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Posts posted by TheMadBaron
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I'll follow up in the hopes that someone can point me in the right direction now that I have it in hand. The medal I obtained features a stamped dedication to "J. WM. CLARKE 93RD, REGT.". From my research I am confident that the dedication is official and period (uneven lettering, approximately half the width of the medal, consistent patina). Tracing Clarke is another issue, however. Checking through British medal rolls on Ancestry, there are two John Clarkes, one James Clarke, and one WIlliam Clarke who served with the 93rd Highlanders and received the Crimea Medal, but no one named as a combination of "J. William".
forces-war-records.co.uk gives an even greater number of candidates based on the (presumptive) combination of John/James William.
As someone who is very new to British medals, could someone possibly provide some advice on verifying whether soldier Clarke was indeed with the 93rd Sutherland?
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I have been delving into British medals recently and have an opportunity to purchase a Crimea Medal, with three clasps, engraved to a soldier who served with the “93rd REG’T.” (exact engraving). It is being sold as the Thin Red Line, but from my (admittedly very early) research, many Crimea Medals to the 93rd are engraved as some variation of “SUTHERLAND/HIGHLANDERS”, not “93rd REG’T”, and I know unissued medals are often dressed up with dedications to the 93rd to increase value. Could anyone please clarify what I should be looking for? Thank you for any assistance.
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The other black and white ribbon might be a Military Merit Cross, received for service in China when the Iron Cross wasn’t being issued.
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These are freedom of movement passes distributed to natives by the authorities in German Africa.
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Membership pins given to those associated with the Kolonial-Krieger-Verein and its various incarnations from the early 20th century through to the end of the Third Reich are commonly seen, but, I also see the "Silberne Ehrennadel" offered by various dealers (most unmarked, with the marked ones I've found manufactured by Paul Küst), yet cannot find any information about this pin or what it was awarded for (I would assume long membership or meritorious contributions to the organization). Antique Photos makes no mention of this pin in its entry on the standard membership pin, and Ehrenzeichen-Orden only makes reference to various "honour badges" that were handed out. I haven't found anything on the forums, but that could be a slight on my part with search parameters. I would appreciate if anyone could shed any light on this particular pin.
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I've found these two examples, which seem to match the attributes of this being a late-period (ie. Third Reich) zinc from the accepted die:
2. https://www.awm.gov.au/collection/C146681?image=1
In any case, I'm confident enough to proceed. Thanks for the input, everyone.
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6 hours ago, 91-old-inf-reg said:
Hello,
One piece of information that I would ask for is if it is possible to try and obtain the weight of the badge. Generally this is a good indicator of its authenticity. If it’s a gram or two above 17g I would be comfortable with its authenticity but I am not a complete expert on these badges.
As for the catch, could this be a possible private purchase example? I’m not sure. I’m sorry if I couldn’t be of more assistance.
Best regards,
Dan
I'll ask the seller. Thanks Dan!
1 hour ago, VtwinVince said:A very nice pair there. I actually handled an aluminum version at a recent show (compared it to one posted on WAF - exact match down to minute details) but I was only testing the Imperial waters at the time and unfortunately didn't buy it.
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I'm in the process of purchasing this Kolonialabzeichen on the classifieds of WAF, but have concerns regarding authenticity, especially in light of the preponderance of fakes out there. It's a late-period zinc example, but I'm only familiar with these badges having a safety pin-style attachment, not a hinge and catch. I know this is a Weimar-era badge, but popular among Imperial collectors, so I hope it's acceptable that I chose this part of the forum. Anyway, with that in mind, I would appreciate any input on whether or not to proceed.
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1 hour ago, elbavaro said:
Sorry, but it is too small to identify. But ... it could be white-blue which is Bavaria. So it could be a Bavarian Freikorps or a Bavarian citizens troop.
Is it possible that these are Bayernwacht members? The reverse has a Nürnberg studio mark.
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4 hours ago, 91-old-inf-reg said:
@TheMadBaron,yes he is apart of the alpine corps. From my understanding it was a symbol of their specific branch of the army, in this case it is the artillery as the symbol is a grenadiers bomb. Here’s an example:
Great, thank you for the information!
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I've recently begun collecting Imperial/WWI/Freikorps photographs, and came across this one in auction. I'm still at the beginning of the rather steep learning curve of uniforms and insignia of the era, and don't quite understand what I'm seeing here. Is this soldier part of the Deutsches Alpenkorps? And what is that badge behind the edelweiss? Thank you for any assistance.
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I don't have more photos of the cap unfortunately; it's available for €260 from a seller in Ireland. As it seems there are red flags I'll pass on it. I collect on a very limited budget and literally can't afford to be burned.
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78th Battalion CEF (Winnipeg Grenadiers) Vimy Ridge Casualty Group to Private Alfred Roussin
in Commonwealth Realms: Canada, New Zealand & Australia Medals & Militaria
Posted · Edited by TheMadBaron
I just acquired this small Vimy Ridge casualty group to Private Alfred Roussin, a Métis soldier who served with the 78th Battalion CEF (Winnipeg Grenadiers). Along with the rest of the 78th, Private Roussin was involved in the attack on Hill 145, the current site of the Canadian Vimy Memorial, on the morning of April 9th, 1917. He was listed as missing in action on the same day, and later declared dead. The 78th took 600 casualties in the battle overall, and all but one of its Officers were dead or wounded.
The group consists of his British War Medal, cased Memorial Cross, and, as a Catholic, a small Sacred Heart of Jesus Medal:
Private Alfred Roussin's name appears on both the Canadian Vimy Memorial and the National Métis Veterans' Memorial Monument in Batoche, Saskatchewan: