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    dwmosher

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    Posts posted by dwmosher

    1. Nick

      Thanks for your response so quickly. Here is the reason for my question. This tunic was aquired without shoulder boards (I have added field grade boards for display). From the piping combination, it was easily identified as an officer with the LG Jaegersky Regiment. Based on the cut and tailoring of the tunic and the additional loops and holes for the medal bar, orders and presumed regimental badge, I feel this gentleman was pretty high up in the pecking order. Could this individual be identified through this information?

      Thanks again

      Dave

    2. A friend showed this picture of a Saxon senior NCO and wanted info on him. Looking at the litzen, I presumed he was with LGR 100 or GR 101 and looked for any association for those regiments to have fought with the Turks. From what I could determine, Res IR 101 was part of the 219 ID in Macedonia and Serbia in 1918; nothing else I looked up seems to fit. Hopefully, I'm in the ball park, or can be "set straight" which regiment he was with and perhaps even identify him. BTW, aside from the Turkish War Medal, I see one other Turkish medal, an EK1, a fairly sustantial ribbon bar (I would presume the first ribbon would be an Albert bravery medal) and a breast badge that can't quite be seen on his left side (most likely a wound badge). Thanks

      Dave

    3. Hello

      I picked up an officer's tropical SD tunic named to WA Dawkins with a date of July 1918 in the pocket. The buttons (George V) and collar insignia are for Royal Engineeers, with three rank pips on the shoulder straps. Additionally, the tunic has a rigid sewn-on ribbon bar indicating the MM and the trio. Any idea who this officer was (obviously, he started out as other ranks and was fighting the Hun back in 1914-15). Any help is appreciated.

      Regards

      Dave Mosher

    4. Wie gehts:

      As an addition to this thread, here is a private-purchase officer's Bluse for the 5. Garde Regt zu Fuss. There were only three regiments in the German army which utilized the "old Prussian" style litzen on the Bluse; the 5.G.R.z.F, the G. Gren.R.5 and Fus.R.80. To delineate between the three units, both the 5.G.R.z.F and Fus. R. 80 used the muted silver Spiegel on the gray collar tabs, but Fus.R.80 was cyphered on the shoulder boards. This leaves 5.G.R.z.F and G.G.R.5, which both used the non-numbered/cyphered white-piped shoulder boards, but the Spiegel on G.GR.5 is a muted gold on the gray collar tabs. Hence, 5.G.R.z.F.

      Regards

      Dave

    5. Actually, out of the 28 dragoon regiments, only five wore yellow piping (Dr. 4,8,16,21 and 26) and Dr 16 actually wore white piping on the collar and cuff and yellow everywhere else. Your color options for line dragoons (w/o litzen) are poppy red, black, pink, yellow, white and burgandy red. Of these, there are a few with the white piping on the collar and cuff (like Dr 16 above) but with the other color options You just have to decide which piping color you like or which regiment you want to represent

    6. There are several different color pipings and piping combinations for dragoons. All dragoon feldgrau waffenrocks have a piped standing collar, Swedish piped cuff and are piped along the bottom of the skirt. What regiment are you trying to paint? This is the M-1910 waffenrock worn by a Rittmeister for 2. Badisches Dragoner-Regt. Nr. 21. The piping is "lemon" yellow.

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