; 11 December 1917. Henry Denison Denison-Pender was born on 2 April 1884, the 2nd son of Sir John Denison-Pender, G.B.E., K.C.M.G. He was educated at Eton and was commissioned into the 15th Hussars in May 1907, transferring to the Royal Scots Greys in June the same year. Promoted to Lieutenant in April 1911, he served in the Scottish Cavalry Depot at Dunbar, 1913-14. During the Great War he served in France/Flanders, August-November 1914 and May 1915-March 1918. Appointed a Temporary Captain in November 1914, he was promoted to that rank in May 1915. Denison-Pender was appointed G.S.O.3 with the 6th Division in December 1915; Brigade Major with the 6th Infantry Brigade in June 1916; G.S.O.2 with the 33rd Division in July 1917, and G.S.O.2 with the 51st Division in January 1919. For his wartime services he was three times mentioned in despatches, was awarded the D.S.O. and M.C., and in November 1917 was granted the brevet of Major. He retired from the Army in 1919 (London Gazette 1 July 1919). Postwar he was Director of the Telegraph Construction and Maintenance Co. Ltd., 1921-59. He was appointed J.P. for Dorset in 1929 and High Sheriff of Dorsetshire in 1935. During the Second World War he was employed as Deputy Chief Telegraph Censor at the Central Telegraph Office, 1939-42, for which he was awarded the O.B.E. He was in addition, Chairman of the Sturminster Rural District Council, 1949-53; Member of Council of the Bath and West Agricultural Society, 1929-50; Member of Council of the Royal Agricultural Society, 1943-53; President of the Yeovil Agricultural Society, 1936-37; Life Honorary Member of the Hunters Improvement and Light Horse Breeding Society, 1953; and Master of the Portman Hunt. He was married in 1913 to Doris Louise Sydney, the eldest daughter of Sydney Fisher of Amington Hall, Tamworth, Staffordshire, with whom he had three daughters. Latterly living at Hartletts in Hook, Hampshire; he died on 16 February 1967. £2800-£3200

Lot 1410

A good Great War D.S.O. group of seven awarded to Colonel A. N. R. McNeill, Royal Army Medical Corps distinguished Service Order, G.V.R., silver-gilt and enamel; 1914 Star (Capt., R.A.M.C.); British War and Victory Medals, M.I.D. oak leaf (Lt. Col.); India General Service 1936-39, 1 clasp, North West Frontier 1936-37 (Col., D.S.O., R.A.M.C.); War Medal 1939-45; Coronation 1937, generally good very fine (7) £1600-1800 d.S.O. London Gazette 3 June 1918. mention in despatches London Gazette 25 May 1918. arthur Norman Roy McNeill, was born in Glasgow in April 1886, was commissioned as a Lieutenant in the Royal Army Medical Corps in August 1908, and was advanced to Captain in February 1912, while stationed in Mauritius. Back in the U.K. by the outbreak of hostilities, he first entered the French theatre of War in October 1914, and remained actively employed there until the end of hostilities, latterly as an Acting Lieutenant-Colonel and C.O. of No. 7 Cavalry Field Ambulance. Subsequently employed out in Ind a 1923-28, in Malaya 1930-31, and again out in India from 1936-41, he commanded the British Military Hospitals at Mhow and Rawalpindi, in addition to a posting as A.D.M.S. H.Q., 1 Division, Waziristan in 1937, thereby gaining entitlement to his India General Service Medal. Having then been advanced to full Colonel, and served as A.D.M.S. H.Q. Bombay, he returned to the U.K. in 1941 and was A.D.M.S. H.Q. Devon and Cornwall, until that June, when he was placed on the Retired List. He died in London in February 1947. £1600-£1800

Lot 1413

An extremely rare Second World War Malta convoys D.S.O., M.B.E. group of nine awarded to Captain G. B. Pinkney, Merchant Navy: decorated for his services as Chief Officer and then Master of the Port Chalmers in operations ‘Halberd’ and Pedestal’, his D.S.O. was among the first gazetted to a Merchant Officer following a change of policy by the Admiralty’s Honours & Awards Committee distinguished Service Order, G.VI.R. 1st issue, silver-gilt and enamel, the reverse of the suspension bar officially dated ‘1942’; The Most Excellent Order of the British Empire, M.B.E. (Civil) Member’s 2nd type breast badge; British War and Mercantile Marine Medals 1914-18 (Henry G. B. Pinkney); 1939-45 Star; Atlantic Star; Africa Star; Pacific Star; War Medal 1939-45, mounted as worn, the fourth with officially re-impressed naming, good very fine or better (9) £4000-5000 d.S.O. London Gazette 10 November 1942: ‘For bravery and dauntless resolution when an important convoy was fought through to Malta in the face of relentless attacks by day and night from enemy submarines, aircraft and surface forces.’ M.B.E. London Gazette 9 June 1942. Joint citation with his Master and Chief Engineer: ‘The ship was frequently attacked by enemy aircraft. The Master showed courage and good seamanship and it was due to his handling of the vessel that she was brought safely to port. The Chief Officer’s organisation of the defences was outstanding and the Chief Engineer proved equal to all demands made on his department.’ Henry George Bacon Pinkney, who was born in Auckland, New Zealand in November 1898, passed his examination for 2nd Mate in October 1919, shortly after active service in the Mercantile Marine in the Great War, latterly in the S.S. Port Lincoln. Gaining his 1st Mate’s certificate in February 1922, and qualifying as a Master (Steamships) in November 1926, he was employed by the Port Line on the Australia run between the Wars, and joined the Port Fairy shortly after the renewal of hostilities. removing to the Port Chalmers in March 1941, as Chief Officer, he found himself rapidly employed on the Malta run, initially in operation ‘Substance’ that July, but it was for his subsequent deeds in ‘Halberd’ in September, when his ship, and the City of Pretoria, made the passage from Malta to Gibraltar unescorted, that he was awarded the M.B.E. The official report submitted by the Flag Officer Commanding Force ‘H’ states: ‘Port Chalmers and the City of Pretoria were reported by Italian aircraft at 1200 hours on the 27th, shortly after leaving Malta. No enemy surface craft or aircraft were seen until 2320, when what was believed to be an E-Boat was sighted by Port Chalmers, who was following in the wake of the City of Pretoria. he enemy craft first sighted by Port Chalmers was lying stopped 3-400 yards on the port beam of City of Pretoria, who saw nothing except gunfire from her consort. Port Chalmers sheered off to starboard and 10 minutes after the first sighting heard E-Boat engines approaching from the port quarter; she turned to starboard to bring the enemy astern, and opened fire with her 4-inch gun at the enemy’s bow wave. The enemy opened fire at Port Chalmers with her machine-guns, but scored no hits, and after Port Chalmers had fired six rounds of 4-inch, the enemy crossed astern and made off. Port Chalmers then resumed her station astern of City of Pretoria. This action took place 15 miles S.S.W. of Pantellaria.’ Here then evidence of Pinkney’s outstanding organisation of his ship’s defences, which was just as well for Port Chalmers was regularly visited by enemy aircraft during the same trip. As it is, Gibraltar was reached on the 30th, his Master and Chief Engineer receiving O.B.Es and himself the M.B.E. ‘Pedestal’ But a far greater challenge awaited him in August 1942, by which stage he had been appointed Master of the Port Chalmers - namely the most important Malta convoy of them all - operation ‘Pedestal’: of the 14 merchantmen that set out, nine were sunk and three damaged, while the Senior Service lost an aircraft carrier, two cruisers and one destroyer, as well as having another half a dozen ships damaged. given such grim statistics, it is rare to be able to relate that the Port Chalmers was one of four merchantmen to reach Malta, and one of just two that arrived undamaged, testament indeed to the seamanship of her Master - also aboard was Commander A. J. Venables, R.N. (Retd.), the Convoy’s Commodore, who later reported that the ship’s company ‘deserved the highest praise for their magnificent conduct and coolness under most trying circumstances, as the continual air bombing, always most accurate, was a great test for high morale, especially when the enemy had the sky to himself. The evening of the 12th was a severe trial to all, as the escort afloat had completely vanished at a critical moment after the disaster at the entrance to Skerki Channel ... ‘ A view shared by Pinkney, who, in recommending his Chief Enginer and 2nd Officer for decorations, stated, ‘Enemy action commenced on the 11th August and was almost continuous until noon on the 13th ... by submarine, bombing and torpedo bombing’. And so it was, from the moment the convoy arrived in the Straits of Gibraltar, an early victim to torpedo attack being the aircraft carrier Eagle - she went down in 15 minutes. And then as related by Venables, further disaster struck at the entrance of the Skerki Channel - Port Chalmers was following the cruiser Cairo, and very nearly rammed her when she slowed after a torpedo hit, Pinkney just managing to get enough power astern before sliding past. While on the 13th, ‘Port Chalmers experienced extraordinary good fortune in just missing the bombs time after time’, so too a torpedo: ‘Pathfinder’s vigorous and spirited action had thrown the Italian pilots completely out of their stride and most of their torpedoes missed the ships well clear. Only one was accurate and this became entangled by its fin in the starboard paravane of Port Chalmers’ minesweeping gear. This left Captain Pinkney in an unenviable position with the live torpedo tied close to his side and threatening to swing in and detonate against her thin plates at any moment. Somewhat at a loss at this unexpected situation, Pinkney flashed the nearest escorts for advice. Commander Gibbs suggested that he should cut the paravane wire and swing the helm hard over. In the end the clump of chain for’ard was unshackled and let go and the derrick was then let go. Their dangerous companion then sank quickly as the Port Chalmers drew clear. Some minutes later it exploded on the bottom - in about 400 fathoms - and although the ship was well clear Captain Pinkney described the uplift of the explosion as tremendous.’ Pinkney was awarded an immediate D.S.O. and, in addition to D.S.Cs to his Chief Engineer and 2nd Officer, his crew also won seven D.S.Ms and three ‘mentions’. In May 1943, he removed to the Port Campbell, aboard which ship he served for the remainder of the War, and he retired from the service in May 1953; sold with his original D.S.O. warrant. £4000-£5000

Lot 1414

An extremely early Second World War D.S.C. group of nine awarded to Skipper Lieutenant H. C. Gue, Royal Naval Reserve distinguished Service Cross, G.VI.R., the reverse officially dated ‘1939’ and privately engraved, Chief Skipper H. C. Gue, D.S.C.’, hallmarks for London 1939; British War Medal 1914-20 (15376 D.A. L.D.H., R.N.R.); Mercantile Marine War Medal 1914-18 (Henry C. Gue); Victory Medal 1914-19 (15376 D.A. L.D.H., R.N.R.); Naval General Service 1915-62, 1 clasp, Palestine 1936-1939 (Ch. Skpr., D.S.C., R.N.); 1939-45 Star; Atlantic Star, clasp, France and Germany; War Medal 1939-45; Royal Naval Reserve Decoration, G.VI.R., the reverse officially dated ‘1939’, generally good very fine (9) £1200-1500 d.S.C. London Gazette 1 January 1940: ‘For unfailing courage, endurance and resource in H.M. Trawlers, Drifters and Minesweepers in their hard and perilous task of sweeping the seas clear of enemy mines and combating submarines.’ Henry Charles Gue was in London in May 1894 and entered the Royal Naval Reserve as a Deck Hand in March 1917. Demobilised in the rate of Leading Deck Hand in March 1919, he was appointed a Skipper in October 1924 and advanced to Chief Skipper in October 1934, and it was in the latter rank that he volunteered for service in the Red Sea, in support of anti-smuggling operations off Palestine in the late 1930s, most probably in a trawler converted for inshore patrol work. appointed to the requisitioned trawler Cape Spartel in November 1939, he went on to win his D.S.C. in a matter of weeks, thereby becoming just the 26th recipient of the decoration to be listed in the London Gazette for the 1939-45 War, ahead even of the River Plate awards - he received his award at an investiture held on 5 March 1940. gue removed to another trawler, the Pitsman, in April 1941, and to the Athenian as C.O. and Skipper Lieutenant, in March 1944, in which latter vessel he served in support of the Normandy landings prior to being placed on the Retired List at the end of the year. His R.N.R. Decoration was announced in the London Gazette in February 1945. £1200-£1500

Lot 1419

Family group: a Great War M.C. group of seven awarded to Major W. G. C. Cockaday, Royal Field Artillery military Cross, G.V.R., unnamed; 1914 Star, with clasp (Lieut., R.F.A.); British War and Victory Medal, M.I.D. oak leaf (Capt.); India General Service 1908-35, 1 clasp, Afghanistan N.W.F. 1919 (Capt., R.F.A.); Coronation 1911, silver; Army L.S. & G.C., E.VII.R. (53342 B.Q.M. Sjt., R.F.A.), this last with some edge bruising three: Second Lieutenant A. G. Cockaday, Royal Field Artillery, died of wounds, 31 October 1918 1914 Star, with clasp (63684 Tptr., R.F.A.); British War and Victory Medals, M.I.D. oak leaf (2 Lieut.); Memorial Plaque (Aubrey George Cockaday), this group with adhesive marks/stuck on card, good very fine except where stated (11) £1100-1300 William Godfrey Charles Cockaday was born on 5 February 1872. Serving 22 years in the ranks of the Royal Field Artillery, he attained the rank of Serjeant-Major in December 1908. He was commissioned a Lieutenant (District Officer) in 1912. Serving in the Great War, he entered the France/Flanders theatre of war on 15 October 1914 and in March 1915 was appointed a Temporary Captain. For his wartime services he was mentioned in despatches (London Gazette 19 October 1916) and awarded the Military Cross (London Gazette 23 November 1916). He was promoted to Captain in December 1919 and Major in April 1923. He retired on 6 February 1927. Sold with copied research and a quantity of military and family photographs. trumpeter Aubrey George Cockaday, 25th Brigade R.F.A., entered the France/Flanders theatre of war on 16 August 1914. As such, for his services in the first months of the war he was mentioned in despatches (London Gazette 9 December 1914). He was later commissioned a 2nd Lieutenant in the R.F.A. (London Gazette 13 July 1918). Whilst serving with the 10th Battery, 147th Brigade R.F.A., he died of wounds on 31 October 1918, aged 21 years. He was buried in the Ramillies British Cemetery. 2nd Lieutenant Cockaday was the son of Major W. G. C. Cockaday and Mrs E. Cockaday of Great Yarmouth. sold with copied research and a photograph of the recipient in uniform. £1100-£1300

Lot 1429

A rare Great War M.C. group of four awarded to Lieutenant T. A. Edwards, Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve, Royal Naval Division - due to appalling casualties, he onetime commanded the Hawke Battalion as an Acting Lieutenant military Cross, G.V.R., unnamed as issued; British War and Victory Medals (Lieut. T. A. Edwards, R.N.V.R.); Defence Medal 1939-45, good very fine and better (4) £1800-2200 m.C. London Gazette 15 February 1919: ‘In the attack on Niergnies on 8 October 1918, he displayed great skill in handling his company in a difficult manoeurve. After the objective had been taken the enemy made a determined counter-attack, supported by tanks, on the troops on the company’s right flank, as a result of which the latter were compelled temporarily to withdraw. Personally leading the operation he quickly formed a defensive flank, and by his cool courage and good leadership not only were severe losses inflicted on the enemy but an important tactical position was maintained which materially assisted in the reforming of the line at a critical period.’ Thomas Arthur Edwards, a native of Herne Hill, London, was commissioned as a Temporary Sub. Lieutenant in August 1915 and first went to France in July 1916, where he joined Howe Battalion, Royal Naval Division. Over the ensuing year and a half he saw much action, not least on the Ancre, and, in February 1917, following an attack against enemy trenches on the ridge commanding Beaucourt, in which the Brigade sustained casualties of 24 officers and 647 ratings, he was appointed Adjutant of Hawke. having then got married while on leave in the U.K. that July, he returned to the Battalion as an Acting Lieutenant in the following month and was back in action at Passchendaele in November - he was appointed second-in-command on the 11th, saw further action at Welch Ridge and returned to the U.K. on leave over Christmas. he was, however, back in France by the time of the German Spring Offensive, again as second-in-command of Hawke, when the Battalion was forced to retreat from Bus to Barastre, and thence to High Wood and towards the Thirpval Plateau - and Edwards became C.O. when Commander B. H. Ellis, D.S.O., was mortally wounded on 26 February. Placed in command of ‘D’ Company when a new C.O. arrived in April, Edwards and his men remained actively employed in trenches opposite Hamel and on the Auchonvillers Ridge in May-July, and thence in the advance through Logeast Wood and Loupart Wood to the Bapaume Road - a group photograph of Hawke officers taken in June shows a haggard Lieutenant Edwards, who was sent home on a month’s special leave in August. once more rejoining his unit in the Field in September, Edwards won his M.C. for the above described deeds at Niergnies on 8 October - an engagement that made history, for the Germans made use of captured British tanks in their determined counter-attack. Notified of his award in Divisional Orders dated 18 December 1918, he ended his career as an Education Officer in the 63rd (R.N.) Division and was, appropriately enough, demobbed in March 1919 to pursue his civilian profession as a schoolmaster. £1800-£2200

Lot 1430

A Great War M.C. group of five awarded to Captain C. Jackson, Royal Garrison Artillery military Cross, G.V.R., unnamed as issued, in case of issue; British War and Victory Medals (Capt.); Defence Medal 1939-45; Coronation 1953; together with corresponding miniatures; silver and enamel medal, inscribed on obverse ‘The Municipal Tramways and Transport Association Inc.’, reverse engraved ‘C. Jackson, President 1940-41’, suspended from a neck ribbon and contained in its case of issue; a small head quarter length photograph of recipient contained in a silver frame, generally nearly extremely fine (12) £600-800 M.C. London Gazette 1 January 1918. also included with the lot is a fine leather bound testimonial on vellum, inscribed in illuminated ink ‘The Municipal Passenger Transport Association (Incorporated) to Clement Jackson, Esquire, M.I.A.E., M. Inst. T. We have pleasure in informing you that the following resolution was carried unanimously at the Annual General Meeting of the Association on July 11th 1941. That the members of the Association assembled at the 40th Annual General Meeting, place on record their high appreciation of the devoted services of Clement Jackson, Esquire, in the office of President during the year 1940-41 and express to him their grateful recognition of the application of his time and abilities to the interests of the Association under very trying circumstances created by the war.’ Clement Jackson was commissioned into the Royal Garrison Artillery (North Midland (Staffordshire) from the Inns of Court Officers Training Corps on 7 October 1915. In 1939 he was working as a General Manager and Engineer with the City of Plymouth Transport Department, Milehouse, Plymouth. £600-£800

Lot 1434

A fine Second World War Bomber Command operations D.F.C., D.F.M. group of six awarded to Flight Lieutenant R. E. Manvell, Royal Air Force, a Flight Engineer who completed a tour of duty in Lancasters of 97 Squadron before joining Pathfinders and participating in the Hamburg ‘firestorm’ and Peenemunde raids: he was killed in action in June 1944 distinguished Flying Cross, G.VI.R., reverse officially dated ‘1944’; Distinguished Flying Medal, G.VI.R. (569921 Sgt. R. E. Manvell, R.A.F.); 1939-45 Star; Air Crew Europe Star; Defence and War Medals, generally good very fine (6) £2500-3000 d.F.C. London Gazette 6 June 1944. The original recommendation states: ‘Flight Lieutenant Manvell is the Squadron Flight Engineer Leader and has a fine operational record. He has completed 51 operational sorties, 21 of which have been with the Path Finder Force, against the most heavily defended targets in Germany. Apart from his duties as Engineer Leader, which he has carried out with zeal and efficiency, he has shown outstanding keenness to fly on operations on every possible occasion. His enthusiasm to undertake operational work has been an inspiration and, in particular, an example to the Flight Engineers entrusted to his care. His ability for training and instructing Flight Engineers, and his high sense of devotion to duty and his work on this squadron make him very worthy of the award of the Distinguished Flying Cross.’ D.F.M. London Gazette 14 May 1943. The original recommendation states: ‘This airman has participated very successfully in numerous operational sorties. His targets have included Essen and other strongly defended industrial centres in the Ruhr. He also took part in raids on Berlin and Italy and with good effect. In daylight, he has attacked Milan, Le Creusot and Danzig. His skill and courage have been an example to all.’ Robert Edward Manvell, a native of New Eltham in London, commenced his operational career as a Flight Engineer in No. 97 (Straits Settlement) Squadron, a Lancaster unit operating out of Woodhall Spa, Lincolnshire, in June 1942, with three successive trips to Bremen, the first of them a ‘Thousand Bomber Raid’. Thus ensued a busy tour of operations, undoubtedly to targets of the heavily defended kind, including Berlin, Cologne, Duisberg (thrice), Dusseldorf (twice), Essen, Hamburg, Milan (thrice), Nuremburg and Saarbrucken, in addition to three daylight raids: Danzig on 11-12 July, a Bomber Command ‘first’ involving 44 Lancasters and a 1,500 mile round trip, Le Creusot on 17 October, No. 5 Group’s famous dusk attack on the Schneider locomotive and armaments works, and Milan on 24 October, another risky enterprise with 88 Lancasters. manvell was recommended for his D.F.M. in March 1943, having completed 30 sorties and 170 hours of operational flying, and was commissioned as a Pilot Officer in the following month. returning to the operational scene with No. 156 Squadron in June 1943 - a Path Finder Force unit operating in Lancasters out of Alconbury, Huntingdonshire, and later from Warboys - Manvell quickly carried out a brace of trips to Cologne. So, too, in July, four successive strikes against Hamburg, strikes that culminated in the famous ‘firestorms’. Having then flown sorties to Mannheim, Nuremburg and Milan - the latter on three occasions - he participated in the famous Peenemunde raid on 17 August 1943, in Lancaster EE-926, piloted by Flying Officer A. M. Lutz. his very next raid proved to be the costliest of the War so far, a strike against Berlin on the night of 23rd-24th, in which nearly 60 aircraft were lost. Trips to Nuremburg, Modane and Hanover followed, but he remained grounded in the months of October and November, quite probably to attend a Squadron Flight Engineer Leader’s course - certainly he was advanced to Flying Officer in the former month. A return trip to the ‘big city’ in December, and strikes against Frankfurt, Leipzig and Stuttgart in February-March raised his operational sorties to the 50-mark - and 307 hours of operational flying - and he was recommended for the D.F.C. sadly, however, on the night of 23-24 June 1944, in Lancaster JB230 GT-S, captained by Pilot Officer D. Langford, D.F.C., he was killed in action in a marker operation for a flying-bomb site at Coubronne. His aircraft crashed at Zuytpeene, four kilometres from Cassel, only one member of crew surviving to be taken P.O.W., the remainder being buried in the local churchyard. £2500-£3000

Lot 1436

A fine Omdurman D.C.M. group of seven awarded to Colour-Sergeant Michael Mullen, Royal Irish Fusiliers, for services with the Maxim Gun Detachment during the campaign in the Sudan in 1898 distinguished Conduct Medal, V.R. (Corpl. M. Mullen, R. Ir. Fus. (2nd Sept. 1898)); India General Service 1895-1902, 1 clasp, Relief of Chitral 1895 (3188 Pte. M. Mullan, 1st Bn. Royal Irish Fuslrs.); Queen’s Sudan 1896-98 (3188 L/Sgt. M. Mullin, 1/R.I. Fus.); Queen’s South Africa 1899-1902, 4 clasps, Cape Colony, Tugela Heights, Relief of Ladysmith, Transvaal (3188 Sgt. M. Mullen, Rl. Irish Fus.); King’s South Africa 1901-02, 2 clasps, South Africa 1901, South Africa 1902 (3188 Serjt. M. Mullen Rl. Irish Fus.); Meritorious Service Medal, G.VI.R., 1st issue (C.Sjt. M. Mullen, R. Ir. Fus.); Khedive’s Sudan 1896-1908, 1 clasp, Khartoum (3188 Lce-Sergt. M. Mullin, 1st R.I.F.) mounted as worn, note variations in spelling of surname, contact marks but generally very fine or better and a rare group (7) £3500-4000 D.C.M. recommendation submitted to the Queen on 9 November 1898, and published in London Gazette of 15 November 1898, and in Army Order 153 of September 1899. Awarded for Omdurman, 2 September 1898, one of two such awards to the Royal Irish Fusiliers for the Sudan Campaign. the following details are given in R. de M. Rudolf’s Short Histories of the Territorial Regiments of the British Army: ‘The Omdurman Campaign 1898 - Colour-Sergeant J. Teague and Corporal M. Mullen were the N.C.Os. in charge of the Maxim Gun Detachment, 1st Royal Irish Fusiliers, during the above campaign, and for the excellent and determined manner in which they performed their duties during the campaign and in action they were awarded the Distinguished Conduct Medal.’ The 1st Battalion, Royal Irish Rifles was represented at Omdurman by only a small force, consisting of 4 officers and 91 men, of which 2 officers and 26 men formed a Maxim Gun Detachment, while the remainder constituted a remount depot. The Maxim detachment was commanded by Captain Douglas Churcher, with whom went Lieutenant Wilson. The remount group was led by Captain de Berry and Lieutenant Heard. captain Churcher’s Maxim detachment, travelling by boat and train, reached Atbara, south of Wadi Halfa, on the evening of August 8th. De Berry, who arrived on the barren scene a few days later, wrote while en route: ‘The duties are hard, as we have two boats full of animals which need 10 men always in each of them. We have had rather too much river work and I fancy the men will be rather glad to get out of the boats, although the train is far worse, yet there will be only 24 hours of it from Halfa to the Atbara. The steamers shake very much, and it is hard to write clearly.’ In the battle, the Maxim detachment fought as a self-contained unit in Major-General Lyttelton’s brigade, and was so mentioned in Kitchener’s despatches. After Omdurman most of the Irish Fusiliers returned to Alexandria, but Churcher, with 20 men and 2 Maxims, left Khartoum with General Hunter’s expedition up the Blue Nile. mullen was one of eight signallers of the Royal Irish Fusiliers to receive the medal for the Relief of Chitral 1895, together with Captain T. O’Leary of the regiment, who was Inspector of Army Signalling in the Punjab. Mullen also received the Meritorious Service Medal, anounced in Army Order 122 of 1938. £3500-£4000

Lot 1437

A scarce Omdurman D.C.M. group of eight awarded to Staff Quarter-Master Sergeant John Parsons, Army Service Corps, late Commissariat & Transport Corps distinguished Conduct Medal, V.R. (Sergt. J. Parsons, A.S.C. (2nd Sept. 1898)); Egypt and Sudan 1882-89, dated reverse,1 clasp, Tel-El-Kebir (4199 P[te.], 11th C[ompy. S. &] T.C.), naming details partially worn through bruising; Queen’s Sudan 1896-98 (S/4199 Sgt., A.S.C.); Queen’s South Africa 1899-1902, 5 clasps, Cape Colony, Paardeberg, Driefontein, Johannesburg, Diamond Hill (4199 S.-Sejt., A.S.C.); King’s South Africa 1901-02, 2 clasps, South Africa 1901, South Africa 1902 (4199 S. Qr. Mr. Serjt., A.S.C.); Army L.S. & G.C., V.R., small letter reverse (4199 Staff Sgt., A.S.C.); Khedive’s Star 1882; Khedive’s Sudan 1896-1908, 1 clasp, Khartoum (4199 Sergt., A.S.C.), the first with (slack) refixed suspension claw, the second with edge bruising and pitted and thus good fine, otherwise generally very fine or better (8) £2500-3000 D.C.M. London Gazette 15 November 1898. john Parsons was born in Glastonbury, Somerset and enlisted in the Commissariat & Transport Corps in June 1882, aged 19 years. Posted to Egypt in August 1882, he was present at Tel-el-Kebir in 12th Company, and was advanced to Corporal in August 1894 and to Sergeant in September 1897. Re-embarked for Egypt in July of the following year, he participated in the Khartoum operations and was mentioned in despatches by Kitchener for his services at Omdurman that September (London Gazette 30 September 1898 refers), in addition to being awarded the D.C.M., which decoration was presented to him at a parade at Aldershot on 19 March 1899 - ‘The C.O. pinned the decoration to the tunic of the recipient, shook hands with him, and, in congratulating him, trusted he would live long to wear it.’ Parsons was next actively engaged in South Africa from October 1899 until August 1902, when he served variously in ‘C’, ‘E’ and 10th Companies, A.S.C., and added the L.S. & G.C. Medal to his accolades in November 1900 (WO 102/7 refers). He was finally discharged in June 1903, having been advanced to Staff Quarter-Master Sergeant in April 1902. £2500-£3000

Lot 1438

A Boer War D.C.M. group of three awarded to Sergeant T. W. Vine, City of London Imperial Volunteers, formerly 3rd Middlesex Volunteer Artillery and later South African Constabulary distinguished Conduct Medal, E.VII.R. (Serjt. T. W. Vine, S.A.C.); Queen’s South Africa 1899-1902, 3 clasps, Cape Colony, Paardeberg, Johannesburg (706 Sgt. T. W. Vine, C.I.V.); King’s South Africa 1901-02, 2 clasps, South Africa 1901, South Africa 1902 (942 T. Sjt.-Maj. T. W. Vine, S.A.C.) mounted as worn, good very fine (3) £2000-2500 D.C.M. London Gazette 27 September 1901: Sergeant T. W. Vine, City of London Imperial Volunteers. Although Vine’s D.C.M. is named to the S.A.C. it was unquestionably won whilst he was serving with the C.I.V. thomas Walter Vine was born on 22 July 1870, and joined the Volunteers on 20 July 1887, serving in the 3rd Middlesex Volunteer Artillery. He received the Royal Humane Society’s Honorary Testimonial in October 1891, ‘for having on the 18th April 1891 gone to the rescue of Gunner Sharman, who was in imminent danger of drowning at Shoeburyness, and whose life he gallantly assisted in saving.’ A jeweller and watchmaker by trade, he volunteered to join the City of London Volunteers in January 1900, then aged 29, and served in South Africa with No. 1 Mounted Infantry Company. He was mentioned in despatches (London Gazette 10 September 1901) and awarded the Distinguished Conduct Medal. He was discharged from the C.I.V. Mounted Infantry at Pretoria on 1 October 1900, at his own request to be employed with the South African Constabulary. He served as a Troop Sergeant-Major in the S.A.C. for the remainder of the war and later became a Head Constable. He was discharged from the S.A.C. upon its withdrawal from Swaziland in March 1907, and transferred to the Swaziland Police with whom he served until 1925. sold with extensive file of copied records. £2000-£2500

Lot 1439

A Great War D.C.M., M.M. group of eight awarded to Warrant Officer Class 2 W. Emmens, Royal Signals, late 15th (Bantam) Battalion Cheshire Regiment distinguished Conduct Medal, G.V.R. (19901 Pte., 15/Ches. R.); Military Medal, G.V.R. (19901 Pte., 15/Ches. R.); British War and Victory Medals (19901 A. Cpl., Ches. R.); Defence and War Medals; Territorial Efficiency Medal, G.V.R. (2557110 Sjt., (D.C.M.) (M.M.) R. Signals); Efficiency Medal, G.VI.R., Territorial (2557110 W.O. Cl. 2, R. Signals), mounted for wear, contact marks, nearly very fine and better (8) £2500-2800 D.C.M. London Gazette 26 January 1918. ‘For conspicuous gallantry and devotion to duty. When out laying a wire, during an attack, with another N.C.O., they lost direction and met a party of twenty of the enemy with a machine gun, whom they attacked without hesitation, their only weapons being one rifle and a signalling lamp stand. They captured the gun and put it out of action, and brought back two prisoners. They then established communication with the captured position and maintained it, under heavy fire throughout the day, showing great gallantry and determination’. m.M. London Gazette 21 October 1916. w. Emmens came from Leeds. Sold with some copied research. £2500-£2800

Lot 1440

A Great War D.C.M., M.M. group of four awarded to Serjeant E. J. West, King’s Royal Rifle Corps distinguished Conduct Medal, G.V.R. (R-7339 Cpl., 6/K.R.R.C.); Military Medal, G.V.R. (R-7339 Sjt., D.C.M., 2/K.R. Rif. C.); British War and Victory Medals (R-7339 Sjt., K. R. Rif. C.); together with a set of four miniature dress medals, good very fine (8) £1800-2200 d.C.M. London Gazette 13 February 1917. ‘For conspicuous gallantry in action. He got on to the parapet under heavy fire, and drove back the enemy parties on both sides of the trench. Later, he rallied and led forward a party of men’. m.M. London Gazette 7 October 1918. edward James West was born in 1892. Coming from Staines and a Lino Maker by occupation, he enlisted into the K.R.R.C. on 18 November 1914. Serving with the 6th Battalion K.R.R.C. he was awarded the D.C.M. for conspicuous gallantry on 22 July 1916. Later serving with the 2nd Battalion he was awarded the M.M. for bravery. He was transferred to the Army Reserve on 10 February 1919. After the war he returned to employment with the Staines Lino Company and worked for a total of 48 years with them until his eyesight failed. He came to St. Dunstans in 1954. He died on 28 January 1972 leaving a widow and a married daughter. According to the vendor who purchased these medals directly from the family he was told that the M.M. was awarded for saving men’s lives on the Somme river. sold with copied research; the recipient’s Certificate of Transfer to Reserve; Certificate of Emloyment during the War; handwritten notes re the forwarding of the D.C.M. and M.M. dated 1919; a letter from St. Dunstan’s re. a pension, dated 2 March 1954; St. Dunstan’s Golden Jubilee 1915-65 London Reunion Invitation Card to Mr and Mrs West; together with a Menu, which includes a list of St. Dunstaners (including West) attending; St. Dunstans Review, March 1972 - with obituary; several photographs including two of the recipient in uniform; and one of recipient’s sweetheart whom he later married; also with a K.R.R.C. cap badge and three metal and two cloth badges and a leather wallet. £1800-£2200

Lot 1441

A Great War D.C.M., M.M. group of three awarded to Acting Sergeant Richard Dicker, Royal West Kent Regiment, late Royal Engineers distinguished Conduct Medal, G.V.R. (34062 Pnr., 1/Div. Sig. Coy. R.E.); Military Medal, G.V.R. (34062 Pr.-A. Cpl., 1/D.S. Coy. R.E.); British War Medal 1914-20 (7429 A. Sjt., R. W. Kent R.) edge bruising and contact marks, nearly very fine and better (3) £800-1000 D.C.M. London Gazette 21 June 1916. ‘For conspicuous gallantry when repairing telephone lines under heavy shell fire’. m.M. London Gazette 23 February 1918. richard Dicker entered the France/Flanders theatre of war on 9 November 1914. Sold with a riband bar and with a clasp for the 1914 Star to which was entitled. Copied m.i.c. shows entitlement to 1914 Star without clasp. £800-£1000

Lot 1442

A Great War ‘Western Front’ D.C.M., M.M. pair awarded to Lance-Corporal Arthur Hutton, Durham Light Infantry distinguished Conduct Medal, G.V.R. (15347 L. Cpl., M.M., 2/Durh. L.I.), suspension rod loose; Military Medal, G.V.R. (15347 Pte., 10/Durh. L.I.) edge bruising, contact marks, good fine (2) £900-1100 D.C.M. London Gazette 30 October 1918. ‘For conspicuous gallantry and devotion to duty in rushing and capturing a post containing six of the enemy, thus allowing the company to continue its advance. Later, with his company commander, two machine guns in action were located. They worked round and rushed them, the gunners surrendering’. m.M. London Gazette 12 March 1917. arthur Hutton came from Crook, Co. Durham. Serving with the Durham Light Infantry, he entered the France/Flanders theatre of war on 21 May 1915. He was awarded the Military Medal for bravery whilst serving with the 10th Battalion Durham Light Infantry in the vicinity of Arras. On 6 January 1917 a raid was carried out upon the German lines, in the hard fighting that followed, casualties to the battalion amounted to 2 officers wounded and 44 other ranks killed, wounded or missing. For the action, one M.C. (to 2nd Lieutenant A. G. Bell) and 6 M.M.’s (including one to Hutton) were awarded. He was subsequently awarded the D.C.M. for conspicuous gallantry whilst serving with the 2nd Battalion. Sold with copied research including gazette extracts and m.i.c. £900-£1100

Lot 1443

A Great War D.C.M., M.M. pair awarded to Company Quartermaster Serjeant L. H. Colbran, Army Service Corps distinguished Conduct Medal, G.V.R. (M2-079630 C.Q.M. Sjt., A.S.C.); Military Medal, G.V.R. (M2-079630 C.Q.M. Sjt., A.S.C.) slight edge bruising, good very fine (2) £800-1000 D.C.M. London Gazette 3 June 1918; citation, 21 October 1918. ‘For conspicuous gallantry and devotion to duty while in charge of a heavy artillery ration dump during an enemy attack. When ordered to burn his dump, he said he would rather wait to the last minute, and remained for three days after under heavy shell fire, and succeeded in getting all ordnance and other stores away. He issued what rations he had to troops, who, but for him, would have gone without food’. m.M. London Gazette 16 July 1918. lionel Hyde Colbran was born in Bournemouth, Hampshire. A Motor Driver by occupation, he enlisted on 24 April 1915, aged 38 years. With the A.S.C. he entered the France/Flanders theatre of war on 31 March 1916 and attained the rank of C.Q.M.S. in July 1917. He was mentioned in Haig’s despatch of 26 December 1917 and in 1918 was awarded the D.C.M. and M.M. Colbran was discharged on 12 June 1919. Sold with copied service papers and other research. £800-£1000

Lot 1444

A scarce 1914 ‘Battle of La Bassee’ D.C.M. group of four awarded to Acting Sergeant Charles Rogers, Royal Engineers distinguished Conduct Medal, G.V.R. (13573 2 Cpl., 17/Co. R.E.); 1914 Star, with clasp (13573 2 Cpl., R.E.); British War and Victory Medals (13573 Cpl., R.E.), mounted for wear, nearly extremely fine (4) £2200-2600 D.C.M. London Gazette 1 April 1915. ‘For gallant conduct at Givenchy on 25th October, 1914, in leaving his trench and assisting a severely wounded officer into cover, under heavy shell fire’. charles Rogers was born in Belfast and enlisted in the Royal Engineers on 18 March 1904 for a three-year engagement, aged 19 years, 6 months. He extended his service in 1906 to complete seven years with the colours. He served with 3 Field Troop R.E. who were based at Canterbury, and having been promoted Corporal on 4 January 1911, he transferred to the Reserve on 17 March 1911. Having married in 1908, he was still residing in Canterbury at the outbreak of hostilities. On 5 August 1914 he was mobilized at Chatham and posted to 17 Field Company R.E. on 8 August 1914. They were immediately ordered to France and ten days later the Company disembarked at Le Havre, coming under the command of 5th Division II Corps. introduction to hostilities was swift, as the list of engagements for Corporal Rogers and 17 Field Company attests: Battle of Mons, 23-24 August 1914; Retreat from Mons, 23 August-5 September; Battle of Le Cateau, 26 August; Battle of the Marne, 6-9 September; Battle of the Aisne, 13-20 September; Passage of the Aisne, 13 September; Actions of the Aisne Heights, 20 September; Battle of La Bassee, 10 October-2 November, and 1st Battle of Ypres, 5-19 November. it was at La Bassee that Corporal Rogers won his D.C.M. The battlefield was flat, intersected with streams, and waterlogged. Thus the trenches dug in it could only be shallow, and cover had mainly to be obtained by building up breastworks - very exposed conditions for the Engineers who were working day and night to consolidate the defences. « the official history states that, ‘... the II Corps on the 25th had a quiet day except for artillery fire, the enemy’s being more than usually accurate as the weather permitted aeroplane observation. .... During the morning the bombardment became so heavy that some battalions were withdrawn from their trenches, to reoccupy them at night. ... Work on the defences was continued whenever possible, the engineers collecting fencing posts and plain wire from the neighbouring country by day and erecting them at night in front of the line to form entanglements. ...’ This was not the only act of gallantry that Rogers displayed; as his wife speaking to a local paper stated that she was ‘not able to say definitely for what particular act of gallantry her husband received the D.C.M., but she believes that it was for something he did in connection with the blowing up of a bridge during the battle of the Aisne’. She adds that in a recent letter from him, he wrote, ‘I may as well tell you I have got the D.C.M. Probably you will know by this. More honours for good old Kent - I mean Ireland’. on 16 November, whilst serving at Ypres, Rogers was promoted to Acting Sergeant. He remained with his unit until being wounded in action on 28 April 1915 - this during the Battle of St. Julien during the 2nd Battle of Ypres, when 17 Field Company was on short attachment to the 27th Division. His wounds were severe enough for him to be returned home on 2 May 1915. the remainder of his service was with the ‘Home Establishment’, being posted to the Training Depot. He was discharged on the grounds of no longer being physically fit on 27 January 1919, still with the rank of Acting Sergeant. sold with a contemporary cutting from the Kentish Gazette and Canterbury Press, bearing an article on and a photograph of Sergeant Rogers; also with copied service papers; m.i.c. and other research. £2200-£2600

Lot 1445

A Great War ‘Western Front’ D.C.M. group of five awarded to Warrant Officer Class 2 T. W. Russon, Worcestershire Regiment, late Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry distinguished Conduct Medal, G.V.R. (41794 C.S. Mjr., 4 Worc. R.); 1914 Star, with copy clasp (9702 L. Cpl., 2/Oxf. & Bucks. L.I.); British War and Victory Medals (9702 A.W.O. Cl.II, Oxf. & Bucks L.I.), B.W.M. suspension bent; Army L.S. & G.C., G.V.R., 3rd issue, Regular Army (5239928 W.O. Cl.II, D.C.M., Worc. R.) edge bruising, first four fine, last good very fine (5) £1000-1200 D.C.M. London Gazette 10 January 1920. ‘For conspicuous gallantry and initiative during the advance on Ghelewe on 30th September 1918. Owing to heavy casualties, he took command of the company and succeeded in capturing and consolidating a line west of Gheluwe under very heavy machine gun fire. It was owing to his fine leadership and disregard of danger that his company reached and held this line’. lance-Corporal Thomas W. Russon, 2nd Battalion Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry, entered the France/Flanders theatre of war on 14 August 1914. He later won the D.C.M. as a C.S.M. in the 4th Battalion Worcestershire Regiment. sold with an ‘Army Orders’ Certificate from General Sir Herbert Plumer, Commanding Second Army, dated 11 November 1918, in which various awards, including that to Russon, are listed. Also with some copied research including War Diary extract and m.i.c. £1000-£1200

Lot 1446

A fine Great War D.C.M. group of four awarded to Lieutenant W. F. Evans, Royal Air Force, late North and South Staffordshire Regiments and Royal Flying Corps: having been awarded his D.C.M. for bravery on the Somme in July 1916, and been wounded as a Subaltern at Ypres in 1917, he qualified as an Observation Officer in the R.F.C. distinguished Conduct Medal, G.V.R. (9713 A.C.S. Mjr. W. F. Evans, 8/N. Staff. R.); 1914-15 Star (9713 C. Sjt., N. Staff. R); British War and Victory Medals (2 Lieut.), a little polished, otherwise generally very fine (4) £800-1000 D.C.M. London Gazette 10 January 1917: ‘For conspicuous gallantry in action. When in a part of a village where there was no officer, he led three attacks against the enemy, who had re-established themselves by a counter-attack. He showed great coolness and courage, and did fine work consolidating.’ Walter Fletcher Evans, a native of Burton-on-Trent, was born in April 1877 and first entered the French theatre of war as a Company-Sergeant in the 8th Battalion, North Staffordshires in the course of 1915. Subsequently employed with his battalion on the Somme in July-November 1916, his D.C.M. was awarded for the attack on La Boiselle on 3 July, when his unit sustained casualties of 12 officers and 272 other ranks - accompanying war diary extract refers. commissioned in the 7th Battalion, South Staffordshires, in May 1917, Evans joined ‘D’ Company out in France that July and was wounded at Ypres in the following month. he subsequently transferred to the Royal Flying Corps, passed the Aerial Gunnery Course at Hythe and was appointed an Observation Officer in the Royal Air Force in April 1918. Evans was demobilised at the end of 1919, having latterly served in an Artillery Co-operation Squadron in the rank of Lieutenant. £800-£1000

Lot 1447

A Great War ‘Western Front’ D.C.M. group of five awarded to Warrant Officer Class 2 F. L. Brice, Royal Field Artillery distinguished Conduct Medal, G.V.R. (32074 B.S. Mjr., A.58 Bde. R.F.A.); 1914-15 Star (32074 B.S. Mjr., R.F.A.); British War and Victory Medals (32074 W.O. Cl.2, R.A.); Army L.S. & G.C., G.V.R., 1st issue (1019424W.O. Cl.II, D.C.M., R.F.A.), mounted as worn, minor edge bruising and contact marks, very fine (5) £800-1000 D.C.M. London Gazette 28 August 1917. ‘For conspicuous gallantry and devotion to duty although severely gassed and badly shaken by a shell which penetrated his gunpit, he immediately carried a wounded comrade to the dressing station under heavy shell fire. In view of his own condition, his conduct throughout the whole bombardment was particularly gallant’. frank Lea Brice was a native of London. He enlisted into the Royal Field Artillery at Woolwich on 24 August 1903. He served in India, October 1909-October 1914; in the Middle East, March 1915-July 1916, and in France, July 1916-February 1919. Serving in France he was awarded the D.C.M. for conspicuous gallantry. Postwar he was employed as Brigade Accountant and Drill Instructor, retiring with excellent references in September 1927. After leaving the Army he lived in Alpha Villa, Dudley Road, Clacton-on-Sea, and was for many years the Secretary of the Clacton Unionist Club. Frank Brice died in December 1935, aged 47 years. In his obituary it was stated that, ‘During a gas attack in France he noticed a batman, who was without a mask, overcome by fumes. At the risk of his own life, Sergt.-Major Brice took off his mask and gave it to the batman thus saving his life. Mr Brice, of course, was badly gassed, the effects of which no doubt accentuated his illness and thus hastened his death. For this act of gallantry he was awarded the D.C.M., which decoration was presented to him at a public ceremony at the triangle at the junction of Station Road and Pier Avenue, Clacton, by the Colonel of the 29th London Regiment in 1918 in the presence of the regiment. ...’ Sold with the recipient’s Soldier’s Small Book; recipient’s Regular Army Certificate of Service Booklet; a group photograph; newspaper cutting with obituary, base silver match case set with two stones (a third is missing), inscribed, ‘F.L.B.’, and a silver presentation box, approx. 165 x 87 x 50mm., hallmarks for London 1927, with wooden interior, case lid inscribed, ‘Presented to Battery Sergeant-Major F. L. Brice, D.C.M. by The Officers of the 364th Field Battery R.A. on his retirement 23rd September 1927’. £800-£1000

Lot 1448

A Great War ‘Gallipoli Mining Operations’ D.C.M. group of four awarded to Private Thomas Wilkinson, 4th Battalion East Lancashire Regiment distinguished Conduct Medal, G.V.R. (1381 Pte., 4/E. Lanc. Regt.-T.F.); 1914-15 Star (1381 Pte., E. Lan. R.); British War and Victory Medals (20014 Pte., E. Lan. R.) B.W.M. with edge bruising and contact marks, nearly very fine and better, rare (4) £1400-1800 D.C.M. London Gazette 16 November 1915. ‘For conspicuous bravery on the 14th September, 1915, on the Gallipoli Peninsula. During mining operations, Private Wilkinson remained at his post in a mine gallery where the enemy’s shaft was expected to break through. When they succeeded in doing so, he shot the first Turk who appeared, and then assisted a Non-Commissioned Officer to lay and fire the charge, so destroying the enemy’s gallery. This was done at great personal risk’. private Thomas Wilkinson, 4th Battalion East Lancashire Regiment, Territorial Force, entered the Balkan theatre of war on 9 May 1915. Awarded the D.C.M. for mining operations on the Gallipoli Peninsula; possibly the only Gallipoli D.C.M. award to the the 4th Battalion. Sold with copied research and with shoulder badge. £1400-£1800

Lot 1449

A Great War ‘Gallipoli’ D.C.M. group of three awarded to Private John Jackson, Essex Regiment, for ‘stalking and shooting snipers’ Distinguished Conduct Medal, G.V.R. (2173 Pte., 7/Essex R.-T.F.); British War and Victory Medals, M.I.D. oak leaf (2173 Pte., Essex R.), mounted as worn, with fragment of ribbon for a 1914-15 Star, some edge bruising and pitting, nearly very fine (3) £1200-1400 D.C.M. London Gazette 21 June 1916. ‘For conspicuous gallantry in stalking and shooting snipers, frequently alone’. m.I.D. London Gazette 11 July 1916. private John Jackson, 7th Battalion Essex Regiment, enlisted on 17 June 1913. During the Great war he entered the Balkan theatre of war on 11 August 1915 and serving in Gallipoli, was awarded the D.C.M. for the highly skilled and dangerous job of stalking and shooting enemy snipers. He was discharged on 5 May 1916 as a result of wounds received. In addition to the above medals he was entitled to both the 1914-15 Star and Silver War Badge. Sold with copied m.i.c., Silver War Badge roll extract, gazette and war diary extracts. £1200-£1400

Lot 1450

A Great War ‘Western Front’ D.C.M. group of three awarded to Company Sergeant-Major Arthur Graham, Royal Berkshire Regiment distinguished Conduct Medal, G.V.R. (1479 C.S. Mjr., 2/4 R. Berks. R.-T.F.); India General Service 1895-1902, 2 clasps, Punjab Frontier 1897-98, Tirah 1897-98 (4833 Pte., 2d Bn. Oxf. Lt. Infy.); Territorial Force Efficiency Medal, G.V.R. (200069 C.S. Mjr., 4/R. Berks. R.) fine scratch marks to last, contact marks and edge bruising, nearly very fine and better (3) £800-900 D.C.M. London Gazette 25 September 1916. ‘For conspicuous bravery and determination in reorganising successive waves in an attack and in supporting ably his Company Commander, who had been wounded early in the action. He showed courage and resource in evacuating casualties’. company Sergeant-Major Arthur Graham, 2/4th Royal Berkshire Regiment, of 81 Catherine Street, Reading, was awarded the D.C.M. for his actions during a raid on German positions at Ferme du Bois during the night of the 13/14 July 1916. He was presented his medal at the barrack square of the 49th Regimental Depot, Reading, by Major-General W. G. B. Western. Sold with copied research. £800-£900

Lot 1451

A scarce Great War Honorary D.C.M. group of five awarded to Marechal-des-Logis A. G. Fockeday, 19e Escadron du Train france, Croix de Guerre, with silver star and bronze palm on ribbon; Croix du Combatant; War Medal 1914-18; Victory Medal 1914-18; G.B., Distinguished Conduct Medal, G.V.R., unnamed as awarded to foreign nationals, the medals with photograph and documents in glass-fronted, wooded framed case, generally good very fine (5) £600-800 Sold with a photograph of the recipient in uniform; ‘Ordre General No.7’ from the Grand Quartier General des Armees du Nord et du Nord-Est, dated 1 March 1917, confirming the award of the British D.C.M. and French Croix de Guerre to Marechal-des-Logis Alphonse Gustave Fockaday, of the 19e Escadron du Train; identification card with photograph confirming Fockaday as an interpreter; a telegram to Fockaday at 12 Rue Lauriston, Paris, from the Queen’s Private Secretary, thanking him for his kind message of sympathy. These documents in display case with medals; also with photocopies of the same. £600-£800

Lot 1452

A Great War ‘Western Front’ D.C.M. awarded to Squadron Sergeant-Major F. W. Peacock, Northumberland Hussars distinguished Conduct Medal, G.V.R. (H270016 S.S. Mjr., 1/1 North’d. Hrs.) good very fine, rare £1000-1200 D.C.M. London Gazette 3 September 1918. ‘For conspicuous gallantry and devotion to duty when in charge of ‘B’ Squadron dismounted Hotchkiss gun teams. Although their flanks were turned, he fought these guns with splendid courage and coolness, doing great execution until they were all knocked out. He then kept the teams firing with their rifles until the last possible moment’. m.I.D. London Gazette 15 May 1917. private F. W. Peacock, Northumberland Hussars, came from Sunderland, and entered the France/Flanders theatre of war on 5 October 1914. Later promoted to Squadron Sergeant-Major, by the end of the war he was the senior Warrant Officer of the regiment. The regimental history ‘adds flesh’ to his D.C.M. winning action, recording, ‘S.S.M. Peacock was in charge of ‘B’ Squadron, dismounted Hotchkiss gun-teams from March 21 (1918) onwards, on the Croizat Canal, between Jussy and Liez. These guns did great execution on the 22nd, and fought, though their flanks were turned, until the guns were knocked out. The men were kept in hand by this Warrant Officer, and then fought with rifles, with the nearest unit, until they came into Noyon on the 24th. S.S.M. Peacock himself, by personally keeping in touch with the teams, all the time showed remarkable coolness and bravery, having to be continually moving through severe enemy fire of all sorts’. Squadron Sergeant-Major Peacock was presented with the D.C.M. ribbon on 4 May 1918 at Cocquerel. one of only 12 Great War D.C.M’s. to the regiment. sold with Northumberland Hussars cap badge and copied research. £1000-£1200

Lot 1453

A fine Great War ‘Aveluy Wood’ D.C.M. awarded to Private A. H. Bird, Lancashire Fusiliers distinguished Conduct Medal, G.V.R. (31363 Pte., 18/Lan. Fus.) good very fine £700-900 D.C.M. London Gazette 30 October 1918. ‘For conspicuous gallantry and devotion to duty. He attacked and captured an enemy machine-gun single-handed, killing the team. He then endeavoured to gain touch with the left and killed several of the enemy he met. He destroyed a trench mortar with a bomb, and all through the action he showed fine courage and determination, and was of the greatest assistance to his officers’. albert H. Bird entered the Army as Private 7956 in the R.A.V.C. but later transferred to the 18th (Bantum’s) Battalion Lancashire Fusiliers, entering the France/Flanders theatre of war on 22 May 1915. Bird was awarded the D.C.M. for his distinguished service in the attack on Aveluy Wood, 1 June 1918. In the action the battalion suffered 2 officers and 18 other ranks killed, 7 officers and 144 other ranks wounded and 1 officer and 48 other ranks missing; and in the process gained three M.C’s. and two bars, one D.C.M. (Bird) and 10 M.M’s. sold with copied m.i.c., war diary extracts, regimental history extracts and other research. £700-£900

Lot 1454

A Great War D.C.M. awarded to Acting Company Sergeant-Major W. T. Palmer, East Surrey Regiment distinguished Conduct Medal, G.V.R. (59 A.C.S. Mjr., 7/E. Surr. R.), with replacement fixed straight bar suspension, slight edge bruising, very fine £300-400 D.C.M. London Gazette 15 April 1916. ‘For gallantry and devotion to duty. In a mine explosion he, with three other men, continued bombing and firing till forced back. On a counter-attack being made he rendered material assistance’. william T. Palmer, East Surrey Regiment, entered the France/Flanders theatre of war on 1 June 1915. He later served in the Labour Corps. £300-£400

Lot 1456

A Great War replacement D.C.M. awarded to Gunner R. Murphy, Royal Garrison Artillery distinguished Conduct Medal, G.V.R. (32403 Gnr., R.G.A. (Triplicate)), a late ‘triplicate’ issue, nearly extremely fine £200-300 D.C.M. London Gazette 14 January and 11 March 1916. ‘For conspicuous gallantry and devotion to duty when he advanced with the infantry under heavy fire and constantly repaired telephone wires’. £200-£300

Lot 1459

A rare Great War D.S.M. group of four awarded to 2nd Lieutenant C. H. Potts, Royal Air Force, late Royal Naval Air Service distinguished Service Medal, G.V.R. (M. 1008 C. H. Potts, C.P.O. Mech., R.N.A.S. Dover Patrol 1916-7); 1914-15 Star (M. 1008 C.P.O. 1, R.N.A.S.); British War and Victory Medals (2 Lieut., R.A.F.), the first with officially re-impressed naming, good very fine (4) £1500-1700 d.S.M. London Gazette 12 May 1917. The recommendation states: ‘A conspicuous and reliable Chief Petty Officer. He has invented and produced an automatic carburettor which has been fitted to all Clergent engines in the Dunkirk Command.’ Charles Harold Potts was born in Cambridge in March 1888 and entered the Royal Navy as an Acting Electrician 4th Class in May 1909. He subsequently served in H.M.S. Hermes in 1913, in which year Commander C. R. Samson tested a new aeroplane fitted with folding wings, which was launched from a special platform built over the bows of that ship, and by the outbreak of hostilities in August 1914 he had attained the rank of Chief Petty Officer Mechanic in the fledgling Royal Naval Air Service. entering the French theatre of war in June 1915, he was decorated for the above cited achievements at Dunkirk, and was advanced to Warrant Officer in July 1917. He went on to serve in No. 5 Squadron, 5 Wing, R.N.A.S., which unit was operating out of Condekerque on day bombing duties in D.H. 4s, a unit which was subsequently designated No. 205 Squadron on the formation of the Royal Air Force in April 1918 - see Bomber Pilot 1916-1918, by Squadron Leader C. P. O. Bartlett, D.S.C., for full details of No. 5’s operations and several references to Potts. The latter returned to the U.K. that July as a newly commissioned 2nd Lieutenant and was finally placed on the Retired List in 1930. He is believed to have died in Wandsworth, London in late 1968. £1500-£1700

Lot 1461

A Great War D.S.M. group of three awarded to Chief Petty Officer L. J. Hofgartner, Royal Navy distinguished Service Medal, G.V.R. (178122 P.O. Atlantic Ocean 30th July 1917), attempted erasure of name; Victory Medal 1914-19 (178122 Act. C.P.O., R.N.); Royal Navy L.S. & G.C., G.V.R., 1st issue (178122 P.O., H.M.S. Hindustan); together with an unnamed British War Medal 1914-20, nearly very fine and better (4) £600-800 d.S.M. London Gazette 2 November 1917. ‘... for actions against enemy submarines’. lorenz John HÅ¡fgartner was born in London on 13 October 1878. He entered the Royal Navy as a Boy 2nd Class on 31 January 1894, being advanced to a Boy 1st Class in January 1895. Promoted to Ordinary Seaman whilst on the Royal Oak in October 1896; Able Seaman when on the Prince George in December 1897, and Leading Seaman on the Duke of Wellington in January 1903, he became a Petty Officer 2nd Class on Boscawen II in October 1904 and Petty Officer 1st Class on the Hindustan in July 1910. with the onset of war he was based at Attentive II (Dover), serving aboard the destroyer Flirt until December 1914. Based at Cormorant (Gibraltar) from March 1915, he served aboard the torpedo boat No.90, April 1915-May 1918. He was awarded the D.S.M. for his services aboard T.B.No.90 on 30 July 1917. The torpedo boat was on patrol west of Cape Spartal when she observed that the S.S. Ganges had been hit by a torpedo. Proceeding to her assistance she sighted a submarine. The submarine dived and the T.B. passed over her dropping a depth charge. Two further passes were made and a mass of bubbles and oil were seen on the surface. As bubbles were still coming up from the spot the following evening, it was deemed probable that the submarine had been sunk. hÅ¡fgartner attained the rank of Chief Petty Officer in September 1918 whilst on the Nimrod. Sold with copied service papers, Admiralty report of the sinking and a postcard featuring a torpedo boat. £600-£800

Lot 1462

A good Second World War anti-U-boat operations D.S.M. group of seven awarded to Leading Seaman Matthew Lee, Royal Navy, for the destruction by H.M.S. Swale of the U-657 in May 1943 distinguished Service Medal, G.VI.R. (JX. 276715 M. Lee, A.B.); 1939-45 Star; Atlantic Star; Africa Star, clasp, North Africa 1942-43; Burma Star; Defence and War Medals, with original card forwarding box and Admiralty issuance slip for the campaign awards, good very fine and better (7) £1200-1400 d.S.M. London Gazette 7 September 1943: ‘For gallantry, skill and devotion to duty in actions against enemy submarines’. the original recommendation states: ‘This rating was the Asdic Operator who first gained contact with the U-Boat. His coolness and efficient operating during action resulted in the destruction of the U-Boat.’ Matthew Lee was born at Browney Colliery, Durham in November 1920 and entered the Royal Navy in July 1941. Posted to Osprey at Portland for training as an Asdic Operator that November, he joined the frigate H.M.S. Swale in June 1942, aboard which ship he was quickly employed off North Africa. But it was as a result of that ship’s subsequent convoy escort work in the Battle of the Atlantic that Lee won his D.S.M., namely on 17 May 1943, when, in response to the torpedoing of the S.S. Aymeric, Swale located and sunk by depth-charge the U-657 - there were no survivors. lee, who had already survived SC. 122 / HX. 229 in March 1943, one of the hardest fought of Atlantic convoys in which 22 ships were lost, went on to guide Swale in further noteworthy attacks, not least that leading to the destruction of the U-302 on 6 April 1944 - having just torpedoed two Norwegian merchantmen, Kapitain Herbert Sickel and his entire crew were lost to a devastating depth-charge and hedgehog attack delivered by Swale. latterly employed in the East Indies, Lee departed Swale as a Leading Seaman in August 1945 and was released from the service in April 1946. sold with a quantity of original documentation, including Admiralty letter of notification for the recipient’s D.S.M., dated 9 September 1943, and related Buckingham Palace forwarding letter; his Certificate of Service; a writing pad with his pencilled account of his journey back to the U.K. from the Indian Ocean in December 1945; and several wartime photographs and newspaper cuttings, one of the latter recounting the story of Swale’s rescue of the badly damaged Port Fairy. £1200-£1400

Lot 1463

A fine Second World War D.S.M. group of five awarded to Able Seaman H. L. Bray, Royal Navy, a long served member of Coastal Forces who was decorated for his gallant work as an M.T.B. twin-Oerlikon gunlayer in a firefight with E-Boats in January 1945 distinguished Service Medal, G.VI.R. (A.B. H. L. Bray, P/JX. 314097); 1939-45 Star; Atlantic Star; Defence and War Medals, the first with one or two edge bruises and surface scratches, otherwise good very fine or better (5) £1200-1500 D.S.M. London Gazette 24 April 1945: ‘For leadership, daring and resource whilst serving in Light Coastal Forces, in successfully repelling an attack on a convoy by E-Boats.’ The original recommendation states: ‘This rating was twin-Oerlikon gunlayer on M.T.B. 446 during an action with E-Boats on the night of 22 January 1945. His fire was accurate and well controlled and he scored repeated hits on one of the E-Boats. His bearing throughout the action in the face of heavy return fire was cool and courageous. Able Seaman Bray has served in Motor Gun Boats and Motor Torpedo Boats for two and a half years, taking part in numerous actions against the enemy. At all times his conduct has been exemplary and his gunlaying of the highest order.’ Hammond Leslie Bray, a native of Bilston, Staffordshire, was one of three crew members of M.T.B. 446 to be honoured for the above cited action off the Thames Estuary, the other two, both ratings, being awarded ‘mentions’. That evening, three groups of E-Boats set out to attack our convoys, one of them being engaged by M.T.Bs of the 35th Flotilla near Tongue Sand - a confused action ensued in which one enemy boat, S-119, was sunk, most probably as a result of a collision. sold with a portrait photograph of him, the reverse captioned, ‘Wolverhampton, wounded.’ £1200-£1500

Lot 1464

A rare Second World War D.S.M. awarded to Leading Airman F. R. R. Lowe, Fleet Air Arm, who was killed in the Western Desert in July 1942 distinguished Service Medal, G.VI.R. (FX. 79410 F. R. R. Lowe, L. Airmn.), number and initials officially corrected, otherwise extremely fine £3000-3500 D.S.M. London Gazette 11 June 1942. frederick Ronald Rhodes Lowe, a native of Mansfield, Nottinghamshire, attended No. 11B Telegraphist Air Gunners’ Course at Worthy Down between August 1939 and January 1940, following which he joined No. 826 Squadron, Fleet Air Arm, and would quickly have seen action in the Dunkirk operations, when the Squadron’s Albacores operated out of Detling. So, too, over the coming months, operating out of Bircham Newton under R.A.F. Coastal Command. In fact, between June and November 1940, 826 carried out 22 night attacks against coastal targets in Belgium, France and Holland, dropping seven tons of mines and 56 tons of bombs, in addition to escorting 92 convoys. And it was on one of these bombing missions, against invasion barges off Calais, on 11 September 1940, in Albacore L-7097, that Lowe fought off an attack by 109s - nonetheless, his pilot, Sub. Lieutenant A. H. Blacow was injured and their aircraft severely damaged. embarked for the Mediterranean in H.M.S. Formidable in November 1940, 826’s aircrew remained actively employed in shipborne operations in that theatre of war until coming ashore in the summer of 1941, a period encompassing anti-submarine patrols and bombardment spotting, in addition to a torpedo attack in the Battle of Matapan at the end of March, and a bombing raid on Scarpanto airfield during the evacuation of Crete in May. Once ashore, initially based in the Eastern Mediterranean, but later in the Western Desert, operations continued apace, successful flare-illumination co-operation work with the 7th Cruiser Squadron leading to 826 carrying out similar duties for the Army and the Desert Air Force, more often than not on the El Alamein front - in the four months leading up to that famous battle, 826 dropped 12,000 flares, in addition to carrying out regular bombing strikes against enemy troops and shipping. The Squadron’s war diary also refers to the occasional ‘special mission’, such as that flown by nine Albacores on the night of 9-10 July, a mission 250 miles behind enemy lines to salt flats south of Sidi Barrani, where, refuelled by Bombay transport aircraft, they went on to deliver an attack on an enemy convoy approaching Tobruk. sadly, on the night of 23-24 July 1942, operating out of Grebe, the Naval Air Station at Dekheila, near Alexandria, in Albacore X-9256, Lowe was killed in action in a strike against landing grounds at Daba, so, too, his fellow crew, Sub. Lieutenants J. D. Nunnerley and M. G. A. Whittle. Aged 21 years, Lowe was buried in El Alamein War Cemetery. £3000-£3500

Lot 1465

A Great War M.M. and Bar group of five awarded to Private James Christie, Gordon Highlanders military Medal, G.V.R., with Second Award Bar (9986 Pte., 2/Gord. Hdrs.); 1914 Star, with clasp (9986 Pte., 2/Gord. Highrs.); British War and Victory Medals, small M.I.D. oakleaf (9986 Pte., Gordons); Army L.S. & G.C., G.V.R., 1st issue (2865088 Pte. (M.M.) Gordons), mounted as worn, very fine and better (5) £1200-1400 m.M. London Gazette 14 December 1916. bar to M.M. London Gazette 18 July 1917. m.I.D. London Gazette 17 February 1915. private James Christie, 2nd Battalion Gordon Highlanders, entered the France/Flanders theatre of war on 7 October 1914, being employed as batman to Captain James Burnett. The battalion was soon in action. On 29 October, during the 1st Battle of Ypres, Captain Burnett was severely wounded whilst leading his company in a counter-attack near Ghevulet. His batman, Private Christie carried him to safety. An account of the action was given by a fellow ‘Gordon’: ‘After the successful counter-attack the battalion retired to their own lines, by which time night had fallen. At this point James Christie realized Captain Burnett was missing. Private Christie made his way back across the battlefield to the point he last saw his company commander, James Christie had covered almost three-quarters of a mile and was within a stone-throw of the German trenches when he found the wounded officer. Capt. Burnett spotted a figure on the skyline and hoping it was a friend he sounded a distinctive call on his whistle. Private Christie had promptly responded when they came under fire from the German trenches. Heaving the wounded officer on to his back, Private Christie returned to the British trenches, still under fire’. for his actions, Christie was subsequently mentioned in despatches and awarded the Military Medal. He remained with Captain Burnett for the remainder of the war, later winning a bar to his Military Medal. After the war he continued as Burnett’s chauffeur until the 1930’s. He later lived on the Crathes Castle Estate and died on 14 December 1852. captain Burnett was later Major-General Sir James Burnett, C.B., C.M.G., D.S.O., 25th Laird of Leys and 13th Baronet. sold with a quantity of copied research on both Christie and Burnett. Also two copied photographs of the recipient. £1200-£1400

Lot 1466

A fascinating Great War ‘Western Front’ M.M. and bar group of four awarded to Serjeant Irvin Hullah, Royal Field Artillery, killed in action 4 April 1918 military Medal, G.V.R., with Second Award Bar (62495 Sjt., 53/By. R.F.A.); 1914 Star (62495 Bmbr., R.F.A.); British War and Victory Medals (62495 Sjt., R.A.); Brighouse Tribute Medal (Sergt. I. Hullah. M.M., 62495, R.F.A.), complete with embroidered ribbon and ‘Victory’ top bar; Memorial Plaque (Irvin Hullah) extremely fine (6) £1000-1400 m.M. London Gazette 27 October 1916. bar to M.M. London Gazette 18 July 1917. irvin Hullah was born on 16 May 1892 at Lyagate Hipperholme, Brighouse, Yorkshire, the son of James and Emma Hullah. In March 1900, Emma Hullah, nee Martin, married Benjamin Hollings at Halifax Parish Church; the family then went to live at St. Sampsons, Guernsey. Irvin Hullah enlisted into the Army at Bradford and served with the Royal Field Artillery. As a Bombardier serving with the R.F.A. he entered the France/Flanders theatre of war on ............. Serving with the the 53rd Battery R.F.A. he was awarded the Military Medal and Bar for his several acts of bravery. Two handwritten reports provide the details: ‘(62495 Cpl. Hullah, 53 Battery R.F.A.) Your Commanding Officer and Brigade Commander have informed me that you distinguished yourself on (2nd and 20th August 1915) near (at Hooge). I have read this report with much pleasure. [Signed] Major-General Commanding 6th Division, British Army in the Field, 5th October 1915’. ‘62495 Sgt. Irvin Hullah, 53rd Battery R.F.A. Your Commanding Officer and Brigade Commander have informed me that you distinguished yourself by your great gallantry on 18/5/17 at ______ when under very heavy fire, you endeavoured to rescue two men from a dugout which had been destroyed by an 8 inch shell. I have read this report with much pleasure. C. Ross Major-General Commanding 6th Division’. shortly after, on 17 June 1917, Sergeant Hullah was wounded but was able to rejoin his unit on 17 July and was on home leave in October. He was killed in action whilst serving with ‘C’ Battery, 107th Brigade, on 4 April 1918, aged 25 years. A letter to his mother written by Battery Quartermaster Serjeant Brooks, dated, 4 July 1918, gave the circumstances of his death: ‘........ I have obtained the following particulars from a fellow Sgt. who was in action at the time. On the morning of the 4th April, he was just behind his gun talking to our late Commanding Officer, Major J. R. Grieve, M.C., when a shell came over and struck both. A piece struck Irvin in the head and it is one consolation to know that death was practically instantaneous. He & I were chums, and in him I lost a companion who possessed and displayed the best virtues of manhood.....’ Major Grieve and Serjeant Hullah were buried where they fell near the Bois de Senecat (?), not far from the village of Hailles, 10 miles S.W. from Amiens. Both bodies were later removed to adjacent graves at the Moreuil Communal Cemetery Allied Extension, in the Avre Valley to the S.E. of Amiens. His name was also recorded on the Brighouse War Memorial. His Military Medal and Bar was presented to his mother, Mrs Emma Hollings, by the Lieutenant Governor and G.O.C. Guernsey at a public parade at the Fort Field, Guernsey, on 26 February 1919. sold with an array of original documents and letters, including: the recipient’s Birth Certificate; handwritten reports from the G.O.C. 6th Division, on two postcards, providing details of his M.M. actions; Army B.104 Forms (3) reporting his wounding, his return to duty, and his death in action; 1914 Star and British War Medal forwarding slips addressed to ‘Mrs E. Hollings, Rocq Rd., St. Sampsons, Guernsey’; Commemorative Scroll; Memorial Plaque enclosure; two letters to his mother from B.Q.M.S. Brooks concerning her son’s death, dated 6 May 1918 & 4 July 1918 (both damaged); a letter from Army H.Q. Guernsey to Mrs Hollings giving the place, date and time of the presentation of her son’s M.M. and Bar; a letter from the Rev. E. S. Merriman, attached 107th Brigade H.Q., R.F.A. concerning his grave, dated 14 March 1919; a letter from the next-of-kin of Major Grieve concerning the graves of Major Grieve and Serjeant Hullah. also with a letter to his mother from his fiance, Jane Ruckin, of 17 Vale Road, Brighouse, dated 2 October 1918, giving poignant details of his last home leave: ‘I feel that I must write a few lines .... Poor Boy, it will be just a year on Saturday since he came on leave .... One morning he said to me, ‘You know Janie, I am afraid Mother will be hurt because I have not spent my leave with her, what do you think I should have done?’ I told him that I thought until one was married, ‘Mothers’, should come first. He answered, ‘Yes, but I am thinking of my future, I shall want a home & a wife when the war is over’. Poor Boy, he was sure of his Mother’s love & he wanted to make sure of the other. But it was not to be, God has taken him to a Brighter Home. ....’ £1000-£1400

Lot 1467

A rare Great War M.M. and Bar group of four awarded to Leading Seaman William Thewlis, Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve and Hawke Battalion, Royal Naval Division, who was twice severely wounded military Medal, G.V.R., with Second Award Bar (TZ-5052 A.B.-H.G. W. Thewlis, Hawke Bn., R.N.V.R.); 1914-15 Star (T.Z. 5052 A.B., R.N.V.R.); British War and Victory Medals (T.Z. 5052 L.S., R.N.V.R.), very fine and better (4) £2000-2500 m.M. London Gazette 11 February 1919. bar to M.M. London Gazette 20 August 1919. william Thewlis, a native of Chirton, North Shields, was born in January 1895 and worked as a miner with the Preston Coal Company prior to enlisting in the Tyneside Division, Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve, in June 1915 - aged 20 years, he stood at just five feet, three and a half inches tall. posted to Hawke Battalion, Royal Naval Division, in December 1915, which unit he joined out in Imbros in the New Year, he was re-embarked for France in May 1916 and wounded in action on 13 November of the same year. Treated at No. 3 Canadian General Hospital in Boulogne for a gunshot wound to his left shoulder, Thewlis was invalided home in the hospital ship St. Denis and did not rejoin his battalion out in France until May 1917. again severely wounded during a gas attack in March 1918, he was invalided home to the Admiralty Edinburgh War Hospital at Bangour, West Lothian. Here, however, he was quickly discharged, pressure from the German Spring Offensive having taken its toll, but an endeavour to get him quickly back in the Field failed, his records noting that he was again invalided from France in May. Finally, at the end of August, he rejoined the Hawke Battalion proper and was advanced to Able Seaman (H.G.) in the following month. A few days later he received confirmation that he had been awarded the M.M., by Routine Order dated 24 September 1918, an award no doubt reflecting his gallant services earlier in the year, when he was wounded. further advanced to Leading Seaman, Thewlis was awarded a Bar to his M.M. in Routine Orders dated 15 January 1919, and just three weeks later he was re-embarked for England, where he was demobilised at Ripon. £2000-£2500

Lot 1468

A Great War ‘Western Front’ M.M. and Bar group of three awarded to Private W. H. Lewis, Royal Welsh Fusiliers military Medal, G.V.R., with Second Award Bar (4353 Pte., 9/R. W. Fus.); British War and Victory Medals (4353 Pte., R. W. Fus.) first with signs of brooch mounting to obv., suspension refitted, slight edge bruising, very fine (3) £550-650 M.M. London Gazette 2 November 1917. bar to M.M. London Gazette 29 August 1918. private W. H. Lewis, 9th Battalion Royal Welsh Fusiliers, was born in Newport. In action in France, he was awarded the M.M. on 4 September 1917 for his bravery when he was wounded in action (possibly in the attack of 31 August 1917?). He was subsequently awarded a bar to the M.M. for a later action in France. Sold with some copied research. £550-£650

Lot 1469

A Great War M.M. and Bar awarded to Gunner A. Bicknell, Royal Field Artillery, killed in action, 5 September 1918 military Medal, G.V.R., with Second Award Bar (95153 Gnr., D.63/Bde. R.F.A.) nearly extremely fine £400-500 M.M. London Gazette 19 February 1917. bar to M.M. London Gazette 10 March 1918. alfred Bicknell was born in Fulham and enlisted at London. Serving as a Corporal with ‘D’ Battery, 63rd Brigade Royal Field Artillery, he was killed in action on 5 September 1918. He was buried in the Combles Communal Cemetery Extension. He was the son of Mrs Alice Sarah Chapman of 461 North End Road, Fulham. £400-£500

Lot 1470

A Great War ‘Western Front’ M.M., Second World War ‘Home Guard’ B.E.M. group of six awarded to Sergeant W. G. Strong, Kent Home Guard, late Scottish Rifles military Medal, G.V.R. (19770 Pte., 9/Sco. Rifles); British Empire Medal, (Military) G.VI.R., 1st issue (Sgt., H.G.); 1914-15 Star (19770 Pte., Sco. Rif.); British War and Victory Medals (19770 L. Cpl., M.M., Sco. Rif.), these three late issues; Defence, unnamed; Silver War Badge (433994), lacking pin fitting, nearly extremely fine (10) £500-600

Lot 1471

A Great War M.M. group of four awarded to Private C. G. Pearce, 1st Battalion, Scots Guards military Medal, G.V.R. (6172 A. L. Cpl., 1/S. Gds.); 1914 Star, with copy clasp (6172 Pte., S. Gds.); British War and Victory Medals (6172 Pte., S. Gds.) minor edge bruise to first, otherwise generally very fine or better (4) £400-500 M.M. London Gazette 14 January 1918. sold with copy m.i.c. confirming that he first served in the French theatre of war from 13 August 1914. £400-£500

Lot 1472

A Great War ‘Western Front’ M.M. group of four awarded to Serjeant E. J. Westbrook, Middlesex Regiment military Medal, G.V.R. (7792 Cpl., 4/Middx. R.); 1914 Star (L-7792 Pte., 4/Midd’x. R.), rosette on ribbon; British War and Victory Medals (L-7792 Pte., Midd’x. R.), on the ‘Victory’ the rank has been erased and privately engraved, ‘Sjt.’, contact marks, nearly very fine (4) £380-420 M.M. London Gazette 23 August 1916. £380-£420

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