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    Tony

    Old Contemptible
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    Everything posted by Tony

    1. Ok, I did a quick search and found him as a temporary Captain in the Home Guard (assuming hg is the Army List abbreviation for Home Guard) in 1942. I didn't find him in the casualty lists. Attached is a page from the army list, he's in the first column, 10th from the bottom. I've no idea what the crossed swords or W.S./Lt. mean. I also found him in the Grantham Journal 18/7/41 - Grantham v Egerton Park, WG Butteriss bowled out by Hill for 53. At his father's funeral in April 42 he's a Major according to newspaper above. S2_US_MCV_ARMY_ARMYLISTOCTPART121943GREA_0669.pdf
    2. A day later and my brain has finally clicked into gear ?. I see what you mean Pete with the Dunkirk connection, served overseas early and didn't go back afterwards.
    3. That's interesting, I thought they were awarded for service any time between 1939 and 1945 (the Star being for overseas service). Cazack, a cracking group and hopefully the missing medals will turn up one day.
    4. Andy, thanks for taking the time to check. Do you think there's any chance of this being the same man? Not that anything can be proven. I've just been looking at the German Adressbueche and the family name seems to crop up mainly on the North Sea coast area and Ruhr/Rheinland. Anyway, WWI gas mask glasses don't crop up often, so a nice and possibly rare item to have especially as the tin is named.
    5. I dug these out again the other day and am just wondering if any other online research possibilities have become available over the past couple of years.
    6. Peter, I don’t really know the ins and outs but in basic terms and only up to 1920 each regiment issued their own number, if a soldier changed to a different regiment he received a number that belonged to his new regiment. See here https://www.rlcarchive.org/Help/Enlistment Post 1920 block numbers https://www.northeastmedals.co.uk/mm/army_service_numbers.htm
    7. Hello, Your great grandfather's service record doesn't appear to have survived the fire bombs in WWII. Attached is his medal index card which shows he received the British War and Victory medals. Only receiving a medal pair indicates he didn't go overseas until Jan. 1916 at the very earliest. Therefore if he was at Mons it would have been in Nov. 1918. W/R is Waterways and Railways. https://www.longlongtrail.co.uk/army/regiments-and-corps/the-corps-of-royal-engineers-in-the-first-world-war/ I think as his medal box shows RAMC he first entered theatre in that Corps and transferred to the RE at a later date. I don't subscribe to Ancestry so can't check pension records.
    8. Peron, John Norton transferred from the Royal Artillery to the King's Own Yorkshire Light Infantry on 12/1/44. Going by the medals he then obviously served with the W. Yorks. That's the only info I could find online at Find My Past.
    9. Always good to have a reunite, good luck finding the other two.
    10. They could be serviette/napkin rings however, as with most things that are a mystery, it's just a guess based on seeing similar WWI items. I would think that unless a book or newspaper ad from 1918 turns up showing what they were actually made for you'll probably never get a 100% satisfactory reply to the answers you're looking for.
    11. Looks like he was sick in 1916. Here's a list of the casualty clearing stations to give you an idea of the area he may have been serving in. https://www.longlongtrail.co.uk/army/regiments-and-corps/locations-of-british-casualty-clearing-stations/
    12. Difficult to know if he wasn't a casualty (wounded/killed/POW). This site http://www.corpsofmilitarypolice.org/tools/armynumber?query= shows the service number 14416131 as being General Service. The number 29526 L brings up an error page but that may just be a problem at my end however, the service number 29526 shows a result for Royal Army Service Corps. Here's another link showing army block numbers allocated from 1920 to 1942 http://www.northeastmedals.co.uk/mm/army_service_numbers.htm Hopefully the above helps a little.
    13. They look like shooting club awards/medals to me. The Swiss one has the history or evolution of shooting on the back, in the languages spoken in Switzerland.
    14. I can't help with your question but going by the link it appears to be a US unit insignia rather than British.
    15. Great pic. Have you ever seen an original anywhere? And, have you seen the many so called MG chainmail face protection masks coming out of the cracks over the past few months?
    16. I think France has the standard grades of gold like 18 and 22 ct.
    17. That's a great find! I read somewhere that some of the Russian mutineers were eventually imprisoned in Algeria.
    18. Thanks for the tip on the book Rob and good to see a French addition to this thread.
    19. I can't help you with your question but that's a great lot Mike. All I can pick up on is three of them appear to have the Queen's crown. Is that 20ct on the gold wing? Might that suggest it was made outside of Britain? Apart from having no hallmarks, 20ct isn't standard there.
    20. Great to find a pic. Where did you come across the ID card (Kennkarte)?
    21. Thanks anyway Kris. If I find anything worth mentioning when I'm there I'll post it.
    22. Yeah, I think it would've made it more interesting to say it was Free Belgian issue. Next time I'm round his place I'll check the buttons myself, just in case he missed something. Do you know how soon after liberation the Belgian army changed back to their own style of uniform?
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