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    Ulsterman

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    Posts posted by Ulsterman

    1. Good idea. I would also invite you to "tag it" by adding the photo of the bar to the OMSA web sites' medal bar section. There it should live on a decade or so-or maybe much longer, depending upon how technology evolves (don't you love these memory sticks?).

      In the USA high end collectors are now filing UCC papers for specific bars-establishing a permannent trail of provenance and insurability.

    2. I actually have a spiffing Wehrpass to a medical Doctor who almost fits this bar.

      He served as a "Feldhilfsarzt" in Berlin from September 1918 to October, 1920. Later he gets a noncom EK2 in 1921 upon release (his only WW1 medal), becomes a MD sometime in the 1920s, is recalled in 1939 and ends up in Russia. He also got the Bulgarian and Hungarian WW1 medals in the Spring of 1941 (!) to flesh out his HK (1936) and a Westwall (1940) and a KVKx (1942).

      Now if he'd been a Nazi official.......

    3. You outbid me on that bar. Well done.

      The noncom EK2s are all over the map, but I remember seeing somewhere that 10,000 of the 13,000 were awarded post 1918 and that the vast majority went to civillian types. Commonly seen references in ranklists are to medical officers, but I have seen docs of them awarded to all sorts-notibly engineers& bureaucrats (FEMALE NURSES, naval architects, airship chemists, Reichsbahn Inspector, Silesian Reichspost director, tax collector, Vice Consuls at some God forsaken place in Anatolia I can't even find on a map etc.).

      The medal bars' story then is plausable-civillian in WW1 in a technical capacity, then joins NSDAP in 1930 as an "officer", in uniform or "combat zone" in WW2 for the KVKx and helps build the Westwall. Makes me think NSKK type.

    4. Vets could (and did) exchange their old version of the Landwehr decoration for the new one in 1913. What worries me however, is the General Honor Decoration, which was given to senior NCOs. That's why I would agree that the bar might have had a regular LS decoration originally.

      Or (more likely to my mind)-after military service our man here went to work as a civil servant: postman, tax collector/ clerk etc. and he got the AE for long service as a civvy. Guesstimate: Born @ 1845-50, served between @1865-73, got a job and worked for Germany until 1910-15 (state retirement pension kicked in at age 65 under Bismarck's pension scheme).

      Landwehr medals were awarded differently than LS medals as per Ricks' article and took longer to acquire, so maybe the medal is original to the bar (I suspect it is).

      Maybe he got recalled as a geezer in 1914 and guarded a POW camp in the Landsturm for a few years. There were 65 year old Landsturm men in uniform in 1915, especially in Poland and in the homeland (Ever see "Les Grand Illusion"?)

      Nice bar.

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