Indian Title Badge, G.V.R., Khan Sahib, silver and enamel, the reverse engraved ‘Bakshi Ghazanfar Ali’, very fine £60-£80 --- Awarded 2 January 1911. Bakshi Ghazanfar Ali, Extra Assistant Settlement Officer in the Punjab: ‘Bakshi Ghazanfar Ali did good work as Extra Assistant Colonization Officer in Lyallpur, and was appointed Extra Asssitant Officer of the Ludhiana Settlement when it was started in 1908. The Settlement Commissioner reports that Ghazanfar Ali has done exceedingly well and that it is due to his loyal co-operation that the Settlement Officer has been able to complete the revision of maps and records quicker than has ever been done in any settlement.’
We found 2720569 price guide item(s) matching your search
There are 2720569 lots that match your search criteria. Subscribe now to get instant access to the full price guide service.
Click here to subscribe- List
- Grid
-
2720569 item(s)/page
Rifle Brigade Officer’s Shoulder Belt Plate A good example, on a silver plate within a laurel wreath with battle honours, the last being ‘Relief of Ladysmith’, surmounted by a King’s Crown resting on a blank tablet, a Maltese cross, ball finials to the points, lions between the arms. To the centre, within a circlet inscribed ‘Rifle Brigade’, a crowned strung bugle. Mounted on the base of the wreath, a scroll inscribed ‘The Prince Consort’s Own’, with four silver screw posts and two nuts to reverse, complete with backing plate, with hallmarks ‘J & Co, Birmingham, 1914’ on both front and back plates, excellent condition £140-£180
A Great War Army Service Corps Cuff Rank Tunic. A very good four pocket example, ranked to a Captain, missing its collar insignia, complete with all buttons and two year blue overseas service stripes, with metal fastener and belt supports, leather trim to cuffs, visible between the reverse of the tunic below the neck between the shoulder blades where previously a large red horse shoe divisional insignia was originally sewn, with maker’s label ‘Daniels & Sons, 8 Grand Parade, Military Tailors, Cork’,with pen markings ‘LEA, 7179, ASC’, attributed to Captain Archibald Raby Riley, Army Service Corps, who served on the Western Front with the 37th Division from 10 October 1916, relinquishing his commission on 19 March 1919 and was awarded a Silver War Badge, issued on 12 April 1919, very good condition £300-£400 --- Sold together with copied medal roll extract and copied Medal Index Card, showing that the British War and Victory Medals were dispatched to Captain Riley, formerly of Gort-More, Dartry Road, Dublin, to the Royal Bank, Cornmarket, Dublin.
A scarce Japanese POW Medical Officer’s Order of Saint John and M.I.D. group of seven awarded to Colonel Horace Claude ‘Hot ‘n’ Cold’ Benson, a senior British Medical Officer on the Burma-Siam Railway, of “Bridge on the River Kwai” infamy; after the war he was a witness for the prosecution at the trial of Major Kudo, 19th Ambulance Corps for War Crimes The Order of St. John of Jerusalem, Officer (Brother’s) breast badge, silver and enamel; 1939-45 Star; Pacific Star; Defence and War Medals 1939-45, with M.I.D. oak leaf; Coronation 1953; Service Medal of the Order of St John, silvered base metal (D/Sgn H. C. Benson. York) mounted as worn, pin lacking, good very fine (7) £600-£800 --- Importation Duty This lot is subject to importation duty of 5% on the hammer price unless exported outside the UK --- --- Order of St. John London Gazette 9 July 1957. M.I.D. London Gazette 12 September 1946. ‘In recognition of gallant and distinguished services while Prisoners of War’. Horace Claude Benson was born on 11 May 1902, at Ashover, Derbyshire, and educated at Sedburgh School. At Edinburgh University he studied medicine and gained the M.B. and Ch.B. (1928). He was employed as a Clinical Assistant at the Ear and Throat Department of the Royal Infirmary, Edinburgh, prior to being granted a commission in the Army. He became a Lieutenant in the Royal Army Medical Corps in 1929, served in Egypt during 1931-36, was promoted to the rank of Captain in 1932 and Major in 1939, being posted to India. He was commanding officer of the 27th Indian Field Ambulance, 9th Indian Division, 1941-42, being promoted Acting Lieutenant-Colonel in February 1941 and Temporary Lieutenant-Colonel in May 1941. Benson was present at the fall of Malaya, was captured and remained a prisoner-of-war of the Japanese during 1942-45. Whilst in captivity, he was Senior British Officer of ‘L’ Force - a medical force of 15 officers and 100 medical orderlies. Initially held at Changi P.O.W. Camp, Singapore; thence from 23 August 1943, by train to Kanburi (Kanchanabri) Thailand to administer relief from cholera and other multifarious diseases rife in the P.O.W. and coolie forced labour camps, situated along the Burma-Siam Railway. After the war and his subsequent repatriation, Colonel Benson gave a report of his wartime experiences as a captive: ‘Beatings with fists or bamboo sticks, on the face and head, of MOs (Medical Orderlies) and ORs by Japanese medical personnel of Kudo Batai (19th Ambulance Corps commanded by Major Kudo) was fairly frequent, and often done for no apparent offence. These beatings were committed by most of the Japanese from the lowest rank up to even Major Kudo himself.... My complaints generally had a temporary successful effect, but it was quite apparent that Major Kudo encouraged his subordinates. The biggest beating up that I had was from Major Kudo because the ORs were having a singsong one night. However when he afterwards apologised I asked for a pig for Christmas Dinner and got it. Our experience was that we received worse treatment from Japanese medical personnel than we did from non-medical personnel and Koreans’. Following the Japanese surrender, Major Kudo was subsequently arrested for war crimes. As a witness for the prosecution at Kudo’s trial, Colonel Benson submitted an affidavit in 1946 that he had witnessed the death of some 25 recaptured coolies, who were imprisoned in a hut near to the Kanburi Hospital. ‘They were then given an injection of some reddish fluid. They all died in agony and showed symptoms consistent with mercurial poisoning’. For his splendid efforts as British Officer Commanding at Kanchanabri Hospital, Benson was mentioned in despatches and in June 1946 was promoted to Lieutenant-Colonel. He was appointed C.O. of 109 Military Convalescent Hospital in 1946 and Chief Instructor Training Wing Depot and Training Establishment R.A.M.C., 1947-50. He was then posted as C.O. of the British Military Hospital in Malta, 1950-51. Promoted Temporary Colonel in August 1952, he attained the rank of Colonel in January 1953 and was appointed Assistant Medical Director, H.Q. North-West District, 1953-54 and Commandant of the Depot and Training Establishment R.A.M.C., 1954-58. He was President of the Standing Medical Board, Northern Command, York, 1958-59 and placed on Retirement Pay in 1959. Colonel Benson died on 13 March 1986. Sold with a folder of copied service papers and other research including his thirteen page close typed “Report on History of “L” Force P.O.W. Thailand”, relevant copies from “The Knights of Bushido, A Short History of Japanese War Crimes” by Lord Russell of Liverpool, which in the chapter ‘Life and Death on Burma-Siam Railway’ documents Lieutenant-Colonel Benson’s evidence, and “River Kwai Railway, The Story of the Burma-Siam Railroad” by Clifford Kinvig... “venal and corrupt... Major Kudo who commanded the Kudo Butai which included the medical reinforcements ‘K’ and ‘L’ sent north to succour the native labourers”. Additionally, a small folder of Benson’s personal papers including reports on medical conditions in POW camps in Thailand 1943-45 was deposited with The Imperial War Museum’s Department of Documents.
An unattributed Soviet Union group of nine Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, Order of the Patriotic War, Second Class breast badge, 3rd ‘1985’ type, silver, gold, and enamel, the reverse officially numbered ‘6414587’, with Monetny Dvor mint mark and screw-back suspension; Order of the Red Star, 2nd type breast badge, silver and enamel, reverse officially numbered ‘1024647’, with Monetny Dvor mint mark and screw-back suspension, Commemorative Medal for the 20th Anniversary of Victory in the Great Patriotic War 1945-65, bronze; Jubilee Medal for the 50th Anniversary of the Armed Forces of the Soviet Union 1918-68, bronze and enamel; Commemorative Medal for the 30th Anniversary of Victory in the Great Patriotic War 1945-75, bronze; Jubilee Medal for the 60th Anniversary of the Armed Forces of the Soviet Union 1918-78, bronze; Commemorative Medal for the 40th Anniversary of Victory in the Great Patriotic War 1945-85, bronze; Jubilee Medal for the 70th Anniversary of the Armed Forces of the Soviet Union 1918-88, bronze; Medal foe Irreproachable Service in the Armed Forces of the U.S.S.R., First Class, for 20 years’ service, silvered and enamel, mounted as worn, generally very fine (9) £80-£100
The C.I.E. and Gold Kaisar-I-Hind Medal group of four awarded to Sir Richard Amphlett Lamb, K.C.S.I., C.I.E., Indian Civil Service, member of the Executive Council of the Governor of Bombay 1910-15 The Most Eminent Order of the Indian Empire, C.I.E., Companion’s 2nd type breast badge, gold and enamels, complete with integral gold brooch bar; Kaisar-I-Hind, V.R.,1st class, 18 carat gold, hallmarked London 1900, complete with integral gold brooch bar; Delhi Durbar 1911, silver; India General Service 1854-95, 1 clasp, Burma 1887-89 (Mr. R. A. Lamb Dy. Comr.) nearly extremely fine (4) £3,000-£4,000 --- Richard Amphlett Lamb was born at Poona, India, on 4 April 1858, son of Veterinary Surgeon William Lamb, 3rd Bombay Cavalry. Educated at Highgate Grammar School, he passed the Indian Civil Service examination in 1877 and was posted to Bombay, where he joined the Indian Civil Service in 1879. He served first at assistant collector, magistrate, and later as forest settlement officer, at Kandesh. He was one of the younger civilians selected for service in Upper Burma where he was appointed Deputy Commissioner in 1887. For his share in suppressing the dacoity which so long delayed pacification he was awarded the medal and clasp. After his return to his own Presidency as a collector, it fell to him in 1897 to act as chairman of the Poona Plague Committee soon after the assassination of its first chairman, his civilian colleague, Mr Rand. Later, he made an excellent Commissioner of the Central Division, for he had a thorough grasp of the complicated revenue system, and was both assiduous and sympathetic. He also did good wrk in the Secretariat, where he filled various departmental secretaryships, and in the Commissionership of Customs, Salt, &c. He was appointed a member of the Executive Council of the Government of Bombay, for which Lord Sydenham selected him in 1910. He was awarded the Kaisar-I-Hind medal (1st Class-Gold) in 1900, and appointed C.I.E. in 1901; C.S.I. in 1909, and knighted as K.C.S.I. at the Delhi Coronation Durbar in 1911. Sir Richard married at Colaba, Bombay, on 31 May 1901, Kathleen Maud, daughter of Lieutenant-Colonel J. P. Barry, I.M.S., and had a family of four sons. He died at his residence, Tudor House, Broadway, Worcestershire, on 27 January 1923. Sold with the following original photographs and documents: i. Studio portrait in uniform wearing I.G.S. medal. ii. Studio portrait in uniform wearing C.I.E., K-I-H, and I.G.S., Ahmednagar January 1903 (two versions, standing and seated). iii. Studio portrait seated in uniform wearing C.S.I., C.I.E., K-I-H and I.G.S., dated December 1909. iv. Studio portrait in uniform wearing K.C.S.I., C.I.E., K-I-H, Delhi Durbar 1911 and I.G.S. (two versions, standing and seated). v. Various documents of appointment to the Bombay Civil Service in 1879, together with Birth and Marriage certificates, and five obituary press cuttings. vi. Court cane in ebonised wood with gilt finial engraved with monogram ‘RAL’ vii. A particularly fine album created in commemoration of the 1911 Delhi Durbar, the cover embossed in gilt lettering ‘Coronation Durbar. Delhi. 1911.’ containing numerous invitations for Sir Richard and Lady Lamb to the many and various official celebrations for the Delhi Durbar, including plan of camp of the Governor of Bombay, captioned photographs of the members of same, invitations to the State Entry and Coronation Durbar of the King Emperor, large fold-out panoramic photograph of the Durbar celebration, other invitations to State Garden Party at Delhi Fort on 13 December 1911, and to Investiture held the following day, the occasion on which Lamb was invested with the K.C.S.I. For the recipient’s miniature dress medals, see the following lot (Lot 185).
A Great War ‘Western Front’ D.C.M. group of four awarded to Gunner F. Ideson, Royal Horse Artillery, who was discharged on account of wounds Distinguished Conduct Medal, G.V.R. (45919 Gnr: F. Ideson. ‘N’ By: R.H.A.); 1914 Star, copy; British War and Victory Medals (45919 Gnr. F. Ideson. R.A.) mounted court-style for wear, light pitting from Star, VM officially re-impressed, nearly very fine and better (4) £400-£500 --- Importation Duty This lot is subject to importation duty of 5% on the hammer price unless exported outside the UK --- --- D.C.M. London Gazette 3 June 1918: ‘For conspicuous gallantry and devotion to duty. When the battery was in action, supporting a counter-attack, this man for some time served his gun alone, thereby keeping it in action at a very critical time. The battery was under heavy shell fire, and had suffered several casualties.’ Frank Ideson was born in Keighley, West Yorkshire, around 1889 and enlisted in the Royal Horse Artillery on 21 November 1906. Posted to France as Gunner in the Royal Field Artillery on 5 October 1914, Ideson’s name was later listed in the Bradford Daily Telegraph of 6 October 1915 as one of 3000 ‘gallant sons’ of Keighley who answered the call. Transferred to the Royal Horse Artillery, he was awarded the D.C.M. in 1918 whilst serving with “N” Battery; this unit of 6 guns later claimed the highest number of shells discharged in a single month by one battery during the Great War, firing 115,360 shells in August 1917 in support of the Canadian Corps on the Western Front. Discharged from 5th Army Brigade and awarded a Silver War Badge in consequence of wounds on 28 August 1919, it is possible that Ideson witnessed his former comrades of “N” Battery bear the coffin of the Unknown Soldier to Westminster Abbey on 11 November 1920. Sold with copied research.
An exceptionally rare Zanzibar Order of the Brilliant Star First Class Set of Insignia. Zanzibar, Sultanate, Order of the Brilliant Star, Hamad bin Thuwaini (1893-96) issue, First Class set of insignia, comprising sash badge, 92mm including wreath suspension x 61mm, silver-gilt and enamel, the central medallion the painted portrait of Sultan Hamad bin Thuwaini on gold, unmarked, minor white enamel restoration to tips of points, and green enamel restoration to top of wreath by suspension; Star, 85mm, silver and enamel, the central medallion the painted portrait of Sultan Hamad bin Thuwaini on gold, Ch. Billard, A. D. Marie succ., Paris, cartouché to reverse, with retaining pin with silver marks and two additional support hooks, one tip of star slightly bent, with full sash riband, good very fine and of the highest rarity (2) £3,000-£4,000 --- Importation Duty This lot is subject to importation duty of 5% on the hammer price unless exported outside the UK ---
Three: Private J. Hughes, Cheshire Regiment 1914-15 Star (3767 Pte. J. Hughes. Ches: R.); British War and Victory Medals (3767 Pte. J. Hughes. Ches. R.) contact marks, edge bruise and edge digs to BWM otherwise very fine Three: Private J. Plant, Cheshire Regiment 1914-15 Star (3147 Pte. J. Plant. Ches: R.); British War and Victory Medals (3147 Pte. J. Plant. Ches. R.) edge bruise to BWM, otherwise good very fine Three: Private H. Steele, Cheshire Regiment 1914-15 Star (10314 Pte. H. Steele. Ches: R.); British War and Victory Medals (10314 Pte. H. Steele. Ches. R.) extremely fine (9) £100-£140 --- John Plant attested into the Cheshire Regiment for service during the Great War and served ion the Western Front with the 4th Battalion from 28 August 1915. He was wounded on 4 September 1916 and later discharged on 26 April 1919. Harry Steele attested into Cheshire Regiment on 24 January 1914 and served during the Great War on the Western Front with the 1st Battalion from 18 December 1914. He was gassed on 24 September 1915 and further wounded on 12 September 1916. He was discharged on 18 May 1917 and awarded a Silver War Badge.
A Great War O.B.E. and Order of St John group of six awarded to Doctor A. V. Davies, a distinguished Surgeon and Member of Parliament The Most Excellent Order of the British Empire, O.B.E. (Civil) Officer’s 1st type breast badge; The Order of St. John of Jerusalem, Knight of Grace set of insignia comprising neck badge and breast star, silver and enamel, neck badge lacking suspension loop; Coronation 1911, St John Ambulance Brigade (Dist. Supt. Of Stores A. V. Davies) Jubilee 1935; Coronation 1937; Service Medal of the Order of St John, silver, straight bar suspension, with two additional service bars (1525 Dst. Staff Ofcr. A. V. Davies No. 4 Dst. 1919) mounted on card for display, the star with some central enamel damage, otherwise nearly very fine or better (7) £800-£1,000 --- Importation Duty This lot is subject to importation duty of 5% on the hammer price unless exported outside the UK --- --- O.B.E. (Civil) London Gazette 1 January 1920. Order of St. John, Knight of Grace London Gazette 25 May 1918. Arthur Vernon Davies was born on 10 June 1872, the son of Edwin Edgar and Catherine Davies, of Bridgend, Glamorgan. He married Annie Maude, daughter of J. Brooke Unwin, M.D. of Dunchurch and there was a son and a daughter of the marriage. He was educated privately in Cardiff and at Owen’s College, Manchester. He graduated M.B. Ch.B., was House Surgeon Manchester Royal Infirmary and Northern Hospital, Medical Officer of Health for Crompton U.D.C., M.O. Infant Welfare Centre, Public Vaccinator (Oldham District) and Certifying Factory Surgeon, Shaw, Lancs. He was elected Conservative and Unionist M.P. for the Royton Division of Lancashire in the General Election of October 1924 serving until his retirement in October 1931. He was a distinguished doctor in the Manchester area, and active in the St. John Ambulance Brigade and the British Red Cross in Lancashire. Dr. Vernon Davies died on 4 August 1942. His recreations were noted as music and ambulance work.
Waterloo 1815 (Jonathan Jones, 23rd Regiment Foot, R.W.F.) fitted with original steel clip and silver bar suspension, light edge bruising and contact marks, otherwise nearly very fine £1,400-£1,800 --- Jonathan Jones was born in the Parish of Llangoidmore, Cardigan, and attested for the 23rd Foot at Sheerness, Kent, on 3 September 1807, ages 23, a tinman by trade. He was promoted to Corporal on 25 June 1815, and to Sergeant on 25 December 1816. He served ‘with the Expedition which proceeded under Lt. General Sir David Baird to join Lt. General Sir John Moore in Spain in 1808 - was present at the Battle of Corunna 16th January 1809, when he returned to England & in 1815 went to the Netherlands & was present at the Battle of Waterloo - & remained in France until the Army of Occupation was withdrawn - Went to Gibraltar in 1823 & remained until 1825, since which period he has been in the situation of Acting Serjeant Major to the Reserve Companies.’ He was discharged as Colour-Sergeant on 8 June 1831, and lived to claim the M.G.S. for Corunna. Sold with copied discharge papers.
The group of five miniature dress medals attributed to Sir Richard Amphlett Lamb, K.C.S.I., C.I.E., Indian Civil Service, member of the Executive Council of the Governor of Bombay 1910-15 The Most Exalted Order of the Star of India, silver, silver-gilt and enamels; The Most Eminent Order of the Indian Empire, silver-gilt and enamels; Kaisar-I-Hind, V.R.,1st class, gold breast badge; Delhi Durbar 1911, silver; India General Service 1854-95, 1 clasp, Burma 1887-9, all medals unmounted and unnamed having been removed from a display frame, ribbons poor, otherwise very fine (5) £240-£280 --- Richard Amphlett Lamb was born at Poona, India, on 4 April 1858, son of Veterinary Surgeon William Lamb, 3rd Bombay Cavalry. Educated at Highgate Grammar School, he passed the Indian Civil Service examination in 1877 and was posted to Bombay, where he joined the Indian Civil Service in 1879. He served first at assistant collector, magistrate, and later as forest settlement officer, at Kandesh. He was one of the younger civilians selected for service in Upper Burma where he was appointed Deputy Commissioner in 1887. For his share in suppressing the dacoity which so long delayed pacification he was awarded the medal and clasp. After his return to his own Presidency as a collector, it fell to him in 1897 to act as chairman of the Poona Plague Committee soon after the assassination of its first chairman, his civilian colleague, Mr Rand. Later, he made an excellent Commissioner of the Central Division, for he had a thorough grasp of the complicated revenue system, and was both assiduous and sympathetic. He also did good wrk in the Secretariat, where he filled various departmental secretaryships, and in the Commissionership of Customs, Salt, &c. He was appointed a member of the Executive Council of the Government of Bombay, for which Lord Sydenham selected him in 1910. He was awarded the Kaisar-I-Hind medal (1st Class-Gold) in 1900, and appointed C.I.E. in 1901; C.S.I. in 1909, and knighted as K.C.S.I. at the Delhi Coronation Durbar in 1911. Sir Richard married at Colaba, Bombay, on 31 May 1901, Kathleen Maud, daughter of Lieutenant-Colonel J. P. Barry, I.M.S., and had a family of four sons. He died at his residence, Tudor House, Broadway, Worcestershire, on 27 January 1923. For the recipient’s full sized awards, see the previous two lots (Lots 183 and 184).
An Imperial Russian Crimean Period Infantry Helmet Plate of the 26th Infantry Regiment. A large die stamped helmet plate with double headed Russian eagle, with regimental number ‘26’ in German silver on a separate brass shield, two lugs to rear, with two lugs detached and no longer present, fair condition £160-£200
Pair: Gunner J. Young, Royal Horse Artillery Coronation 1911, unnamed as issued; Army L.S. & G.C., E.VII.R. (64438 Gnr. J. Young. R.H.A.) mounted court-style for display together with the riband for the Queen’s South Africa Medal 1899-1902, very fine and better (2) £100-£140 --- Importation Duty This lot is subject to importation duty of 5% on the hammer price unless exported outside the UK --- --- James Young was born in 1868 and enlisted in the Royal Horse Artillery on 2 November 1887. Posted to India per S.S. Malabar the following year, he served during the Boer War as Bombardier in “R” Battery, Royal Horse Artillery, and was awarded his Long Service and Good Conduct Medal with gratuity in October 1907. Young later served during the Great War with the 589th H.S. Company, Labour Corps, being discharged on 4 February 1918 and awarded a Silver War Badge in consequence of sickness. Sold with copied research including Coronation 1911 Medal roll extract.
Four: Commander W. A. L. Q. Henriques, Royal Navy, who served ashore in Egypt in the Armoured Train and had an impressive record for saving lives during his career Egypt and Sudan 1882-89, dated reverse, no clasp (Lieut. W. A. L. Q. Henriques, R.N. H.M.S. “Malabar”); British War Medal 1914-20 (Commr., R.N.); Khedive’s Star, dated 1882, unnamed as issued; Royal Humane Society, small bronze medal (successful) (Sub. Lieut. W. A. L. Q. Henriques, R.N. 16 July 1671 [sic]) fitted with a replacement top bronze riband buckle; together with the related group of four miniature dress medals mounted on a Hunt & Roskell quadruple silver buckle brooch; and a ‘Queen Mary’s Carpenters of War Hospital, Central Surgical Supply Depot’, oval bronze lapel badge, the reverse inscribed ‘Capt. Henriques R.N. Oct. 1915 -’, generally very fine or better (4) £600-£800 --- Provenance: Dix Noonan Web, December 2006. Approximately 269 no clasp medals awarded to H.M.S. Malabar. William Abraham Ludington Quixans Henriques was born on 25 September 1850, and entered the Royal Navy as a Naval Cadet in June 1865, becoming Midshipman in March 1866, Sub Lieutenant in December 1870, and Lieutenant in December 1874. He served in China in 1866, as Midshipman in H.M.S. Pelorus, and was present and assisted in the destruction of several piratical villages and junks in the Lejemon Pass, near Hong Kong, for which the officers engaged received the thanks of the Governor of Hong Kong. Whilst Midshipman of H.M.S. Juno in 1869, he jumped overboard on two occasions and saved the lives of two marines who had fallen overboard in Portsmouth Harbour, one being in heavy marching order. As Sub-Lieutenant of H.M.S. Monarch, on 16 July 1871, he jumped overboard to save E. Ringsford, A.B., and J. Breshnahan, Pte. R.M.L.I. (Bronze Medal of the Royal Humane Society). In East Africa from 1873 to 1875, as Sub-Lieutenant of H.M.S. Thetis, Henriques was present at the capture and destruction of several slave dhows, and the liberation of 600 slaves, including the expedition up the Mtusi River, resulting in the taking of three large dhows after a determined resistance by the Arab slave dealers. He subsequently received Prize Money for one Slave Dhow, name unknown, captured on 16 July 1874, and another, name unknown, captured on 29 October 1874. In 1874 he also rescued the crew of the galley which had capsized on the bar at Pangany, after dark and under circumstances of great difficulty, for which he received the thanks of Captain T. Le H. Ward. Heriques served throughout the Egyptian campaign of 1882 as Lieutenant in H.M.S. Malabar, including service ashore, and was twice under fire in the Armoured Train (Medal and Khedive’s Bronze Star). Whilst in Malabar, he rescued the Boatswain who had fallen overboard at night, the ship going at 11 knots under steam and all possible sail. He was publicly thanked in the presence of the ship’s company by Captain Grant for going away in the lifeboat. Promoted to Commander transferring to the Retired List in September 1895, Henriques was re-employed during the Great War from March 1917 to late 1918, borne in H.M.S. President for ‘Miscellaneous and Special Service’ as a Commander on the Active List. Sold with copied service record and medal roll extract.
Shanghai Volunteer Corps Cap Badges and Buttons Two die stamped examples, ‘SVC on Star, with ‘4th April 1854’ banner below, the first gilt with silver ‘SVC’, the second bronze, both with two lugs to reverse; together with two SVC buttons; a reproduction Shanghai Volunteer Corps Armoured Car Company Badge; and two other badges, generally good condition (7) £160-£200 --- Importation Duty This lot is subject to importation duty of 5% on the hammer price unless exported outside the UK ---
The K.C.B. and K.C.V.O. sets of insignia attributed to Sir Ralph Endersby Harwood, who rose from humble beginnings as a G.P.O. Boy to become Financial Secretary to His Majesty King George V at Buckingham Palace The Most Honourable Order of the Bath, K.C.B., (Civil) Knight Commander’s set of insignia, comprising neck badge, silver-gilt, hallmarks for London 1932; and breast star, silver, gold and enamel, with gold retaining pin, with part lengths of neck riband, in Garrard, London, case of issue; The Royal Victorian Order, K.C.V.O., Knight Commander’s set of insignia, comprising neck badge, silver-gilt and enamel, the reverse officially numbered ‘K243’; and breast star, silver, with gilt and enamel centre, with god retaining pin, the reverse officially numbered ‘243’, with full and miniature-width neck ribands, in Collingwood, London, case of issue, with ‘K’ stock sticker, but with the inked number no longer visible, nearly extremely fine and better (4) £1,500-£2,000 --- K.C.B. London Gazette 1 January 1934. K.C.V.O. London Gazette 2 June 1931. Sir Ralph Endersby Harwood was born at Biggleswade, Bedfordshire, on 28 March 1883, the second son of Charles Harwood of Richmond Lodge, Clifton. Educated at Clifton Church of England School and Bedford Modern School, he entered the civil service at 15 years of age and took initial employment as telegraphist at the General Post Office. Furthered by evening classes, he passed the Second Division Examination in 1900, taking 1st place at Bedford School and 16th place of 1,000 candidates across the country. As Second Division clerk he served successively in the India Office, War Office, Board of Inland Revenue and the National Health Insurance Commission; the latter posting witnessed promotion to a Staff Clerkship. Further promotions followed between August 1912 and May 1913, firstly to Assistant Accountant and thence to the coveted Class I of the civil service with the personal post of private secretary to the permanent secretary. Upon the outbreak of the Great War the Insurance Commission was charged with the important duty of controlling the drug supply of the United Kingdom. Lent to the War Trade Department in late 1915, Harwood took on a statistical position which examined the imports of neutral European Nations - a task which was rendered of vital necessity in order to carry out the blockade of Germany by the Royal Navy. Having set this work on a secure foundation, his superiors - led by Lord Robert Cecil, the new ‘Minister for Blockade’ - set about creating a whole new branch with Harwood as Department Controller. With hostilities at an end, Harwood was appointed temporary Deputy Treasurer to King George V in 1922. He transferred briefly to the Treasury, but returned to the Royal Household in the early 1930’s. In 1935 he was appointed to the new and prestigious role of Financial Secretary to the King. According to The News Chronicle of 16 November 1935, the popular appointment was ‘in recognition of his services in securing economies in the royal household during the depression four years ago, when the King reduced his Civil List income by £50,000.’ More pertinently, Harwood managed to achieve the feat without reducing wages or dismissing any royal servant - at the direct request of His Majesty. Harwood retired from the role in 1936 and later became a financial consultant with Messrs. John D. Wood & Co., London. Awarded the C.B.E. in 1918, C.V.O. in 1921, C.B. in 1924, K.C.V.O. in 1931 and K.C.B. in 1934, Harwood retired to Seckford Hall in Suffolk, and died at home on 28 February 1951. Sold with the original Central Chancery bestowal warrant for the Companion (Civil Division) of the Order of the Bath, named to Ralph Endersby Harwood, Esq., C.V.O., C.B.E., dated 3 June 1924; a second bestowal warrant for the Grant of Dignity of a Commander of the Royal Victorian Order, named to Ralph Endersby Harwood Esquire, C.B.E., dated 4 June 1921; with corresponding Buckingham Palace letter relating to the second, dated 28 June 1921; and a further typed letter from the Privy Purse Office, Buckingham Palace, announcing the King’s intention to promote Harwood K.C.V.O. on the occasion of His Majesty’s Birthday, dated 20 May 1931.
A fine Order of St John and Colonial Police Forces M.S.M. group of five awarded to Inspector D. C. Connor, Kenya Police Force The Order of St. John of Jerusalem, Serving Brother’s breast badge, silver and enamel; Colonial Police Forces Meritorious Service Medal, G.VI.R., 1st issue (Desmond Cleeve Connor, Insp: Kenya Police Force); Jubilee 1935; Colonial Police Forces L.S. & G.C., G.VI.R., 1st issue (Inspr. Desmond C. Connor); Service Medal of the Order of St John, silver, straight bar suspension, with additional service bar (3067. D. C. Connor. Kenya S.J.A.B.O. 1939) mounted for display, good very fine (5) £200-£300 --- Importation Duty This lot is subject to importation duty of 5% on the hammer price unless exported outside the UK --- --- C.P.M. for Meritorious Service London Gazette 2 June 1943. Desmond Cleeve Connor was appointed a Serving Brother of the Venerable Order of Saint John, and in 1939 received the Service Medal of the Order, and subsequently a bar to this for further service. His award of the Colonial Police L.S. & G.C. was published on 25 July 1945. He died on the 19 May 1970.
Four: Petty Officer First Class J. Smith, Royal Navy Ashantee 1873-74, no clasp (J. Smith. A.B. H.M.S. Himalaya. 73-74); South Africa 1877-79, no clasp (“Himalaya” J. Smith P.O. 1st. Cl. H.M.S.); Egypt and Sudan 1882-89, undated reverse, 1 clasp, Tamaai (J. Smith, Gunrs. Mate); Khedive’s Star, dated 1884, unnamed as issued, mounted as worn from a quadruple to silver riband brooch bar, significant pitting and contact marks that has partially obscured naming, therefore fair to fine (4) £800-£1,000 --- The Naval Brigade at Tamaai comprised 478 Officers, men, and marines seconded from 12 H.M. Ships. John Smith was born at Sowton, Devon, on 1 March 1852 and joined the Royal Navy as a Boy Second Class in 1866. Advanced Able Seaman, he served in H.M.S. Himalaya from 14 November 1873 to 13 May 1874, seeing active service in this ship during the Ashantee campaign, and again in H.M.S. Himalaya from 25 September 1875 to 3 December 1878. Promoted Leading Seaman on 1 December 1876, Petty Officer Second Class on 1 June 1877, and Petty Officer First Class on 18 December 1877, he saw further active service in this ship during the South African campaign. Serving in H.M.S. Dryad from 18 December 1879 to 1 February 1884, Smith was seconded for service with the Naval Brigade during the Sudanese campaign of 1884, and was present as a Gunner’s Mate at the action at Tamaai on 13 March. He was shore pensioned on 17 July 1895. Sold with copied service record and medal roll extract, where he appears on the supplementary list for H.M.S. Humber (from H.M.S. Dryad).
Shooting Prize Medals (3): The first silver, hallmarks Sheffield 1897, by Walker and Hall Ltd., 46mm x 53mm, ornately engraved to reverse ‘1st. N.T.V.A. Roy Cup Winner 1897. Band Sergeant. J. Dodds.’ circular in form with top small ring suspension; the second a Works Band Prize Medal, silver with applied unmarked rose gold shield bearing monogram ‘JD’, hallmarks for Birmingham 1905, 40mm x 59mm, engraved to reverse ‘Palmer’s Works Band. Presented to J. Dodds. In Honour of Winning 5 Cups. 1905.’; the third a circular shooting medal ‘In Defence’, 38mm, silver, with Second Award Bar, privately engraved to reverse ‘10th. Baty. 1st. Argyll & Bute Arty. 2nd Prize, Won by Bomb. J. McGregor.’, good very fine (3) £70-£90
Three: Private H. Brown, Cheshire Regiment 1914-15 Star (2948 Pte. H. Brown, Ches. R.); British War and Victory Medals (2948 Pte. H. Brown. Ches. R.) slight verdigris stain on VM, otherwise very fine Three: Lance Corporal J. H. Latham, Cheshire Regiment 1914-15 Star (2246 L.Cpl. J. H. Latham. Ches. R.); British War and Victory Medals (2246 Pte. J. H. Latham. Ches. R.) very fine Three: Private E. Meek, Cheshire Regiment British War and Victory Medals ((3899 Pte. E. Meek. Ches. R.); Special Constabulary Long Service Medal, G.VI.R., 1st issue (Ernest Meek), in named box of issue, very fine (9) £100-£140 --- Herbert Brown attested into the Cheshire Regiment for service during the Great War and served in the Egyptian theatre with the 7th Battalion from 1 August 1915. He was wounded on 30 August 1918. John Harvey Latham attested into Cheshire Regiment for service during the Great War and served in Egypt with the 7th Battalion from 1 August 1915. He was discharged to a commission with the South Wales Borderers and saw further service with the 9th Battalion before transferring into the Royal Garrison Artillery. He does not appear to have served overseas following his commission. Sold with copied Medal Index Card. Ernest Meek attested into the Cheshire Regiment on 19 January 1915 for service during the Great War and served with the 1/6th and 13th Battalions. He was discharged as a consequence of sickness on 26 February 1917 and awarded a Silver War Badge. He saw later service with the Special Constabulary.
Pair: Surgeon-Major R. C. Anderson, 90th Regiment of Foot, later 13th Light Dragoons and Deputy Inspector of Hospitals Crimea 1854-56, 1 clasp, Sebastopol (Surgeon, H. C. Anderson. 90th. Foot.) Hunt & Roskell engraved naming; Turkish Crimea 1855, Sardinian issue (J [sic]. C. Anderson Surgeon 13th Light Dragoons.) contemporary impressed naming, plugged and fitted with a small swivel ring suspension, with a contemporary silver two-prong top riband buckle; together with a matching set of miniature dress medals, housed in a fitted display case, nearly extremely fine (2) £500-£700 --- Robert Carew Anderson was born in 1815 and was commissioned Assistant-Surgeon on 22 May 1840, Posted to the 90th (Perthshire Volunteers) Regiment of Foot, he was promoted Surgeon on 18 May 1849 and served with them in the Crimea. Transferring to the 13th Light Dragoons in 1857, he was promoted Surgeon-Major on 22 May 1860, and later served as Deputy Inspector of Hospitals. He died in 1885.
Pair: Petty Officer First Class A. H. Rewell, Royal Navy, who was severely wounded during the action at El-Teb on 29 February 1884; upon his officer, Lieutenant Royds, being mortally wounded in the assault, Captain A. K. Wilson, R.N., on the staff of Rear Admiral Sir William Hewett, who was present as an observer, took over the command of the detachment and single-handedly engaged the enemy, thus sparing the wounded of his detachment and saving them from certain death. For his great gallantry Wilson was awarded the Victoria Cross Egypt and Sudan 1882-89, dated reverse, 3 clasps, Tel-El-Kebir, Suakin 1884, El-Teb (A. H. Rowell [sic]. Lg. Sean. H.M.S. “Carysfort”) minor official correction to surname; Khedive’s Star, dated 1882, unnamed as issued, both with contemporary top silver riband brooch bars, very fine (2) £1,600-£2,000 --- Approximately 43 Tel-el-Kebir clasps awarded to H.M.S. Carysfort. Alfred Henry Rewell was born in Felpham, Sussex, on 17 July 1857 and joined the Royal Navy as a Boy Second Class on 7 May 1873. Promoted Able Seaman on 1 September 1877, he served in H.M.S. Carysfort from 16 September 1880 to 2 April 1884, being promoted Leading Seaman on 1 July 1881, and saw active service in this ship during the Egyptian campaign of 1882, including as part of the Naval Brigade during the assault on Tel-el-Kebir. Promoted Petty Officer Second class on 1 December 1882, and Petty Officer First Class on 9 May 1883, he saw further service in the same ship during the Sudanese campaign of 1884, including the action at El-Teb on 29 February 1884. The Naval Brigade suffered 13 casualties during the battle of El-Teb, including Rewell, who was seriously wounded; Lieutenant Frank Royds, also of the Carysfort, was mortally wounded in the action, during the assault on the first battery, dying the following day. On spotting the wounded Royds, Captain Arthur Wilson, R.N., H.M.S. Hecla, on the staff of Rear Admiral Sir William Hewett, who was present at the action solely as an observer, immediately took his place in the line, and engaged in single-handed combat with the enemy, thus protecting the detachment until some men of the York and Lancaster Regiment came to his assistance. But for his prompt action the entire detachment must have been speared to death, and for his great gallantry that day Captain Wilson was awarded the Victoria Cross (London Gazette 21 May 1884): ‘This officer, on the staff of Rear Admiral Sir William Hewett at the battle of El Teb on 29 February 1884 attached himself during the advance to the right half-battery, Naval Brigade, in the place of Lieutenant Royds, Royal Navy, mortally wounded. As the troops closed on the enemy's Krupp battery, the Arabs charged out on the corner of the square, and on the detachment who were dragging the Gardner gun. Captain Wilson then sprang to the front and engaged in single combat with some of the enemy, thus protecting his detachment until some men of the York and Lancaster Regiment came to his assistance. But for the action of this officer, Sir Redvers Buller thinks that one or more of his detachments must have been speared’. Rewell returned to England in H.M.S. Royal Adelaide and was invalided out of the service on account of his wounds at Plymouth on 18 June 1884. He subsequently became the publican of the Windsor Tavern in Eastbourne, and was buried at sea at his request. Sold with copied service papers, medal roll extract, and copied research, including a photographic image of the recipient.
Renamed and Defective Medals (2): Queen’s South Africa 1899-1902 (2), no clasp (Agent A. E. Caplen. F.I.D.) planchet only, and remnants of brooch mounting to obverse; 3 clasps, Cape Colony, Paardeberg, Transvaal (3479 Lc. Cpl. T. E. Walker 1st. Vol. Batt. R.A.M.C.) renamed, with contemporary top silver brooch bar, edge bruising, generally very fine (2) £60-£80 --- Arthur Edwin Caplen, a Lithographic Draughtsman with the Civil Commissioner’s Office, Cape Town, served with the Field Intelligence Department during the Boer War, and was awarded a no clasp Queen’s South Africa Medal.
Waterloo 1815 (Q-.Master James Palmer, 2nd Light Batt. K.G.L.) fitted with replacement silver clip and steel ring suspension, nearly extremely fine £2,400-£2,800 --- Provenance: Payne Collection 1911; Glendining’s, November 1940, August 1945, and Oakley Collection, July 1953. James Palmer joined the Litchfield Volunteer infantry as a Lieutenant on 21 April 1807, and was promoted Captain in the Worcester Local Militia on 2 May 1809. He entered the regular service on 10 November 1809, at the age of 39, being appointed Quarter-Master to the 2nd Light Battalion, King’s German Legion on 18 November following. He served in the Peninsula and South of France from March 1811 to April 1814, being present at Albuhera, the 2nd siege of Badajoz, Vittoria, Tolosa, St Etienne, and Bayonne. He also served the campaign in the Netherlands in 1814, the campaign of 1815 and the Battle of Waterloo, where the 2nd Light Battalion K.G.L. were particularly distinguished in the defence of La Haye Sainte. Palmer retired on the reduction of the Legion, 24 February 1816, on half-pay, and chose to remain in London rather than go to the Kingdom of Hannover to join the army being re-established there. He died at Brompton, London, on 12 November 1831, aged 60. Sold with further research copied to a USB flash drive.
The Victorian campaign group of three awarded to Staff Veterinary Surgeon William Lamb, 3rd Bombay Light Cavalry India General Service 1854-95, 1 clasp, Persia (Vet. Surgn. W. Lamb. 3rd Lt. Cavy.); Indian Mutiny 1857-59, 1 clasp, Central India (Vte. Surgn. W. Lamb, 3rd Regt. Bombay Cavy.); Abyssinia 1867 (Vety. Surgn. W. Lamb Bomb: Army) suspension crudely repaired below the crown on this; together with two prize medals: a. Edinburgh Veterinary College, Session 1848-49, engraved silver circular medal with stepped rims, 50mm, hallmarked Edinburgh 1848, the reverse engraved ‘Presented to Mr William Lamb for the Best Set of Notes of a Portion of Professor Dick’s Lectures’, fitted with floral scroll and ring for suspension; b. Highland and Agricultural Society of Scotland, struck silver medal, 45mm, the reverse engraved ‘To Mr William Lamb Worcestershire 1850’, the edge additionally engraved ‘For best examination on veterinary medicine and surgery Edinburgh Veterinary College.’, generally very fine or better (5) £1,600-£2,000 --- William Lamb was born at Hampton Bishop, Herefordshire, on 24 June 1832. He arrived in India on 10 March 1853, where he was appointed Veterinary Surgeon to the 3rd Bombay Light Cavalry. He served with the 3rd Bombay Light Cavalry in the Persian campaign of 1856-57, including the taking of Reshire and Bushire in December 1856; capture of Borazgon, 6 February 1857, and battle of Khooshab, 8 February 1856. In Central India in 1857-58 and 1859, including siege of Ratghur, relief of Saugor, and siege of Gurrakota, January 1858; siege of Jhansie, March & April; battle of Betwa, April; battle of Koonch, siege of Calpee, and attack on rear guard at Elora, May; taking of Morar, siege of Gwalior pursuant to Jowree and Alipore, June 1858; taking of Mhow and Mahoni, 1859. Mentioned in GGO 272 of 1859, ‘Vetry Surgeon Lamb 3rd Lt. Cavalry... most useful to me in getting on the baggage and conveying orders. Mr Lamb rode into camp at my request to report the presence of the enemy and returned at very considerable risk of being cut off.’ Also mentioned ‘as having led up a Troop of the 3rd Lt. Cavalry in the charge which resulted in the capture of the enemy’s guns &c,’ Served in the Abyssinian campaign of 1867-68, in general supervision of the Veterinary Department Land Transport Train; mentioned in despatches London Gazette 30 June 1868, and promoted to Staff Veterinary Surgeon for ‘valuable services with the Abyssinian Expeditionary Force.’ He died in October 1888. Sold with original vellum commission as Veterinary Surgeon from 10 March 1853, Statement of Services to September 1873, three portrait photographs, including one in uniform wearing medals, and marriage certificate. For the recipient’s miniature dress medals, see the following lot (Lot 187).
Five: Major-General R. N. Tinley, 39th Regiment of Foot, later Cape Mounted Riflemen, who was severely wounded at the battle of Mahrajpoor on 29 December 1843, and led his Regiment’s attack on the Grand Redan during the Crimea War Maharajpoor Star 1843 (Captn. Robert N. Tinley H.M. 39th. Regt.) original hook adapted and now suspended from a straight bar suspension, with contemporary silver riband buckle; Crimea 1854-56, 1 clasp, Sebastopol (Lieut. Colonel R. N. Tinley. 39th. Regt.) depot impressed naming; France, Second Empire, Legion of Honour, Chevalier’s breast badge, silver, gold appliqué, and enamel, with poincon mark to base of tassel; Ottoman Empire, Fifth Class breast badge, silver, gold appliqué, and enamel, unmarked, of ‘bazaar’ manufacture; Turkish Crimea 1855, Sardinian issue, unnamed as issued, fitted with an IGS-style suspension, mounted for wear, significant enamel damage to the tips of points of LdeH, otherwise generally very fine (5) £1,400-£1,800 --- Robert Newport Tinley was born in 1811 and was commissioned Ensign in the 39th Regiment of Foot on 4 April 1832. He was promoted Lieutenant on 19 July 1833, and Captain on 15 December 1840. He served with the Regiment during the Gwalior campaign, and was severely wounded at the battle of Maharajpoor on 29 December 1843. Promoted Major on 11 November 1851, Tinley saw further service during the Crimean War, going out to the Crimea with a draft of the 39th Regiment aboard H.M.S. Princess Royal, sailing from Queenstown on 13 January 1855, and was promoted Lieutenant-Colonel on 9 March 1855. He led his regiment's attack on the Redan on 18 June 1855, and commanded the Trench Guard, left attack, where a strong sortie of 2,000 Russians was made against the chevaux de frise, Woronzoff Road, on the night of 2 August, and which was successfully repulsed; he was also present at the attack on the Redan on 8 September, and Commanded and brought out the 39th Regiment of Foot at the end of the war. For his services he was awarded the Fifth Classes of both the French Legion of Honour and the Ottoman Order of the Medjidieh. Promoted Colonel on 28 May 1858, Tinley went on to serve with distinction with the Cape Mounted Rifles before going on half pay on 1 May 1866. Promoted Major-General on 6 March 1868, he died at St. Helier, Jersey on 10 July 1877. A fine watercolour of Tinley in the uniform of the Cape Mounted Rifles, by Richard Simkin, is held in the collection of the National Army Museum. (Accession No. NAM.2014-02-43-1). Sold with the eight Commission Documents covering most of the recipient’s promotions from Ensign to Major-General. For the Maharajpoor Star named to the recipient’s brother, see Lot 359.
Indian Title Badge, G.VI.R., Khan Sahib, silver and enamel, the reverse engraved ‘Mr. Mohammad Ahmed, M.A., L.T., L.L.B. 1st Jany. 1946’, attempted erasure over name, otherwise very fine £140-£180 --- Awarded 1 January 1946. Mr. Mohammad Ahmed M.A., L.T., L.L.B., High Court Pleader, Mhow Cantonment: ‘Mr. Mohammad Ahmed, resident of Mhow Cantonment is aged about 46 years. He is a leading member of the local Bar and has for some considerable time been a member of the Cantonment Board and its Education Committee. He has worked successfully in all branches of war activities especially in publicity. He is a member of the committee connected with controls. Consequent on the resignation in March 1945 of Mr S. T. Hollins, C.I.E., who among other duties was editor of the Central India Weekly News, a wartime publication sponsored by me (the Resident of Central India), Mr Ahmed was selected as Editor of the paper in which capacity he worked until it ceased publication. I consider the title of Khan Sahib in the New Years Honours List for 1946 would be a fitting recognition of the good work he has done.’
The Most Excellent Order of the British Empire, M.B.E. (Military) Member’s 2nd type breast badge, silver, in Royal Mint case of issue, extremely fine £80-£100 --- Sold with a Central Chancery letter dated 23 October 1967 implying that the insignia was that bestowed upon Colonel Frederick Alfred Porter, late King’s African Rifles.
Maharajpoor Star 1843 (Lieutenant William Tinley H.M. 39th Regt.) fitted with a replacement silver bar suspension, good very fine £300-£400 --- William Newport Tinley was born in 1819 and was commissioned Ensign in the Royal African Colonial Corps on 15 November 1839. He transferred to the 39th Regiment of Foot on 31 December 1839, and was promoted Lieutenant, by purchase, on 11 June 1841, serving with the regiment in the Gwalior campaign of 1843, including the battle of Maharajpoor on 29 December 1843. He was promoted Captain on 27 May 1853, and was awarded the Royal Humane’s Society’s Silver Medal for his action on 9 August 1853: ‘During the morning of 9 August 1853 Mortimer Flynn (27), a Private in the 39th Regiment, got into difficulties while bathing in Cork harbour and sank in some ten feet of water. Captain Tinley, who was based at Fort Camden, Cork, was himself going out to bathe, when, shortly after passing the barracks, he spotted Flynn struggling in the water. He ran down to the rock at the edge of the water and jumped in full dressed. Having swam to where Flynn had last appeared, Tinley managed to grab his hair and thus pull his head above the surface. He then held him and swam back to the rock were other soldiers from the guard room helped take the unconscious Flynn ashore and into the guard room to recover. No medical assistance was available. Details of the rescue were quickly brought to the attention of the Royal Humane Society by Lieutenant W Greesham and Lieutenant J Dixon, both of the 39th Regiment, as well as others. The Society initially considered the circumstances at its committee meeting on 21 September 1853 who then referred it on to their General Court. They approved the award of the Society's silver medal to Captain Tinley. The Society sent Tinley's medal to the War Office on 6 April 1854 for them to arrange its presentation.’ (R.H.S. Case no. 15,419 refers) Tinley saw further service during the Crimean War, going out to the Crimea with a draft of the 39th Regiment aboard H.M.S. Princess Royal, sailing from Queenstown on 13 January 1855. He was present at the siege of Sebastopol and the attacks on the Redan of 18 June and 8 September 1855 (entitled to a Crimea Medal with clasp Sebastopol and Turkish Crimea Medal - these medals, together with an unnamed Maharajpoor Star, were sold at auction in November 2014). He retired from the Army on 20 May 1864 and died at Bruff, County Limerick, on 8 February 1874. Sold with copied research. Note: At least one other Maharajpoor Star named to this man is known to exist. For the medals awarded to the recipient’s brother, see Lot 197.
Three: Private J. Charlesworth, Cheshire Regiment 1914-15 Star (25693 Pte. J. Charlesworth. Ches. R.); British War and Victory Medals (25693 Pte. J. Charlesworth. Ches. R.) edge digs, contact marks, nearly very fine Three: Private H. Flood, Cheshire Regiment 1914-15 Star (25755 Pte. H. Flood. Ches: R.); British War and Victory Medals (25755 Pte. H. Flood. Ches: R.), sold with fragile original certificate of war employment, some contact marks, edge bruise to BWM, otherwise very fine Three: Private G. Worthington, Cheshire Regiment 1914-15 Star (25669 Pte. G. Worthington, Ches. R.); British War and Victory Medals (25669 Pte. G. Worthington, Ches. R.) contact marks, nearly very fine (9) £100-£140 --- James Charlesworth attested into the Cheshire Regiment for service during the Great War on 23 March 1915 and served in the Balkans from 7 July 1915. He was buried in a collapse at Gallipoli in September 1915 and suffered a back injury. Later transferring to the Royal Welch Fusiliers, he was discharged on 21 February 1918 and awarded a Silver War Badge, No. 350555. Henry Flood attested into the Cheshire Regiment for service during the Great War on 29 March 1915 and served on the Western Front with the 3rd Battalion from 1 July 1915. Completing a 1st Class Signaller’s course, he was discharged on 28 January 1919. Sold with his original Cheshire Regiment Old Comrades Association member’s card. George Worthington attested into the Cheshire Regiment for service during the Great War and served on the Western Front from 26 September 1915. He saw later service with the Royal Flying Corps and the Labour Corps.
A well-documented Defence of Lucknow and Egypt campaign group of four awarded to Colonel W. Cleland, Royal Dublin Fusiliers Indian Mutiny 1857-59, 2 clasps, Defence of Lucknow, Lucknow (Lieut. W. Cleland, 1st Madras Fusrs.); Egypt and Sudan 1882-89, dated reverse, no clasp (Lieut. Col. W. Cleland, 1/Rl. Dub. Fus.); Ottoman Empire, Order of the Medjidie, Third Class neck badge, by Paul Stopin, Palais-Royal, silver, gold, and enamel, maker’s cartouche to reverse, minor enamel damage to crescent suspension, with small section of neck riband for display purposes; Khedive’s Star, dated 1882, unnamed as issued, contact marks and pitting from the star, otherwise nearly very fine or better (4) £1,800-£2,200 --- Provenance: Gordon Everson Collection, Dix Noonan Webb, March 2002. William Cleland was born at Perth, Scotland, on 26 April 1818, and was educated at Perth Academy. He was commissioned as an Ensign in the 1st Madras Fusiliers on 4 March 1857, and embarked the same day for India. He was actively engaged in the suppression of the mutiny in Bengal in 1857-58, and was present with Havelock’s Column in the actions of Futtehpore, Aoung, Pandoo, Nuddee, Cawnpore, Bithoor, Mungarwar, and Alumbagh, relief of Lucknow, and defence of the Residency, occupation of the Alumbagh under Outram, capture of Lucknow, and the campaign of 1858 in Oude. He was slightly wounded during the attack on the fort at Rehora on 23 November 1858. During his passage home in 1859, Cleland compiled a journal of his experiences during the mutiny, much of which survives in transcript form today. Of the entry into Lucknow on 25 September 1857, he wrote: ‘The distance to the Residency was about three quarters of a mile through a narrow street, the houses on either side of which had two or three rows of loopholes, the street being cut by deep trenches too broad to leap, so that one was compelled to jump to the bottom and scramble up the other side. On the order to advance the 98th rushed through the gateway followed by the Sikhs, the rear being brought up by the Madras Fusiliers, but before the Residency gate was reached the three regiments were left as one. Two guns also were taken along with us, but were brought to a stand on reaching the first trench. Under such a storm of bullets it would have been certain death to anyone who remained stationary for a moment, the guns were consequently left in the street, and we pushed on to the Residency. Those who were wounded lay where they fell, and amongst them were several officers poor fellows. The greater number were massacred during the night by the enemy who issued from their houses for that purpose. It was here that General Neill fell. Having seen his Brigade all pass through the gateway headed by Generals Outram and Havelock, he prepared to follow. On passing through the gateway he was struck on the temple by a bullet which passed through his head and he fell dead to the ground. We reached the Residency gateway about 7 o’clock, were greeted with a cheer and the Residency was saved. Having scrambled over the parapet and gained the interior we were met by numbers of the Garrison who attacked us eagerly with questions concerning Cawnpore. An officer came up to me who I subsequently learned was a doctor, he asked me eagerly who were saved at Cawnpore, and on my telling him all were massacred, he ejaculated “Oh God, my wife and child,” and left me.’ Cleland was promoted to Captain on 8 July 1867, became Major on 1 September 1877, and Lieutenant-Colonel on 1 July 1881. Returning home from a visit to Australia in 1882, Cleland found himself in Egypt at the time of the uprising by Arabi Pasha, and immediately offered his services. He was appointed Chief of Police in Alexandria, a duty which he carried out with an iron rule; ‘Every other day, under the superintendence of Col. Cleland, Chief of Police, Arabs who had been found guilty of the murder of Europeans were executed...’ He was mentioned in despatches for his services and awarded the Order of the Medjidie Third Class. Cleland was appointed to the command of the 1st Battalion, Royal Dublin Fusiliers, on 7 June 1884, and became Colonel on 1 July 1885. He relinquished command of the Battalion on 1 July 1887, and went on Half Pay, finally retiring from the Army on 15 April 1888. After an active life as a bachelor, Cleland married in July 1895, and had one child. He died at Overton, Flintshire, on 14 June 1909. Sold with a very large quantity of extensive research including many transcripts of the recipient’s letters home and reminiscences during the mutiny.
A Victoria Cross Recipient’s Silver Sports Trophy. A Georgian octagonal shaped silver cup, 160mm high x 85mm in diameter, hallmarks for London 1789 but given as an award at various times, first competed for as a House Sports Challenge Cup at Eton College in 1901, and jointly won in 1907 by Neville Bowes Elliott-Cooper, who was awarded the Victoria Cross, Distinguished Service Order, and Military Cross whilst serving with the Royal Fusiliers during the Great War; advanced Lieutenant-Colonel, he died as a Prisoner of War in 1918. Other winners of the trophy include Sir Eugen Millington-Drake (involved in the Olympic Delegations of 1936 and 1948), and Air Commodore Sir Harold Peake; he subsequently presented this trophy to King Edward’s Grammar School in 1947 for the All Round Athlete of the Year; the final name on the trophy is in 1988. The cup retains its silver gilt inner finish and comes complete with its wooden base, good overall condition £80-£100 --- Provenance: Dix Noonan Webb, May 2016.
Army L.S. & G.C., V.R., 1st issue, large letter reverse, edge dated, impressed naming (W. McAdam, Serjt. R. Arty. 1853.) replacement small silver ring suspension, with modern keyring loop to facilitate riband, nearly very fine £120-£160 --- William McAdam served in Plymouth with the 12th Brigade, Royal Regiment of Artillery, from 23 August 1853. He is later recorded as serving at Bristol before being discharged on 19 July 1881 at termination of his second period of engagement after 21 years’ service.
Collar Badges and Service Badges. A selection of Collar Badges and Service Badges including enamel badges (8) to the Police Auxiliary, Second War Messenger Service, National Savings Movement, Civil Nursing Reserve. Women’s Land Army. British Legion. Civil Defence Corps, with assorted badges, some silver, including fobs, Collar Badges, Lapel Badges etc., including 20th Lancers in Silver, Royal Marines, Army Reserve (2), Royal Malta Artillery, Merchant Navy, Loyal Service, a Sailor’s Pension Relief Badge in paper, a Victorian Valise Plate, a quantity of military badge backing plates and an unworn pair of printed cloth formation signs, generally good condition (21) £50-£70 --- Importation Duty This lot is subject to importation duty of 5% on the hammer price unless exported outside the UK ---
An Imperial Russian Imperial Guard Ulan Officer’s Helmet Plate, c.1900. A superb quality white metal badge, with large double headed Russian eagle with Czarist crown above, in centre a separate silver star with dark blue enamel centre, motto in gold, above oak leaves in green enamel, with a gold coloured two headed Russian eagle in black enamel, with a pale blue enamel St. Andrew’s cross on its chest, with four prongs to reverse, these somewhat damaged, very good condition £400-£500
Three: Private J. Haggart, King’s Own Scottish Borderers 1914 Star, with copy clasp (7922 Pte. J. Haggart. K.O. Sco: Bord:); British War and Victory Medals (7922 Pte. J. Haggart. K.O. Sco. Bord.) mounted court-style for display, contact marks, nearly very fine (3) £80-£100 --- James Haggart attested for the King’s Own Scottish Borderers on 24 April 1902 and served with them during the Great War on the Western Front from 15 August 1914. He was discharged due to wounds on 8 June 1915, and was awarded a Silver War Badge no. 113991.
Egypt and Sudan 1882-89, undated reverse, no clasp (W. Lampard. Captn’s. Servt. H.M.S. Turquoise.) with contemporary silver top riband bar, contact marks, nearly very fine £80-£100 --- Approximately 190 no clasp medals awarded to H.M.S. Turquoise. William Lampard was born in Zeals, Wiltshire, on 4 April 1864 and joined the Royal Navy as a Domestic Second Class on 23 May 1884. He served as a Captain’s Servant in H.M.S. Turquoise from that date to 5 September 1884, seeing active service during the Sudanese campaign of 1884, and was discharged to shore at Skegness on 4 November 1884. Sold with copied service record and medal roll extract.
Plaid Brooch. A silver plated Plaid Brooch, possibly used by a civilian pipe band, with a Stag mounted above a coronet within a plain circular back plate with mark ’Made in Gt Britain’, pin to reverse, similar to the Stag on a Gordon Highlanders Officer’s Badge, however this example without battle honours, scrolls, titles or wreath, good condition £50-£70 --- Importation Duty This lot is subject to importation duty of 5% on the hammer price unless exported outside the UK ---
A scarce ‘double issue’ group of four awarded to Private W. Backhouse, 13th (County of London) Battalion (Princess Louise’s Kensington Battalion), London Regiment, and British Red Cross, who was awarded an Italian War Cross for services in Italy 1914 Star (1373 Pte. W. Backhouse. 1/13 Lond: R.); British War and Victory Medals (1373 Pte. W. Backhouse. 13-Lond. R.); British War and Victory Medals (W. Backhouse. B.R.C. & St. J.J.); Italy, Kingdom, War Cross, V.E.III.R., bronze, unnamed as issued; together with the recipient’s Silver War Badge, the reverse officially numbered ‘18367’, nearly extremely fine (6) £100-£140 --- William Backhouse was born in Willesden, Middlesex, on 10 July 1895 and attested for the 13th (County of London) Battalion (Princess Louise’s Kensington Battalion) on 23 January 1913. Mobilised on 4 August 1914, he served with them during the Great War on the Western Front from 3 November to 15 December 1914, taking part in the battles of Mons, the Marne, and the Aisne. Invalided home, he was discharged due to sickness on 27 May 1915, being awarded a Silver War Badge no. 18367. He later joined the British Red Cross Society, and served with the in Italy from 13 February 1918 until the cessation of hostilities. For his services in Italy he was awarded the Italian War Cross. Sold with the recipient’s Character Certificate and Particulars of Service; Discharge Certificate; War Badge Certificate; Record Office enclosure for the 1914 Star; British Red Cross Society enclosure for the British War and Victory Medals; a folded and torn Bestowal Certificate for the Italian War Cross; and copied research.
The Most Distinguished Order of St. Michael and St. George, K.C.M.G., Knight Commander’s set of insignia, comprising neck badge, silver-gilt and enamel; and breast star, silver, gilt, and enamel, with gold retaining pin, with full length neck riband, in Garrard, London, case of issue, nearly extremely fine (2) £800-£1,000
Five: Acting Sergeant D. Ward, Royal Field Artillery 1914 Star, with clasp (28384 Dvr. D. Ward. R.F.A.); British War and Victory Medals (28384 A-Sjt. D. Ward. R.A.); France, Third Republic, Medaille Militaire, silver, silver-gilt, and enamel, with trophy of arms suspension; Croix de Guerre, reverse dated 1914-1918, bronze, minor blue enamel damage to the MM, nearly very fine (5) £160-£200 --- David Ward was born in 1884 and attested for the Royal Field Artillery on 30 October 1902. He served with them during the Great War on the Western Front from 18 August 1914, latterly with C/94 Brigade. A typed note with the lot states: ‘In April 1918 Ward was working with a French Artillery unit at Locre. During the battle of Lys War was awarded the French Military Medal for gallantry.’ However, this is unconfirmed, and no evidence has been found to confirm the award of either of the French decorations.
Pair: Domestic First Class J. Sears, Royal Navy Egypt and Sudan 1882-89, dated reverse, no clasp (J. Sears. Dom: 3.C. H.M.S. “Salamis.”); Khedive’s Star, dated 1882, unnamed as issued; together with the recipient’s Exmouth Training Ship Medal, 38mm, silver, the obverse depicting the figure of Hope standing by rocks on the seashore, mantle flowing behind, one hand raised, the other resting on an anchor, a sailing ship in the background, all enclosed by a plain band, the reverse inscribed in raised letters (name and date engraved), ‘England expects every man to do his duty, Presented to Julius Sewars on board the training ship “Exmouth” for Special Good Conduct, 18 June 1881’, with swivel ring suspension, light contact marks, nearly very fine (3) £200-£240 --- Approximately 88 no clasp medals awarded to H.M.S. Salamis. Julius Sears was born in Poplar, London, on 24 June 1864 and joined the Royal Navy as a Domestic Third Class on 21 June 1881. Posted to H.M.S. Salamis, he served in that ship until 27 December 1882, seeing active service in this ship during the Egyptian campaign of 1882. Advanced Domestic First Class on 23 April 1892, he was discharged to shore on 24 January 1895. In 1875 the Metropolitan Asylums Board set up a Poor Law Training School and were lent the 2nd rate ship-of-the-line H.M.S. Exmouth (built in 1854) for that purpose. The ship was moored in the lower Thames at Grays, Essex, replacing H.M.S. Goliath which had been destroyed by fire in December 1875. Like similar ships, the school provided an education and nautical training for the boys in its care and prepared them for service in the Royal and Merchant Navies.
Family Group: Three: Private H. Ding, Suffolk Regiment, who was discharged on account of wounds in 1917 1914 Star, with clasp (3-8358 Pte. H. Ding. 2/Suff: R.); British War and Victory Medals (3-8358 Pte. H. Ding. Suff. R.) with OHMS transmission envelope, addressed to ‘Mr. H. Ding, Covenly, Isle of Ely, Cambridge’, extremely fine Pair: Private T. Ding, Suffolk Regiment, who was killed in action on the Western Front on 26 September 1917 British War and Victory Medals (26488 Pte. T. Ding. Suff. R.) extremely fine (5) £160-£200 --- Harold Ding was born in Coveney, Ely, Cambridgeshire, on 18 August 1894 and attested for the Suffolk Regiment on 18 October 1911. he served with the 2nd Battalion during the Great War on the Western Front from 19 September 1914 to 18 March 1916. Wounded in action by gun shot to his hand, he was discharged as a result of his wounds on 18 July 1917, and was awarded a Silver War Badge no. 213897. Sold with the recipient’s large Honourable Discharge Certificate, this mounted on board and in relic condition; Character and Discharge Certificate; and an empty Princess Mary Christmas 1914 tin. Tom Ding, the brother of the above, was born in Coveney, Ely, Cambridgeshire, in 1888 and attested for the Suffolk Regiment. He served with both the 8th and 4th Battalions during the Great War on the Western Front from 1916, and was killed in action on 26 September 1917. He has no known grave and is commemorated on the Tyne Cot Memorial.
A fine M.V.O. group of six awarded to Staff Captain T. J. H. Rapson, Royal Navy, who after service in both the Second China War and the Egyptian War of 1882, and having received the Royal Humane Society Medal in 1869, was awarded the M.V.O. for saving H.M.S. Victory from sinking in 1903 The Royal Victorian Order, M.V.O., Member’s 4th Class breast badge, silver-gilt and enamel, reverse officially numbered ‘207’; China 1857-60, 1 clasp, Taku Forts 1860, unnamed as issued; Egypt and Sudan 1882-89, dated reverse, no clasp (Staff Comr. T. J. H. Rapson. RN. H.M.S. “Supply”); Coronation 1902, silver, unnamed as issued; Khedive's Star, dated 1882, unnamed as issued; Royal Humane Society, small silver medal (successful) (Navg. Sub. Lieut. T. J. H. Rapson 1. September. 1869.) the last lacking integral top riband buckle, contact marks, nearly very fine and better (6) £1,000-£1,400 --- One of only 24 no clasp medals awarded to H.M.S. Supply. M.V.O. Fourth Class London Gazette 9 November 1903: ‘Captain Thomas James Henry Rapson, Royal Navy, Staff Captain of Portsmouth Dockyard. For services in securing the safety of His Majesty’s ship Victory when in peril of sinking.’ Thomas James Henry Rapson entered the Royal Navy on 13 August 1859. Serving as Master’s Assistant on H.M.S. Scout during the Second China War, he took part in the capture of Peiho Forts in 1860 and was in charge of a rocket boat during the operations. He was additionally in charge of the cutter of ‘Scout’ in the boat attack on Maluda pirates on the coast of Borneo, 1862. Promoted Second Master on 11 August 1864 and Navigating Lieutenant on 19 May 1870, between January 1865 and December 1879, he served in H.M. Ships Black Prince, Dromedary, Trinculo, Rosario, Lord Clyde, Rapid, Enchantress and Euphrates. In 1869, whilst serving in H.M.S. Trinculo, Lieutenant Rapson was awarded the Royal Humane Society Silver Medal for saving a ship’s cook from drowning in the sea at Corfu. Promoted Staff Commander on 18 July 1881, Rapson served in H.M.S. Supply from 2 January to 30 October 1882, seeing active service in this sup during the Egyptian campaign. Between January 1883 and March 1895 he saw further service in H.M. Ships Ajax, Pembroke, Dreadnought, Duke of Wellington, and Seahorse. He was promoted Staff Captain on 15 July 1896, serving at Portsmouth Dockyard until his retirement on 13 August 1903. On 23rd October 1903, while under tow a tug to be scrapped, H.M.S. Neptune broke the cables connecting her to the tugs. With the winds and a strong flood tide pushing her, she was pushed back into the harbour but hit the brig Seaflower and rammed H.M.S. Victory, tearing a 5 foot hole in her port side. For his actions in helping to save H.M.S. Victory, Captain Rapson was created a Member of the Royal Victorian Order Fourth Class. He died on 13 March 1909. Sold with copied service record, medal roll extract, and other research.
An ‘Egyptian campaign 1882’ Ottoman Order of Osmanieh group of five awarded to Captain C. E. Foot, Royal Navy, who served in H.M.S. Pearl’s Naval Brigade during the Indian Mutiny for which services he was three times Mentioned in Despatches, and later did good service in suppressing the salve trade off the East Coast of Africa, ultimately serving as British Consul at Lake Nyassa Baltic 1854-55, unnamed as issued; Indian Mutiny 1857-59, no clasp (Midn. Chas. C. Foot. Pearl.); Egypt and Sudan 1882-89, dated reverse, no clasp (Capt: C. E. Foot. R.N. H.M.S. “Ruby.”); Ottoman Empire, Order of Osmanieh, Third Class neck badge, silver, silver-gilt, and enamel, with neck riband; Khedive’s Star, dated 1882, unnamed as issued (5) £2,600-£3,000 --- Approximately 261 no clasp Indian Mutiny medals awarded to H.M.S. Pearl. Approximately 234 no clasp medals awarded to H.M.S. Ruby. Ottoman Order of Osmanieh, Third Class London Gazette 16 January 1883: ‘In recognition of distinguished services before the Enemy during the late Campaign in Egypt.’ Charles Edward Foot was born at Vicarsfield, County Kilkenny, Ireland, on 29 July 1841 and joined the Royal Navy as a Cadet on 15 February 1855, serving in H.M.S. Hawke from that date to 19 May 1856, seeing active service in this ship during the Baltic campaign. Transferring to H.M.S. Pearl on 20 May 1856, he was appointed Midshipman on 14 February 1857, and saw further service as part of the Naval Brigade in India during the Great Sepoy Mutiny, for which services he was three times Mentioned in Despatches by Captain Edward Sotheby, R.N., Commanding Pearl’s Naval Brigade (London Gazettes 15 June 1858, 18 June 1858, and 2 July 1858) the first time for the action with the rebels at Thamowlee on 17 April 1858, the second time for the action with the enemy at Puchawas on 25 April 1858, and the third time his services during the action at Nuggur on 29 April 1858: ‘Lieutenant Grant, assisted by Mr. C. E. Foot, Midshipman, managed the guns, which were so well directed by their captains, that only one shell out of 35 failed in striking the object.’ Promoted Lieutenant on 16 February 1861 and Commander on 25 October 1867, Foot commanded H.M.S. Daphne from 1 November 1873 to 13 March 1876, in suppression of the slave trade off the east coast of Africa. Amongst other success on 13 March 1874 they captured a slave dhow on the north-west coast of Madagascar, with 225 slaves onboard, and towards the end of his period of command he ‘did good service in the Persian Gulf, and quelled an armed insurrection by his energy and promptitude. He was fortunate enough to make the leader [the ex-Sultan of Muscat] prisoner.’ (The Standard, 6 January 1876 refers). For his services he received the thanks of the Commander-in-Chief and the Government of India. Promoted Captain on 31 December 1875, Foot subsequently served as post-Captain of the unarmoured composite corvette H.M.S. Ruby from 12 May 1880 to 16 December 1882, seeing active service in command of this ship during the Egyptian campaign of 1882. In recognition of his services during the Egyptian campaign, he was appointed to the Third Class of the Order of Osmanieh, and the entire crew were awarded 14 days’ special leave by the Admiralty. Transferring to the Half-Pay List on 16 December 1882, he was appointed by the Foreign Office as British Consul in the territories of the African chiefs in the districts adjacent to Lake Nyassa, ‘for the purpose of suppressing the slave trade and developing civilisation and commerce in Central Africa’. He died in Mozambique on 16 August 1884. Sold with copied service record, medal roll extracts, and copied research.
The Egypt and Sudan Medal awarded to Petty Officer First Class W. Snow, D.S.M., Royal Navy, who was wounded in action whilst serving in H.M. Trawler 318 during an attack on minefields whilst under fire in the vicinity of the Dardanelles on 13 March 1915, for which services he was awarded the D.S.M. Egypt and Sudan 1882-89, dated reverse, no clasp (W. Snow. A.B: H.M.S. “Don.”) light pitting, very fine £200-£240 --- Approximately 50 no clasp medals awarded to H.M.S. Don. D.S.M. London Gazette 16 August 1915: ‘In recognition of services during the operations in the vicinity of the Dardanelles prior to 25-26 April 1915: For services during the attack on minefields under fire.’ William Snow was born at Newport, isle of Wight, on 22 June 1861 and joined the ROyal Nvy as a Boy Second Class on 4 August 1876. Promoted Able Seaman on 1 December 1880, he served in H.M.S. Don from 23 June to 31 October 1882, seeing active service in that ship during the Egyptian campaign of 1882. Advanced Petty officer First Class on 4 Septemebr 1893, he was shore pensioned on 30 June 1899. Recalled for War service on 2 August 1914, Snow was borne on the books of H.M.S. Halcyon from 13 August 1914 to 21 January 1915, and then H.M.S. Blenheim from 22 January to 31 March 1915. He was wounded in action during operations in the vicinity of the Dardanelles on 13 March 1915, whilst serving in H.M. Trawler 318, and was subsequently awarded the Distinguished Service Medal for services during the attack on minefields ‘whilst under fire’; given the dates involved, it is reasonable to assume that his wounds and the awarded the D.S.M. came for the same action. He was invalided out of the service on 18 June 1915, and in addition to receiving a 1914-15 Star trio was awarded a Silver War Badge no. RN 160 on 14 October 1916. Sold with copied service records and medal roll extracts.
Three: Second Lieutenant W. Perry, 4th (Royal Irish) Dragoon Guards 1914-15 Star (10368 Pte. W. Perry. 4/D. Gds.); British War and Victory Medals (2. Lieut. W. Perry.); together with a silver Masonic Medal, the reverse engraved ‘Gurney Lodge No. 121 Presented to Bro William Perry, For Past Services. Feb. 14. 1922.’, with top ‘U.J.O.T.A.S.P.’ riband bar, good very fine Three: Private A. C. Wilkins, 4th (Royal Irish) Dragoon Guards 1914-15 Star (D-10085 Pte. A. C. Wilkins 4th D. Gds.); British War and Victory Medals (D-10085 Pte. A. C. Wilkins. 4-D. Gds.) minor verdigris spot to VM, good very fine Five: Lieutenant R. V. D. Cullen, 4th (Royal Irish) Dragoon Guards Victory Medal 1914-19 (Lieut. R. V. D. Cullen.); 1939-45 Star; France and Germany Star; Defence and War Medals 1939-45, mounted as worn (but missing the British War Medal), very fine (11) £100-£140 --- R. V. D. Cullen was commissioned Second Lieutenant in the 4th (Royal Irish) Dragoon Guards on 1 May 1917.
Australia, Order of Australia, Member’s (A.M.) breast badge, silver-gilt and enamel, reverse inscribed ‘Peter Craig Farrell’; together with the related miniature award, lapel badge and riband bar, in fitted case of issue, extremely fine £400-£500 --- Importation Duty This lot is subject to importation duty of 5% on the hammer price unless exported outside the UK --- --- A.M. Commonwealth of Australia Gazette 26 January 2004: Dr. Peter Craig Farrell
‘For service to biomedical research and engineering through the invention and development of therapeutic appliances, to business as an entrepreneur and to the community through philanthropy.’
The Burma 1885-7 campaign medal awarded to Surgeon J. P. Barry, Indian Medical Service, father-in-law to Sir Richard Lamb, K.C.S.I., C.S.I. India General Service 1854-95, 1 clasp, Burma 1885-7 (Surgn. J. P. Barry I.M.S.); together with the unnamed Delhi Durbar 1911 silver medal awarded to his daughter Kathleen Maud who was married to Sir Richard Lamb, toned, nearly extremely fine (2) £140-£180 --- J. P. Barry, the father-in-law of Sir Richard Lamb, was the author of ‘At the Gates of the East: A Book of Travel Among Historic Wonderlands’. Sold with two photographs of Barry in uniform wearing medal ribbon and others in later life with children, together with a white metal commemorative medal for the Royal Visit to India 1905-06.
Pair: Sergeant M. Hickey, 21st Foot, who was wounded at Inkermann, 5 November 1854 Crimea 1854-56, 3 clasps, Alma, Inkermann, Sebastopol (Corp. Michl Hickey 21st Regt) Hunt & Roskell engraved naming; Turkish Crimea 1855, British issue, unnamed as issued, plugged with silver suspension, minor edge bruising, therefore nearly very fine or better (2) £400-£500 --- Michael Hickey was born in Pinlate, County Clare, Ireland. He attested for the 45th Foot (No. 3154) at Limerick in January 1850, and transferred as Private (No. 2765) to the 21st Foot in April 1850. Hickey served with the Regiment in the Crimea, and was wounded at Inkermann, 5 November 1854 (London Gazette 12 November 1854). Two men of this name and regiment were wounded at Inkermann - the published transcription of the casualty roll gives their numbers as ‘3174’ [sic] and ‘2329’, the former appearing to be a transcription error from Hickey’s number with the 45th Foot. Hickey was promoted to Corporal in January 1855, and advanced to Sergeant in June the same year. He was discharged medically unfit, in August 1856, as a consequence of the shot gun wound to his left arm received at Inkermann. The ball was still lodged in his arm. Sold with copied service papers.

-
2720569 item(s)/page