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A POOLE POTTERY STONEWARE MODEL OF A SEATED CAT BY BARBARA LINLEY ADAMS, impressed Poole mark and incised signature to the base, approximately 18.5cm high, together with a Poole Pottery stoneware model of an Owl by the same hand, marks and signature to base, approximately 17cm high, with a Poole Pottery pin dish in the Delphis pattern (3) (condition: no obvious damage or restoration)
Twelve Poole Pottery Medieval Calendar Plates, designed by Tony Morris, 1975 Issue,January 483/100, Feb 385/1000, March 182/1000, April 24/1000, May 219/1000, June 877/1000, July 257/1000, August 905/1000, September 4/1000, October 3/1000, November 47/1000, December 38/1000. Most are boxed with certificates. (good condition)
*An Interesting Great War ‘Yeomanry’ Officer Casualty Trio and Memorial Plaque awarded to Second Lieutenant Neville Evelyn Northover, Wiltshire Regiment, late Grantham Troop, Lincolnshire Yeomanry. Having survived the U-Boat attack upon the S.S. Mercian en route to Egypt, he was later promoted from the ranks and killed in action on 4 September 1918 near Kemmel, Ypres while attached to the 15th (Hampshire Yeomanry) Battalion, Hampshire Regiment, comprising: 1914-15 Star (1467. Pte. N. Northover. Linc. Yeo.); British War and Victory Medals (2. Lieut. N. E. Northover.); Memorial Plaque (Neville Evelyn Northover); Medals swing-mounted on card, toned, extremely fine (4) Second Lieutenant Neville Evelyn Northover was born c.1892 in Poole, Dorset, the son of Edward and Henrietta Northover, of Southsea, Hampshire. Online research from an excellent local interest website for Hough on the Hill, Lincs, suggests that in 1911 he was a ‘farm pupil’ with Thomas & Mary Lord at Eastern House, Hough. He played cricket for Hough, and in 1914 he was living in Honington. Upon the outbreak of war in August 1914 he attested for service as a Trooper with the Grantham troop of the Lincolnshire Yeomanry, and in 1915 he was sent to Egypt aboard the S.S. Mercian. This vessel was attacked by a U-Boat on 3 November 1915, during which time its soldiers exchanged gunfire during a sustained attack and chase by the enemy, managing to reach safety in Oran despite taking casualties and damage aboard the ship. Seeing service in Egypt and Palestine, Private Northover was commissioned from the ranks, and made Second Lieutenant in the Wiltshire Regiment (his father was from Tisbury, Wiltshire). He was later attached to the 15th (Yeomanry Battalion), Hampshire Regiment, and was killed in action on 4 September, 1918, where the Hampshire Yeomanry was detailed to attack German trenches near Kemmel. Troops were gathered at 4am for an attack upon a light railway to the west of Bois Quarante. A misplaced artillery barrage resulted in the men being met by a hail of machine gun and sniper fire, causing heavy casualties. Although they failed to hold their second objective in the face of a German counterattack, they did manage to secure the light railway. In total, the battalion lost 8 officers and 90 men killed or missing in this attack, with a further 6 officers and 220 wounded, some of whom had been gassed. Neville Northover was buried at Voormezeele, near Ypres. Offered with copied research from the aforementioned website (as used in this write up), and other related research.

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46745 item(s)/page