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THEATER-MADE METAL PLANE MODELSLot of four theater-made models of U.S. Navy carrier fighter planes, each with wing spans about 4-5". Three of the four are apparently made of cast aircraft aluminum. Some damage, esp. broken props. Exhibition History: U.S. Naval War College Museum "Trench Art" & Naval Scrimshaw", 1990; Intrepid Sea Air Space Museum, 1995-2007. Provenance: The War Museum, New York.
WW2 British RAF War Service (BD) Blouse. Size 11 dated 1944. All original insignia: medal ribbons, albatros, LAC props and Good Conduct stripe. Along with an RAF Field Service cap complete with badge. This group belonged to 1440725 LAC Ralph William Bishop, formerly of 255 and 31 Merchant Shipping Fighter Unit. He served on Arctic Convoys, "Camship" Empire Lawrence, Java, NW Frontier, Burma, and Singapore.
Peadar Kearney 'The Soldier's Song' First Edition Music by Pádraig O' hAonaigh, arranged by Cathal MacDubhgall. 12¼ x 9¼in. (31.12 x 23½cm) Peadar Kearney worked first as a labourer in Dublin, where he was born and educated. In 1911 he got a job at The Abbey Theatre as a props man where he met Patrick Heeney who helped him score The Soldier’s Song which he had composed in 1909-1910. He joined the Irish Republican Brotherhood in early 1903, and became a member of its Supreme Council. He was a founder member of the Irish Volunteers. The Soldier’s Song quickly became the Volunteers’ most popular marching song and was widely published. It was sung in the GPO during the Rising. In the 1916 Rising Peadar Kearney fought under Thomas MacDonagh at Jacob’s biscuit factory in Bishop Street. He evaded capture after the Rising was put down but was arrested during the War of Independence and interned at Ballykinlar Camp in County Down in 1920-21.Published by Whelan and Son, Dublin, 1916. Composed as a marching song for the Irish Volunteers, The Soldier's Song" was adopted as the Irish National Anthem in 1926.

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