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An unusual life-saving group awarded to Captain J. J. Shaw, Master of the Steamship Dalton of Newcastle, for rescuing the shipwrecked crew and passengers of the Steamship Tidal of Cardiff, off the Corton Lightship, near Lowestoft, on 12 January 1922 Shipwrecked Fishermen and Mariners Royal Benevolent Society Silver Medal, sometime gilded (Captain J. J. Shaw, S.S. “Dalton” January 12. 1922) with claw but lacking usual suspension; Shipping Federation Silver Medal for Meritorious Service (J. J. Shaw, 12th January 1922) fitted with gold chain mount and ring for suspension; Board of Trade Presentation Salver, 320mm diameter, silver (1,100g), hallmarks for London 1896, with with ball and claw feet, the centre inscribed ‘Presented by the Board of Trade to James Joseph Shaw, Master of the Steamship “Dalton” of Newcastle-upon-Tyne, in acknowledgement of his humanity and kindness to the shipwrecked crew and passengers of the steamship “Tidal” of Cardiff, whom he rescued off the Corton Lightship, near Lowestoft, on the 12th January 1922’, contained in its wooden presentation box, generally very fine (3) £800-£1,000 --- Provenance: Dix Noonan Webb, April 2001. ‘On the 12th January 1922, the S.S. Tidal of Cardiff, laden with coal, was in distress about 8 miles off the Corton Lightship, near Lowestoft, the vessel having shipped tremendous seas, which caused her to take a heavy and increasing list. In response to signals of distress the S.S. Dalton of Newcastle-upon-Tyne came to her assistance, and although the weather conditions were very bad the master of the Dalton decided to try to launch a boat. Volunteers were called for, and after the Dalton had been manoeuvred about 50 yards to the windward of the Tidal a life-boat, in charge of Mr Robert Spencer and manned by the seamen mentioned, was launched and succeeded in rescuing the crew and passengers consisting of ten men, two women, and three children, and safely transferred them to the Dalton. The rescuing boat had only gone some 30 yards on the return journey when the Tidal foundered.’ (Gallantry, by Sir Arnold Wilson and Captain J. McEwen refers) A piece of Plate (Salver) value £15 was awarded by the Board of Trade to James J. Shaw, Master of the Dalton, and a pair of Binoculars value £8.2.6 to Robert Spencer, Second Officer. In addition, Spencer and the four crewmen of the life-boat (Boatswain Martin Wennerburg; Able Seamen Arthur Hellman and Arthur Edward Clerk; and Donkeyman Henry Fudge) were awarded the Board of Trade Bronze Sea Gallantry Medal. Henry Fudge was subsequently selected for the ‘Emile Robin’ award for 1922. James Joseph Shaw received his silver salver at a Presentation by the Lord Mayor of Newcastle on 6 July 1922. Sold with a contemporary press photograph of Captain Shaw with the Mayor of Newcastle and other civil dignitaries; and copied research.
Waterloo 1815 (Corp. Andrew Mulligan, 11th Reg. Light Dragoons) first and last letters of naming obscured by contemporary replacement silver bar suspension, edge bruising and contact marks, otherwise nearly very fine £1,000-£1,400 --- Provenance: Purchased Spink, May 1980. Andrew Mulligan served as a Corporal in Captain Thomas Binny’s Troop of the 11th Light Dragoons at Waterloo.
Portugal, Republic, Order of Military Merit, Star, of unofficial manufacture, 70mm, silver and enamel, some enamel damage, centre plaque loose, maker’s mark on pinback, otherwise nearly very fine International, Military & Hospitaller Order of St. Lazarus of Jerusalem, neck badge, 67mm x 65mm, gilt and green and white enamels, enamel damage to central medallion and to tips of two arms of cross, otherwise nearly very fine (2) £80-£100
Berkshire Education Committee Medals. A miscellaneous selection of Berkshire School attendance medals, 3 silver and 32 bronze, some with extra date bars and ribbons, and assorted Berkshire Education Committee ‘Never Absent, Never Late’, attendance medals, generally good condition (lot) £40-£50
Family Group: Three: Private J. Scanlan, Royal Irish Rifles, later Royal Irish Fusiliers and Liverpool Regiment 1914 Star, with clasp (9901 Pte. J. Scanlan. R. Ir: Rif.); British War and Victory Medals (9901 Pte. J. Scanlan. R. Ir. Rif.); together with the recipient’s Silver War Badge, the reverse officially numbered ‘B231794’, light contact marks, generally very fine General Service 1962-2007, 1 clasp, Borneo (23708526 Spr. V. E. Scanlan. RE.) good very fine (4) £180-£220 --- John Scanlon was born in Dublin on 7 March 1893 and attested for the Royal Irish Rifles at Dublin on 4 January 1912. He served with the 2nd Battalion during the Great War on the Western Front from 15 August 1914, and subsequently transferred to the Royal Welsh Fusiliers, the Royal Irish Fusiliers, and finally to the Liverpool Regiment. He was discharged from the latter unit on 2 March 1919, ‘in consequence of being surplus to military requirements, having suffered impairment since entry into the War’, after 7 years and 58 days’ service, and was awarded a Silver War Badge. Sold with the recipient’s Character and Discharge Certificates; and two postcard photographs featuring the recipient. Vincent Eamonn Scanlon, the son of the above, was born in Dublin on 26 April 1941 and attested for the Royal Engineers at Belfast on 5 May 1959. He served with the Engineers with the British Army of the Rhine, and then in the Far East from 18 September 1962 to 30 January 1965. He transferred to the Reserve on 4 May 1965, after 6 years’ service, and was finally discharged on 4 May 1971. Sold with the recipient’s Certificate of Service Red Book and attestation form; Passport; Driving Licence; and other ephemera, including a photograph of the recipient.
Indian Recruiting Badge, G.VI.R., silver and bronze, reverse officially numbered ‘6128’; Edward Prince of Wales Visit to Bombay 1921, oval bronze medal, the obverse with bust of Edward Prince of Wales (later Edward VIII), surmounted by Prince of Wales’ feathers, the reverse inscribed ‘Visit of His Royal Highness, Bombay, November 1921’, with small ring for suspension, the first with some scratches to reverse, centre polished, otherwise nearly very fine, the second, small edge dig, otherwise very fine (2) £60-£80
The important ‘Defence of Lucknow’ Indian Mutiny Medal awarded to James Luffman, a 15-year scholar at La Martinière School - a ‘Ragged Fusilier’, one of only two boys wounded during the siege and one of the six senior boys who bore arms Indian Mutiny 1857-59, 1 clasp, Defence of Lucknow (James Luffman.) fitted with contemporary silver ribbon brooch; together with the Punjab 1848-49 medal awarded to his father with clasps for Chiliamwala and Goojerat (James Luffman.) this correctly impressed but with rank and regiment neatly erased, toned, good very fine (2) £2,000-£2,600 --- Luffman’s mutiny medal has always been associated with a two-clasp Punjab medal, also named to James Luffman. It has a well executed erasure both before and after the impressed naming consistent with the rank and regiment having been obliterated. Research by Major H. E. Dadley in conjunction with A. J. Farrington of the India Office Records confirms that the Punjab medal belongs to James’s father Staff Sergeant James Luffman, 3rd Company 1st Battalion Bengal Artillery, with the medal roll confirming the clasps for Chilianwalla and Goojerat. It further transpires that there is only one man named Luffman on the Punjab medal roll. Fifty-eight medals were awarded to the Foundation boys and staff of the La Martinière School and are highly prized for their uniqueness and rarity – this one to James Luffman more so as he was one of only two boys wounded during the Defence. These boys boarded at the school and came under the auspices of the Claude Martin Charities being deemed as being from straightened but deserving families. On 13 June 1857, at the command of Sir Henry Lawrence, the scholars all marched from the Martinière to the Residency on a journey that, over the next 6 months, would turn these schoolboys into men and earn for them the soubriquet “The Ragged Fusiliers”. The siege commenced on the 1st July 1857 when Luffman was just a few days shy of his sixteenth birthday. With the firing of the first shots most of the servants fled the Residency so the military authorities impressed the younger boys of the Martinière to undertake domestic chores including, sweeping the compounds, the drawing of water, grinding the daily rations of corn to make bread and some to cook the boys meals. Others tended to the sick officers and others to take messages between garrisons. Later, Brigadier Inglis requested that as many boys as possible should be sent to pull the punkahs over the sick and wounded at the General Hospital. For this purpose 36 were told off in reliefs of 12 each and changed every 12 hours. The boys’ health suffered greatly and two died. The junior boys were used as night watchmen and for digging the wells for the “filth” of the Establishment whilst six senior boys bore arms defending the Martinière Post, operating the semaphore system on top of the Residency Tower and in supervising the younger pupils. L. E. R. Rees wrote of their plight:
‘The poor Martinière pupils, who go about the garrison more filthy than others, and apparently more neglected and hungry even than we are, are made use of to drive away these insects (flies) from the sick in hospital, and others. That they, too, should contribute their share of usefulness is but just and fair; but that they should be placed in menial attendance upon the healthy great in the garrison is, in my opinion, far from right. But I shall say nothing more on this subject, lest I assume a tone of censure.’ The Martinière Post, after the Judicial Garrison, was the most exposed defence in the Residency. Johannes’ House kept up an incessant rifle fire from just outside the perimeter with “Bob the Nailer” causing the most nuisance. The Post was defended by men from the 32nd Regiment of Foot, civilians and six armed senior boys from the Martinière named as: James Luffman, Edward Henry Hilton, David Aratoon, John Hornby, George Roberts and Samuel Wrangle. The wounding of Luffman is best described by Edward Hilton from his book “The Tourist's Guide to Lucknow”. Hilton spent much of his latter years given tours to local visitors and is well placed to give the most accurate account. The boys who carried arms used to take 20 or 30 rounds and go to the top of the house in which we were located and fire through the loopholes at the enemy and at whatever seemed a fair target. There were pumpkins and other vegetables which would have made a welcome addition to our cuisine growing in Johannes’ garden outside the line of our defence. We found it very tantalising to know that we must not venture to forage in this garden for the vigilance of the enemy’s marksmen was untiring and they never lost an opportunity of picking off any member of the garrison who was so incautious to expose himself. Seeing that the coveted vegetables were not available for us we did our best to make them unfit for the enemy and found some diversion in firing at the gourds. This “sport” was put an end to by the following circumstances: ‘Shortly after the boy Smith had been hit by one of the enemy’s marksmen, known to the boys by the soubriquet of “Jim the Rifle” located in the Johannes’ warehouse facing our post, Luffman and myself, with the intention of avenging this, went on the the roof of the building in which we were quartered and which overlooked the enemy’s position to try and get a shot at the rascal; we both used the same loophole. While on lookout one of the lads, S. Hornby, came to the roof with a supply of ammunition, and, while our attention was thus diverted our mutinous opponent across the way fired at us. His bullet struck Luffman’s musket, [which was in the loophole], glanced along the barrel and lodged in his left shoulder. As already mentioned he fortunately recovered but our target practice had to be discontinued owing to the ammunition being put out of our reach.’ 
James Austen Luffman was born on 5 July 1841, the eldest of three sons to Sergeant James Luffman, Bengal Artillery, and his wife Mary (née Bowers). Mary died on 4 August 1852, at Peshawar leaving James with the unenviable task of taking care of his three children. He sought assistance from the Claude Martin Charities who accepted the two elder brothers, James Austen and John Thomas, at the Martinière at Lucknow, with the younger, William Collins, being accepted at the sister Martinière School at Calcutta. The boys were orphaned on 11 June 1858, when their father died at Raneegunge, where he had been working as a Dak Agent for the Inland Transport Company. The Principal Registry of Probate, England, handed guardianship, until full age, to their lawful aunt Anne Still who, with her husband John, had been resident in India before returning to England living in Sudbury, Middlesex. At the denouement of the mutiny James Luffman joined the East Indian Railways together with “partners in crime” John Hornby and Edward Hilton, an understanding expected of all Martinière boys that they serve at least a year within the railway establishment. On 26 March 1859, he joined the Indian Police and performed non-gazetted appointments in and around Oudh until being gazetted on 16 January 1879 with the rank of District Superintendent of Police, a position he held until retirement on 25 October 1894. His record of service showed he worked variously in Bahraich, Hardoi, Partagarh, Jalaun, Gorackpur and Rae Barelli. It should be noted that at this time gazetted appointments in the police were generally filled by military officers or appointees from England making promotion and gazetting of locally enlisted officers discriminato...
Jordan, Hashemite Kingdom, Order of Independence, First Class set of insignia, comprising sash badge, 92mm including wreath suspension x 59mm, silver, gilt, and enamel, unmarked; Star, 88mm, silver, gilt, and enamel, unmarked, with full sash riband, the Star lacking its backplate, therefore good very fine (2) £400-£500
Regimental Medallions (9), 3rd Hussars Victory Cricket Shield (1925 Tpr. W. Hornby); The Bays Winners Inter-Troop Football; Kings Dragoon Guards Boxing (v The Queens Bays 1931 Bantamweight); Royal Tank Corps 50th Raining Regt R.A.C. sports 1942; 4th Dragoons (L/C Bartlett Boxing); Yorkshire Hussars East Riding Yeomanry (1909 Tpr. C. Allenby); 12th lancers Boxing (Tpr A. Tipper Welterweight); Junior Leaders R.A.C. Tug of War (Winners 1972 100 St); 7th Hussars Cricket (Inter Squadron Cricket Cup 1928 Winners H.Q. Wing R.S.M J. S. Nichols) all silver except the last two; together with a 10th Hussars Sweetheart Brooch made from a regimental button, generally very fine (10) £80-£100
Medallions, Hundred of Salford Humane Society, Committee Badge (2), silver and enamel (O. J. Lueder 1913; Lucy Andrews 1927); the second missing its suspension ring, very fine; Carron Company Ambulance Brigade (Falkirk), ‘Incorporated by Royal Charter 1773, Company Arms. Esto Perpetsa Founded 1759, Presented To’ (not inscribed), picture of five ambulance men, one man lying on ground, integral suspension loop, Birmingham hallmark 1912, silver, 36mm., scarce, some staining, very fine (3) £80-£100
Canadian Memorial Cross, G.V.R. (77681 L/Sgt. J. McNeil) with Maple Leaf bar suspension, in case of issue, good very fine £50-£70 --- John Henry McNeill was born in Hull, Yorkshire in December 1875. He emigrated to Canada, and resided in Victoria, British Columbia. McNeill served during the Great War with the 15th Battalion, Canadian Infantry on the Western Front. He suffered a gun shot wound to the left shoulder during the Battle of Amiens, 8 August 1918 (entitled to Silver War Badge). Lance Sergeant McNeill died after the war of related injuries/illness, 5 March 1922, and is buried in the Vernon (Pleasant Valley) Cemetery, British Columbia, Canada - his memorial cross being a somewhat later claim. Sold with copied service papers.
Coronation 1911, County and Borough Police, unnamed as issued; Huntley & Palmers Limited Fire Brigade Long Service Medal (3) (G. Griffin; W. Hole; J. Stevenson); National Fire Brigades Union Long Service Medal, with five ‘Five Years’ clasps and one ‘Twenty Years’ clasp (J. C. Spencer Windsor Fire Brigade); Volunteer Fire Brigade Contest Medal, held at Wokingham June 6th 1881, silver; High Wycombe Volunteer Fire Brigade, 2nd prize awarded at Maidenhead, 6 July 1874 (Foreman G. Tottle) silver, suspension broken; together with a silver fob (J. Brown. M.O.S. F.B. Burghfield) and a metal F.B.A. Windsor 1887 Diamond Jubilee commemorative medallion, generally very fine £120-£160
A Second War ‘North West Europe’ O.B.E. group of nine awarded to Colonel H. T. Goodeve, Royal Canadian Army Pay Corps The Most Excellent Order of the British Empire, O.B.E. (Military) Officer’s 2nd type, breast badge; British War and Victory Medals (Major H. T. Goodeve.); 1939-45 Star; France and Germany Star; Defence Medal, Canadian issue in silver; Canadian Volunteer Service Medal, with overseas clasp; War Medal 1939-45, Canadian issue in silver; Coronation 1937, unnamed as issued, mounted as originally worn, generally very fine (9) £280-£340 --- O.B.E. London Gazette 1 February 1945 (North West Europe). M.I.D. London Gazette 26 October 1916. Henry Tatham Goodeve was born in Chesley Ontario Canada in January 1888. He was the son of Arthur S. Goodeve, Railway Commissioner, Grand Trunk Railway, and was employed as a Broker. Goodeve served for 6 years with 102nd Regiment, Rocky Mountain Rangers prior to serving with the Royal Canadian Army Pay Corps during the Great War. He advanced to Colonel and served during the Second World War. Goodeve had two brothers, who also served during the Great War - Lieutenant Arthur Erskine Goodeve, who served with the PPCLI, and was killed in action at Courcelette, 17 September 1916; and Lieutenant Stewart Marcon Goodeve, who served with the Royal Flying Corps, and was killed in action, 20 November 1917.
Portugal, Kingdom, Combined Orders of Christ, St Bento de Aviz and St James of the Sword (Order of the Three Bands), a late-19th Century breast Star, 87mm x 73mm, silver, gilt and enamel, the gilt and enamelled centre with representations of the three Orders, with gilt and enamelled Sacred Heart above, with jewel cut rays, and double-pin suspension, about extremely fine and very rare £1,400-£1,800
Queen’s South Africa 1899-1902, 5 clasps, Cape Colony, Orange Free State, Transvaal, South Africa 1901, South Africa 1902 (34354 Tpr: A. Bryant. 58th Coy. Imp: Yeo:), with attractive contemporary silver ribbon pin bar, suspension bent and loose, edge bruising, otherwise nearly very fine £100-£140 --- A. Bryant served with the 58th (Berkshire) Company, 15th Battalion Imperial Yeomanry, in South Africa during the Boer War.
A Second War ‘North Africa - Tobruk Operations’ D.F.M. group of seven awarded to Wellington Pilot Flight Lieutenant R. Stewner, Royal Canadian Air Force Distinguished Flying Medal, G.VI.R. (Can/R. 80154. F/Sgt. R. Stewner. R.C.A.F.); 1939-45 Star; Africa Star, 1 clasp, 8th Army; Burma Star; Defence Medal, Canadian issue in silver; Canadian Volunteer Service Medal, with overseas clasp; War Medal 1939-45, Canadian issue in silver, mounted as worn; together with a pair of silver-gilt R.C.A.F. Operational wings, the reverses stamped ‘Stephenson Sterling’, both with with screw-back fitting, suspension re-affixed on DFM with traces of excess solder, otherwise good very fine and better (7) £1,400-£1,800 --- D.F.M. London Gazette 4 December 1942. The original Recommendation states: ‘Flight Sergeant Stewner is a pilot of exceptional ability and his operational career has been characterised by courage and daring. On the night of 29 July 1942 he was detailed to attack shipping at Tobruk. Intense and accurate gun fire was encountered and the aircraft was caught in the glare of searchlights. Flight Sergeant Stewner took violent evasive action and successfully completed his task. On many occasions he has shown the greatest determination to press home the attack in the face of heavy enemy opposition. This airman has always displayed devotion to duty of the highest order and his example has had an outstanding effect on all personnel.’ Robert Stewner enlisted into the Royal Canadian Air Force at Winnipeg, Manitoba, on 4 November 1940, and served during the Second World War as a Wellington Pilot with 40 Squadron in the Middle East from 28 December 1941 to 13 March 1943, and on the occasion of the operation for which he was awarded the D.F.M. was flying Wellington HX468. He was commissioned Pilot Officer on 5 August 1942, and was promoted Flying Officer on 5 February 1943. He subsequently served in India from 8 February to 27 October 1944 before returning to Canada, and transferred to the Reserve on 2 April 1945, being granted the rank of Flight Lieutenant. Sold with the recipient’s original Commission Document; various photographs of the recipient; various correspondence and newspaper cuttings; much copied research, including full service records (some parts redacted) and photocopied pages from the recipient’s Flying Log Book; and other ephemera.
Three: Private E. G. Paddon, Surrey Yeomanry British War and Victory Medals (8869 Pte. E. G. Paddon. Surr. Yeo.); Defence Medal (E. G. Paddon.) privately engraved naming, very fine Pair: Second Lieutenant N. Clegg, Royal Army Service Corps British War and Victory Medals (2. Lieut. N. Clegg.) very fine British War Medal 1914-20 (Cpl. G. N. Veitch. S.A.N.L.C.); Memorial Plaque (George Alfred Dale) edge bruising and contact marks to BWM, this good fine; the Plaque good very fine (7) £100-£140 --- Norman Clegg joined the Army Service Corps as a driver on 12 December 1915 and by March 1916, having been advanced to Corporal, was posted to German East Africa. Shortly after arriving there he was appointed Sergeant in charge of stores. Commissioned Second Lieutenant in the same unit, he saw little active service and was mainly engaged on convoy work. He was invalided out of the service in 1918, and was awarded a Silver War Badge. George Alfred Dale attested for the Royal Field Artillery and served with ‘C’ Battery, 173rd Brigade during the Great War on the Western Front from 28 November 1915. He died on 4 October 1917, and is buried in Rocquigny-Equancourt Road British Cemetery, Manancourt, France.
An Edwardian silver mounted clear glass globular scent bottle, hobnail cut, pierced silver mount and cover, drop in stopper, 12cm, Chester 1904; three similar silver mounted dressing table jars, two hair tidies, an EPNS dressing table tray, late 19th/early 20th century (7)
A Queen Elizabeth II silver Silver Jubilee proof crown, capsulated, boxed; three others; a silver Queen Mother 80th Birthday proof crown, capsulated, boxed; a silver Gibraltar one crown commemorative proof coin, capsulated, boxed; a silver proof medallic first day cover, 1973; a silver Christmas medallion, Birmingham 1977, boxed; three royal family commemorative £5 coins; two UK proof sets; five silver coins, 31g; etc
A late Victorian silver and hobnail cut globular scent bottle, embossed hinged cover, drop-in stopper, 12cm, Birmingham 1899; an Edward VII scent bottle, Birmingham 1901; an Elizabeth II silver tulip shaped boudoir candlestick, hollow filled, 10.5cm, Birmingham 1953; a silver boudoir candlestick, hollow filled, Birmingham 1952 (4)
Vinyl Records – 45rpm Singles - X-Ray Spex – Germ Free Adolescence – INT 573; Led Zeppelin – Trampled Under Foot – Swan Song – DC1 – 7” limited edition promo; Led Zeppelin – Whole Lotta Love – Atlantic – AK-3412; Led Zeppelin – Whole Lotta Love – Atlantic – OS-13116; Konk – Your Life – BRW 7; Scorpions – Still Loving You – HAAR 5232 (lacks original cover); Lorraine Silver – Lost Summer Love – CC 2; Visage – Pleasure Boys – POSPP 523; Special Request – Take It To The Max – IS 194; John Cougar – Jack & Diane – RIVA37; Man Parrish – Hip Hop, Be Bop (Don't Stop) – POSP 575; Tygers Of Pan Tang – Love Potion No. 9 picture disc – MCAP 769; Wild Horses – Face Down – EMI 5047 (lacks original cover); others, various artists including Pink Floyd, Public Image Ltd, Tears for Fears, Saxon, Diana Ross, Slade, Rock Steady Crew, Squeeze, Bruce Springsteen, Starship, The Special AKA, Cliff Richard, Spandau Ballet, Soft Cell, REO Speedwagon, Billy Idol, The Style Council, Wham, The Pet Shop Boys, Simple Minds, Tears For Fears, Supertramp, Dead or Alive, Ultravox, UB40, XTC, Rocky Sharpe and the Replays picture disc, Ultravox clear vinyl, etc (over 150 singles in two boxes)
A set of twenty five Franklin Mint miniature silver plates, each after the antique, 103g, miniature display rack, certificates; a set of twenty five Franklin Mint miniature collector's plate, each printed with birds, miniature wooden display shelf, certificates
A sterling silver curb link charm bracelet, padlock clasp, with a good assortment of silver charms, including circus lion in carriage, treasure chest, telephone, typewriter, spinning wheel, Welsh dragon, golfer, boxing glove, top hat, windmill, trophy cup, mill wheel, tall ship, etc, 121.8g
Coins - numismatic interest, commemoratives, mainly UK issues from private mints: Jubilee Mint set of four proof Platinum Jubilee Ascension Is crowns, gold plated, in capsules and boxed; Jubilee Mint gold plated 38mm dia. five medallion set commemorating Queen Elizabeth II’s five jubilees in folder of issue; Westminster Mint boxed set of 12 gold plated 32mm dia. Proof medallions commemorating Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, photographic reverses inset in lid of presentation box a mounted Democratic Republic of Congo 10 Franc proof gold piece; Gibraltar Crown 2017 silver proof Queen Elizabeth II sapphire wedding anniversary, photo rev. in capsule; Isle of Man 50 pence 2022 gilded in issuer’s wallet; silver 38mm medallion Royal wedding 201, Princess Diana reverse, proof-like; Gold one eighth sovereign 2022 in Hattton’s box; blue 1971 first decimal issue folder along with Spitfire commemorative gilt pocket watch, chain and clasp knife in wooden box of issue (Qty)
A sterling silver dress ring, set with a large faceted topaz, ring size L, 10g; asterling silver mounted circular Delft pottery fragment, silver herringbone link necklace chain; an oval silver necklace, set with a large polished amber cabochon, 4.25cm, marked 925; other silver necklaces and a brooch; qty
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2465183 item(s)/page