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    Harrier

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    Posts posted by Harrier

    1. and/or authorized produced pieces in the award period."

      I write not only about awarded pieces!

      But the more important part is "... in the award period."

      So if an entitled officer, still in service, purchases a PLM in 1939 to replace the one he was awarded in 1917, his purchase is nothing more than a copy? Even if the manufacturer was authorized by the government to produce it?

      There is a fine line here, I believe, and there are many who would regard the replacement piece as an original, although not of early manufacture.

    2. I was staying once at a hotel in Indianapolis and found, to my great surprise, that a reunion of surviving crewmembers was being held in one of the ballrooms. I was able to briefly speak to some of these nice, and now old, folks, and hear some of their stories. Incredibly, some of them (because survivors were so spread out in the water) didn't even know at the time that sharks were attacking their friends.

    3. Thanks again to everyone.

      I think it was not uncommon at all for "re-tread" officers to be put almost anywhere they could possibly be of use. Nice if former flyers went to flying units, but an officer was an officer and supposedly had enough skill to be able to do SOMETHING! In this case, old Alois just happened to be somewhere they wore yellow.

      I'd really like to figure out what was on that right pocket. I believe Rick is 100% correct that on the left were a WMC 1st and some other minor badge (sports, etc.). The right pocket has me stumped now that we know he wasn't a flyer.

    4. On the Donitz uniform, do you recall if the "rings' on the sleeves were made as a "unitary set", with the broad ring and the other rings sewn on a separate piece of cloth and then attached, as a unit, to each sleeve, or was each "ring" actually sewn individually to the sleeve itself? I ask because I think I recall a photo where you see (on the uniform in the photo) they were made as a set.

    5. The cap may be the same, but the jacket is different (note the spacing of the "rings" on the sleeves, as well as the buttons). Wasn't Weyher also a Konteadmiral in the Bundesmarine? Perhaps this is his actual postwar jacket, altered a bit to look like his wartime one.

      By noticing this one thing, I certainly don't mean to detract from the magnificence of this museum or Gordon's generosity in showing us these photos. For these items to represent just a part of one man's collection is astounding.

    6. What an astonishing place! Thank you very much indeed for showing these photographs.

      A quick question. The tunic in Post #35 has its bottom row of buttons far below the line of the side pockets. Is it an "old wives tale" that the buttons should not be in this position? It is hard to believe that, in the midst of these great pieces, something wrong should slip in.

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