-
Posts
7,155 -
Joined
-
Last visited
-
Days Won
5
Content Type
Profiles
Forums
Blogs
Gallery
Events
Store
Everything posted by Ulsterman
-
Heer A small world
Ulsterman replied to Chris Liontas's topic in Germany: Third Reich: Uniforms, Headwear, Insignia & Equipment
1,000!? That is fewer than I had supposed by far. I thought the Wehrmacht fielded almost 8 million total in 1939-45. Some of them, anti-Nazis are commemorated on the Harvard Memorial Church wall-just below FDR's name. I believe its the only monument to Wehrmacht dead in the USA. -
Portugal - 1800's Padroeira Do Reino Breast Star
Ulsterman replied to Mike's topic in Southern European & Balkan States
wow-off to the JOMSA -
EK 1914 EK1 winner photos...
Ulsterman replied to Chris Boonzaier's topic in Germany: All Eras: The Iron Cross
-
EK 1914 EK1 winner photos...
Ulsterman replied to Chris Boonzaier's topic in Germany: All Eras: The Iron Cross
-
Some Iraqi Stuff for a Major General
Ulsterman replied to Paul R's topic in Modern Campaigns and Conflicts
Cool! You should write an article on Iraqi fakes Paul and Lorenzo. 25 years from now nobody will believe that this stuff was cranked out so early. Hows' collecting in the sand box Lorenzo? Anything new? Did the FJP packet ever arrive? -
Coronation & Jubilee Medals
Ulsterman replied to a topic in Great Britain: Orders, Gallantry, Campaign Medals
Brilliant!! :jumping: -
In Zepplins by W. Cross, the faint radio message received was: "China project. Abort Operations. Enemy Has Seized Units You Were Staging To Assist. Turn Back To Starting Point." There is some controversy about who exactly sent the message, but Chris Andrews, the Cambridge Intelligence expert, has written an article in 'Intelligence and International relations" about how the British tracked the radio communications of the L-59 across Africa and thinks it was deliberate disinformation. Cross doubts that the L-59 would have reached the remaining German forces in Africa....but, you enver know.
-
Coronation & Jubilee Medals
Ulsterman replied to a topic in Great Britain: Orders, Gallantry, Campaign Medals
yoinks! That is a superb group. How did Lady H. get that Turkish medal? -
DDR Female VP-Wachtmeister
Ulsterman replied to christerd's topic in Germany: Post 1945: Bundesrepublik & DDR
She looks very DDR to me-like Berlin police or summit @ 1950(s). -
Vizefeldwebels were senior NCOs (Unterofficer mit portapee: Militarwochenblatt of 1862). In todays' terms they'd be close to a US E6/7 I reckon. They were the backbone of the army. The Koniggratz cross was a campaign medal; you got it for being there. What is interesting is that your buttonaire lacks the Franco-Prussian war medal, so your ancestor was out of uniform by 1870. The war decoration was a serious award-given for real merit and sometimes, bravery in the field. I would guess it was probably a bravery award for the Austrian war and I think there's a list of total awards out there for the war. If you can find out your ancestor's regiment, maybe we can help you find more information. With the Kaisers' Centennial medal (1897) and the swanky enameled long service schanlle, the buttonaire must date from @ 1900. All veterans who applied received the Centennial medal. The US consul was kept busy at the end of the 19th century handing these out. At the time, the German war veterans associations in the USA were quite large and very,very popular.
-
There was (is) a premiere silver edition for higher recipients. As I recall there were @ 100 pieces made. I have found the who, wheres and whys of this medal very interesting over the past few years . I suspect that every Landwehr/Landsturm officer in the occupation armies in the East got one of these in 1918/19. It is not overly uncommon to see these on female bows and I have noted over a dozen documents to women who were NOT denoted as nurses, merely "Frau Gretchen Faust of Wiemar" etc.. I have always wondered who these ladies were and what they did to merit the award. The Red Cross connections are not as common as many American collectors presume. 500,000 were purchased by Berlin in 1917 from varied manufacturers and @ 460,000 were awarded until @ late 1919 (I have seen docs for a few in 1920 awarded at the company level). I have never seen one awarded to a German ally or foreigner. Berlin then sold off the remaining medals as scrap and a number of firms bought lots as replacement stock. Yours seems to be a very nice piece-very pristine and clean. I can't remember seeing any fakes of this medal. By the way, for more information, see the EXCELLENT[/i] Http://www.ordensjournal.ordensmuseum.de website. (2006)
-
Good stuff! Have some of our French members been able to help? My goat-French is not up to par, but the hand-writing is very clear. It is a wonderful story-worthy of an article and shows how Napoleon was able to come to power so swiftly. Formal executions of hapless Generals like this paved the way for someone to restore civil authority.