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    Herr General

    Past Contributor
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    Posts posted by Herr General

    1. Lovely bar !!! Yummy :love:

      Correctly without the 4-days marching medal as it's only authorised in the military to be worn in the year the participation to the march took place.

      I take it this is a surplus group of the colonel as the UK medals and XXXV Officer's LS cross aren't amongst those ? Excellent group in any case !!!

      Cheers,

      Hendrik

      Hi Hendrik. I think that he never updated his mini and fullsize ribbonbar. Maybe he didn't want to wear a long row of medals? He received permission to wear his British medals in 1983, only 7 years before his dead.

      His resistance memorial cross:

      2wgchs0.jpg

    2. Today I received various items from Dutch Colonel J. van Golen including his medals.

      Carrier:

      1917

      Born on 18-08-1917 in Rotterdam

      1937 ? 1940

      Royal Military Academy in Breda

      1940 ? 1941

      Police inspector in 's-Gravenhage

      1941

      Escape to Great Britain

      1942 - 1943

      Activities concerning Contra intelligence services in Western Europe, Occupied France, Belgium, Switzerland, Spain and Portugal.

      1943

      Officer in the Dutch Princess Irene Brigade. Landed in Normandy

      1945

      British Higher Military school

      1946 ?1950

      Brigade Major in Indonesia. 1st and 2nd Politionel actions in West Java

      1950 ? 1952

      Dutch Higher Military school

      1952 ? 1955

      Head of operations ? 1st army Corps

      1955 ? 1958

      Nato staff ? Northern army group

      1958 ? 1960

      Head of personnel ? 4th Division

      1960 ? 1966

      Commander of the Infantry School. Chearman of the Nato task force "Armored Infantry" in Paris

      1966

      Chief of Staff ? Mobile Corps

      1967 ? 1968

      Government representative during the build of AFCENT in Limburg

      1968 ? 1969

      Territorial Commander South

      1970 ? retirement

      Head of civil ? military cooperation AFCENT

      Promotions:

      1937

      Cadet

      1940

      2e lieutenant

      1942

      1e lieutenant

      1948

      Captain

      1953

      Major

      1958

      Lieutenant Colonel

      1963

      Colonel

      Medals:

      Colonel J. van Golen was entitled to the following medals:

      Cross of Merit

      War remembrance cross with the following clasps:

      - Netherlands may 1940

      - Normandie 1944

      - War on land 1940 ? 1945

      Resistance memorial cross

      Cross for Order and Peace with the following clasps:

      - 1946

      - 1947

      - 1948

      - 1949

      Officer?s Long Service Decoration with the number XXXV

      Nijmegen Marching Cross

      Proficiency medal from the Dutch Olympic Comit? in Bronze

      1939 ? 1945 Star (United Kingdom)

      France and Germany Star (United Kingdom)

      Defence Medal (United Kingdom)

      War Medal (United Kingdom)

      Photo's will follow soon

    3. In a Dutch newspaper from 1937 I find a mention of two Dutch citizens who received the following awards ( translated )

      the Order of the Jade from China 4th classe

      White neckribbon with red/blue edges in the Order of the Jade of China

      (commandeurs grade ? )

      Who can give me more information about this Order and his grades?

    4. Hello Eric,

      Here is some info from the Museum Bronbeek about the Gele Soeng ( in Dutch )

      Het zou wel eens zo kunnen zijn dat met de gele soeng het zonnescherm of de pajoeng bedoeld wordt. Deze pajoeng heeft immers de vorm van een paddestoel (soeng) en is bovendien vaak geel van kleur. En het Hoog-Javaaanse woord voor dit zonnescherm "songsong" (de Javaanse o-klank is in het Maleis vaak een oe en het songsong is een gebruikelijke verdubbeling) is gemakkelijk tot soeng te herleiden.

      De pajoeng was het voornaamste onderscheidingsteken voor inlandse ambtenaren. Door de daarop in het veld aangebrachte kleuren en strepen of circels werd de rang van de ambtenaar aangeduid. Elke pajoeng heeft een veld (latar), met een knop, pentol, waaraan een stervormig uitgeknipt aanhangsel met puntige uitlopers (tlatjak) zit. De beide laatste onderdelen zijn in de regel verguld. De stok (garan) is bij de pajoengs der regenten verguld, bij die van de andere ambtenaren wit of zwart geverfd met of zonder versierselen in de vorm van bloemslingers, terwijl de dunne stokjes die het scherm open moeten houden, mneestal geel of wit geverfd zijn en door een netwerk van geel of wit garen zijn omgeven.

      Voor 1904 voerden ook de residenten en assisitent-residenten op Java en Madoera de ambtspajoeng: voor de residenten een vergulden en een halfvergulden/halfwitte voor de assistent-residenten. Gouverneur-Generaal Van Heutsz schafte dit gebruik in de zogeheten "pajoengcirculaire" van 1904 af.

    5. I have an ( incomplete ) list of Dutch persons who received the Order of African Redemption. Among them some persons who became "Ridder" , Knight. Al sources I can find on this Order mention only three grades, Grand Commander, Knight Commander, Officer. Does anyone know if there was a Knight grade ?

      Also there are some police officers who received a medal in a Liberian Order. What kind of medal could this be?

    6. Four Royal Marines flew into a battle zone clinging to the outside of helicopter gunships in a bid to rescue a fallen comrade, the Ministry of Defence has revealed.

      L/Cpl Ford: Comrades did not know he had been killed

      Unwilling to leave behind one of their number following a retreat, the commandos strapped themselves to the small stabiliser wings of two Apache helicopters and returned into the midst of a fierce gunfight with the Taliban in southern Afghanistan.

      Details of the unprecedented rescue attempt were revealed as the MoD pieced together the final hours of fallen hero L/Cpl Matthew Ford.

      L/Cpl Ford, 30, of 45 Commando Royal Marines, took part in a 200-soldier assault on a Taliban fort in Helmand province.

      Following an intense gun and mortar battle, the commandos were forced back. When they realised L/Cpl Ford was missing, four soldiers volunteered to return.

      Three Apaches were available for the mission, but the 200mph helicopters have no room inside for passengers. The soldiers made the snap decision to travel on the outside of two of the armour-plated aircraft, with a third helicopter providing covering fire.

      The men flew right back into the gun battle, landing both inside and outside the enemy fort in the search for L/Cpl Ford.

      They eventually found and retrieved the body of the section leader who had been killed by enemy fire.

      The unnamed soldiers won high praise for the rescue attempt and for managing to return L/Cpl Ford?s body to base.

      L/Col Rory Bruce, a UK Task Force spokesman, said the heroic mission had been a ?leap into the unknown?.

      ?This is believed to be the first time UK forces have ever tried this type of rescue mission,? he said.

      An Apache helicopter similar to the ones used in the rescue mission in Helmand

      ?It was an extraordinary tale of heroism and bravery of our airmen, soldiers and marines who were all prepared to put themselves back into the line of fire to rescue a fallen comrade.

      ?And it was with great sadness they later found their brother-in-arms had been killed in action.?

      L/Cpl Ford was the only fatality sustained by the UK Task Force during the battle on Monday. Four men were injured and are in a stable condition.

      Friends and family yesterday paid tribute to ?gentle giant? L/Cpl Ford, who had recently been thinking about leaving the service to settle down with a family.

      His mother Joan, who lives at the family home in Immingham, Lincolnshire, said: ?We are all devastated by the news of Mathew?s death. He was a larger than life character who lived his life to the full.

      ?He was a wonderful son to me and brother to Thomas and Scott and was looking forward to his future with Ina [his fiancee]. His love for life and his ability to make everyone laugh will always be with us.?

      L/Cpl Ford joined the Royal Marines in 2001. After training in Lympstone, Devon, where he earned the coveted Green Beret. L/Cpl Ford's commanding officer Lt Col Duncan Dewar RM said the serviceman?s ?professionalism, reliability, and selflessness as well as his sharp wit marked him out from the crowd?.

      http://www.telegraph.co.u

      What a heroic action! May he rest in peace!

    7. I just found a great Ordenspange in an old Carsten Zeige catalogue.

      Lippe-Detmold / Denkmunze an der erstrittenen Thronanspruch 1905

      Schaumburg / Goldene Verdienstmedaille 1893-1905

      Detmold / Goldene Verdienstmedaille 1905-1918

      Leopold-Orden Silbernes Verdienstkreuz

      Sachsen / Silberne Friedrich-August-Medaille

      Sachsen-Meiningen / Silberen medaille Hausorden Herzog Georg von Sachsen-Meiningen

      Schaumburg / Silberen Verdienstmedaille

      Niederlande / Silberen Verdienstmedaille des Hausorden von Oranien

      Is it possible to name this bar? I would like to know why he got the Dutch award! I will post a scan tomorrow!

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