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    Tony

    Old Contemptible
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    Posts posted by Tony

    1. Hello,

       

      This great coat belongs to a mate but as I have very little knowledge about WWII uniforms I'm hoping someone here can help me.

       

      Would have been used by the Free Belgians during WWII, the Belgian army in the 1950s or is it just a Brit great coat that someone has sewn Belgian buttons on? I'm assuming the buttons are Belgian.

       

      My mate wants to move it on and would like to know exactly what he has before doing so.

       

      Thanks for any advice.

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    2. Not my area either but I'll have a guess and say the difference is possibly an officer has a bronze badge with prongs on the reverse whereas an OR badge is brass with lugs or a slider on the reverse.

      Here's one being sold as an officer's badge https://www.trademe.co.nz/antiques-collectables/militaria/badges/listing-1910658691.htm 

      An example with slider here https://picclick.co.uk/Genuine-WW1-Royal-Flying-Corps-RFC-Brass-Cap-381604846273.html 

    3. According to the 1939 register, Ronald SJ Rolfe was an apprentice plumber living at 6 Manor Villas, Totland, Isle of Wight. He was born 12/12/20 and living with Ernest J (bricklayer) and Eliza Jane Rolfe (parents?).

      There was an Ernest James Rolfe (bricklayer), married to Eliza J Rolfe who transferred from the infantry to the Royal Engineers in 1917, his home address was 9 Manor Villas, Totland Bay, Isle of Wight so although he had moved from number 9 to number 6 by 1939, it's probably safe to assume that Ronald SJ Rolfe was born in England.

      Ernest FJ (Ronald's brother? b 1909) and Hilda Rolfe were living in number 9 Manor Villas in 1939.

      Edit: just seen the eldest son is Ernest Frederick Frank Rolfe rather than Ernest FJ Rolfe.

      Ronald Sidney J Rolfe married Dorothy Penfold on the Isle of Wight in 1951 and died on the Isle of Wight in 2003.

      In 2002 he was living 7 Broadway, Totland Bay with Philip Rolfe which I assume is Ronald's son.

    4. 20 hours ago, Mike McLellan said:

      Please forgive me if I ask a foolish question. I’m trying to learn the service requirements for obtaining ww2 medals. How could the son qualify for the home defense medal if he also qualified for the Africa, Italy, and war medal? Not to mention the long service medal. Thanks. 

      Mike

      Here's the entitlement for British forces, it's different for other Commonwealth troops as far as I know:

      • 1080 days (3 years) service in the UK between 3 Sep 1939 and 8 May 1945
      • 1080 days (3 years) service in the Home Guard between 14 May 1940 and 31 Dec 1944 
      • 360 days (1 year) non operational service overseas between 3 Sep 1939 and 2 Sep 1945
      • 180 days non operational service in an overseas area deemed to be closely threatened or subject to air attack between 3 September 1939 and 8 May 1945

      In more detail here https://www.gov.uk/guidance/medals-campaigns-descriptions-and-eligibility#world-war-2-medals 

      I don't think he'd have been the son of the Gnr. GJ Smith as the NOK are the parents rather than a wife. Perhaps a nephew but that's just me thinking out loud.

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