Jump to content
News Ticker
  • I am now accepting the following payment methods: Card Payments, Apple Pay, Google Pay and PayPal
  • Latest News

    Paul L Murphy

    Old Contemptible
    • Posts

      2,123
    • Joined

    • Last visited

    • Days Won

      3

    Posts posted by Paul L Murphy

    1. Next up we have a nice photo of an Administrative Official in the rank of Captain Equivalent (these were uniformed civilian specialists such as paymasters etc) in his full dress uniform wearing the Sacred Treasure 5th Class, Sino Japanese War Medal, either the 1914-15 or 1914-19 War Medal, and the Taisho Enthronement Medal. You can notice that the gold braid on the sleeves and shoulders appears to be two different colours. It is a mixture of silver and gold which is what distinguished these uniforms from the normal officer dress uniform where all of the braid was in gold. The waist sash is also blue grey and white, rather than red and white.

    2. Hi folks,

      I am back from Japan, jetlagged and wide awake at 5am in the morning (not a usual time to find me up and about). I am busy scanning some of my latest purchases from the flea markets and here are some nice photos of Japanese medals actually in wear. These types of photos are scarce enough to find but I got a nice haul of them this time around.

      First up is a picture of a civilian wearing the Red Cross Life Member Medal. He is a bit slovenly since the rosette is hanging off the ribbon and he has not bothered sewing it back on properly.

    3. It is for the later medal. The characters on the lid say that it is for Taisho Year 3 to 9 (ie 1914-20).

      The only difference between the two lid inscriptions is the 7th character from the top, ie it changes from a four to a nine.

      Best regards,

      Paul

    4. The press, the press, the press. Without delay!!

      They'll gut him?

      The problem is that the press can be a very blunt instrument and they could end up gutting all collectors (ourselves included) in the process. The last thing we want is successfull pressure to prevent the sale of Irish medals a la some other misguided legal jurisdictions around the world. Joe Public will not care about the subtleties and will tar us all with the same brush. I think naming and shaming within the collecting community would be more effective.

      However I have to agree with Ricky on this one, things like this make you lose you faith in Darwin from time to time !

    5. Can anyone in Eire call the Irish Times and tell them about this? The angle of British antique dealer destroys Irish history would go down well-the piece practically writes itself really. Maybe we can stop this twit from destroying this groups integrity?

      I'm sure the people I know in Parnell Square would also be outraged. :rolleyes:

      Are you sure he is English ? He may only be residing in England ?

    6. This is utter stupidity and disregard for history on the highest scale. Words fail me. He has turned a valuable and historical group of items into a number of anonymous pieces from which the historical importance and unique nature has been stripped. Hopefully he will make a loss on this and it will keep him away from such endevors in future.

      :violent::violent::violent::violent:

    7. Hi Paul

      I have all except the 1st "1874 Formosa Expedition War Medal", not sure if any would even exist, and the last one "1941-45 Great East Asia War Medal" which can only be found as a repro, though I do plan on getting one eventually.

      Not meaning to boast :rolleyes: but I have both of these. The 1874 turns up from time to time and at present costs about $5,000 or so in Japan if you can find one. They are difficult to find but not impossible if you are patient and have a large bank balance ! The GEAWM is harder to find and repros abound. The repros are actually made for veterans who feel they are entitled to it and can be found easily in Japan. The originals turn up once every few years, normally when an old collection is sold.

      :cheers:

      Paul

    8. Genltemen,

      Many thanks to you all, I suspect you must have pinned him down for me. I am in Japan for New Year but will be traveling to Ireland in early Feb and promise to bring the hat back and post a photo after that. I suppose the next step is to find out more about the unit and what they did (I guess counter intelligence against Japan would be high on the list given the fact that Fujii was obviously a Japanese American !

      :cheers:

      Paul

    9. Hi sname is Wakabayashi (Wakadayashi). In the Dictionary of Jpaanese Naval Officer's he has very little info against his name. He was married with a son and came from Ishikawa Prefecture. He enrolled as a Naval Cadet in Meiji Year 44. According to the Dictionary of Japanese Naval Admirals he was born in Meiji 22 and die in 1968. Rear Admiral in 1939 and Vice Admiral in 1943. Had a series of staff positions when an admiral, his last position being head of one of the naval schools. He was put on the retired list in September 1945.

      All in all appears to have been one of the many faceless senior officers that made things tick over rather than a blood and guts front line fighter. Still, the information above suggests that he saw some interesting front line service in his younger days.

      Cheers,

      Paul

    10. Hi folks,

      One of the items in my collection is a WWII period US officer's visor cap which is named on the inside to a "Lt Roy S Fujii, Ft Snelling". Is there any way of finding out more about who he was ? The name suggests he was a Nisei and I would love to be able to put some detail behind the man.

      Cheers in advance,

      Paul

    11. No guesses as to who the recipient is? (No, you won't win the group. It is still with the recipient.)

      Put us out of our misery, pleaseeeee.

      Especially since most of my reference books are still boxed up.

    12. Pretty bloody difficult ! The chances of you surviving that amount of combat were probably pretty slim. If you assume a couple at the bronze star level for being wounded in action you must still have five or six citations for bravery. I have a WWII C de G with 5 palms, 1 silver star and 2 bronze stars to a Legionnaire who was with the 6 REI and then switched sides to the 13 DBLE (the 6 REI went Vichy) and his was the result of five years of almost constant combat.

      In WWI it would have been no different so your recipient would have had to spend most of his four years in the trenches while not keeping his head down all the time ! Have you got a bunch of documents or just the medal ?

      Cheers,

      Paul

    13. The reverse picture is upside down !

      Also, the Ko-sho badge is more common than the Sen-sho version since far more people ended up invalided out of the army as a result of illness and disease (even in the 1930's) than battle wounds. The enamel on these is very weak and you normally find it with hairline cracks.

      I was actually married in the shrine in Kobe where Kusunoke Masashige is enshrined as a god so I suppose you could say he was an important participant in my wedding !

      Nice badge.

      :cheers:

    14. These two beauties both date back to the Civil War period. The first is a cavalry officer's tunic button made by Jennins & Co London.

      The next one up is 2 cms wide and has no maker mark on the reverse, but is also London made. Were these worn by staff officers since they lack the letter on the shield ?

      Stay tuned for some more old buttons from a lot which I recently purchased.

      :cheers:

    ×
    ×
    • Create New...

    Important Information

    We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.