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    Trooper_D

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    Posts posted by Trooper_D

    1. 1 hour ago, paul wood said:

      No I suspect he lost his original down a penguin's gullet or his faithful husky Igloo  devoured it during the 1940 expidition. Thus an official replacement. It was definitely like the black widow illustrated ...

      Your supposition seems right, Paul. He was awarded his Navy Cross (and promotion to Rear Admiral) for his flight to the South Pole on November 28, 1929. So, if a Black Widow was sold at Sotheby's in Byrd's name, it can only have been a replacement (or duplicate).

      Post #4 at the link below, purports to show Byrd's medals (including the Tiffany gold MoH) at the November 10th 1988 sale. It certainly is a very dark colour!

      http://www.usmilitariaforum.com/forums/index.php?/topic/263472-important-military-estate-auctions/

    2. On 28/09/2019 at 11:32, paul wood said:

      Byrds was definitely a black widow according to Gale Hawkes and George Harris and his was a WW1 award. In WW2 he was busy molesting penguins.

      Paul

      In fairness to Muckaroon1960, the US Navy Naval History and Heritage Command state on their Navy Cross webpage that

      "The Navy Cross was established by an act of Congress (Public Law 253) on 4 February 1919"

      and, further down on the page (as a caption to a photo of one),

      "One variation picked up the informal nickname "Black Widow" and was in use about 1941-1942, in which the medal itself and its wrap broach were over-anodized for a very dark, gunmetal finish."

      On 28/09/2019 at 11:32, paul wood said:

      Byrds was definitely a black widow according to Gale Hawkes and George Harris and his was a WW1 award.

      Is it possible that Messrs Hawkes and Harris were wrong, I wonder?

      Link: https://www.history.navy.mil/browse-by-topic/heritage/awards/decorations/navy-cross2.html

    3. 40 minutes ago, GreyC said:

      1652833844_xKaiserlichesAutomobilkorpsPKKlein.thumb.jpg.ac92d47fad56a2147601c9217a465a07.jpg

      Thank you for posting this, GrayC. It is always a delight to see a Fritz Schönpflug cartoon/caricature - and this is a new one to me.

      For anyone who is not already familiar with his work, he was always amusing in the way he showed up German and Austrian military foibles as well as being pretty much 'spot on' with uniform detail. A search of Google Images using his name will be well rewarded!

    4. 16 hours ago, Lukasz Gaszewski said:

      The photo seems to be after somebody's funeral (black armband). If we could find out whose, we could date it.

      It transpires that the US Library of Congress has a copy of this photo in their collection, the details of which suggest (not necessarily correctly) that it was taken between 1915 and 1920. Here is the link,

      https://www.loc.gov/pictures/item/2014707821/

      The tiff photo which can be downloaded from this link is of a higher definition than we have seen before. I don't think that they add a great deal to the investigation but I am posting below two extracts from the original which are of a better quality than the enlargement I originally posted.

      2019-09-14_12-03-50a.jpg.56f7a5923fdf34ac560805ae95d22d5a.jpg

      image.png

      2019-09-14_12-03-50b.jpg

      [for some reason, I can't delete the double posted image :(  ]

    5. 2 hours ago, Alex K said:

      Hi, guessing, not too dissimilar to the Portuguese order of Christ, regards

      Give the gentleman a cigar :)

      2019-09-07_17-56-19.thumb.jpg.08af45e3342ca0261131fe35fa213562.jpg

      If you click on the link below and right click the small image of the portrait above that appears there, then select 'Open image in a new tab' (in Google Chrome; other browsers may differ) you will be presented with a very large version - too large to post here, I think.

      http://www.zamekboskovice.cz/rod-mensdorff-pouilly

      Incidentally, has anyone any thoughts as to the star below the one in question?

       

       

    6. 2019-08-16_09-31-46.jpg.0e8a5db1cb7ffd4dc225a0f90f7f71f7.jpg

      In the second photo, the medal first from the left, a Vladimir with swords? The second from the left looks like the Order of Danilo 5th Class but surely that can't be right for someone of his status, can it? I wonder if the star, bottom right, is the Italian Order of the Crown.

      This enlargement of the first photo might help someone in identifying some of the medals.

      2019-08-16_09-39-27.jpg.ae402e638f8eae3a99ca2dce2c273b62.jpg

    7. 1 hour ago, Wessel Gordon said:

      So in essence it served essentially the same purpose as a modern dog-tag  ... ?

      Ostensibly, yes. However the British Army had been issuing official ID tags since 1907 (according to the link below) so I am of the opinion that bracelets, particularly the silver ones, were more of a fashion item than anything else. See the interesting explanation, here,

      https://www.iwm.org.uk/history/first-world-war-identity-tags

    8. This has all the appearance of being one of the ID bracelets which were commonly - but unofficially - worn by soldiers during the Great War. Click on this link and then click on 'images' and you will see many more,

      https://www.google.com/search?q=wwi+id+bracelet

      You may already know that the hallmark tells that it was made in Birmingham in 1917. 

    9. By one of those strange coincidences, today's Daily Telegraph (a UK broadsheet newspaper, for those who don't know it) has published a review of a book about the first (and only?) female winner of the Velká pardubická.

      As far as I am aware it isn't behind the paywall (I'm a subscriber so I can't tell) so I would encourage a read as - to keep it on topic for GMIC - it mentions the influence of the Austro-Hungarian cavalry in the starting of the race as well as its politicisation just before WW2 (a third of the entry in 1937 were German officers).

      https://www.telegraph.co.uk/books/what-to-read/unbreakable-richard-askwith-review-tale-nazi-fighting-jockey/

    10. 7 hours ago, mariusgin said:

      Someone told me that V = vojenský = militay. So VJK stands for Military riding club...

      If so, that brings it nicely back on topic :)

      2 hours ago, paul wood said:

      Many czech-slovak military horseman were excepional amateur jockeys and participated in the Czech jump race that made the grand national seem like a klddies outing.

      Paul

      Called Velká pardubická or so Wikipedia tells me,

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Velká_pardubická

    11. Google 'Order of the Militia of Christ' and then choose 'images' view of the results where you will see many examples of this cross. There is also a thread on this very site about this Order (which appears to have had a slightly murky past),

       

    12. An interesting find (or purchase, perhaps), Stuka! I have always had a liking for the Belgian Lancer dolman (and have a very moth-eaten one, myself).

      Can you clarify for me, is it an original photograph which has been enlarged more recently, do you think? I see a coat of arms in the top right corner. Is this a later addition, in your opinion? Have you researched the coat of arms to identify the subject of the portrait?

      Sorry, to ask so many questions :( 

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