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    Mike Dwyer

    Old Contemptible
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    Posts posted by Mike Dwyer

    1. Glenn,

      Thank you again for all the information. I just love having lots of useless details that I will probably never, ever need for anything other than to just have the knowledge! :cheers:

      I've just read through your narrative of von Lindeiner's career and there's a couple of things I wanted to check with you.

      After you mention him being wounded on 29 August 1915 you stated he returned to duty and took over F./1. Garde-Regiment zu Fu?. I'm a bit new at some of this, so I'm guessing the 11./1. you mentioned earlier means 11th company, and II/1. means 2nd Battalion, but what does F./1. mean? Fusileer company????

      Right after that you mention he was wounded again on 5 December 1915. Then you say on 24 September 1914 he was assigned to Etappen-Inspektion 5. Did you mean 24 September 1916?

      Again, thank you so much for the details.

    2. This is just idle curiosity. I was looking through some old Military History magazines a friend gave to me and there was an article about The Great Escape from Stalag Luft III. This is the one that the movie, The Great Escape, with Steve McQueen, was based on.

      The article had a photo of the prison camp commander, Luftwaffe Oberst Friedrich Wilhelm von Lindeiner-Wildau. Guessing that he probably served in WW1, I went and looked in the 1914 rank list and found four entries.

      In all of these the name was listed as von Lindeiner gen. v. Wildau (not sure what the gen. v. stands for).

      Two ranked as Major z. D. at Landwehrbesirks, so they're probably too old.

      One was a Hauptmann in the 1. Garde-Regiment zu Fu?.

      One was a Leutnant der Reserve in Feld-Artillerie-Regiment von Puecker (1. Schlesisches) Nr.6.

      Anyone know which one, if any, is the future Stalag Luft III commander?

    3. I have several ancestors who fought for their country during the War of Northern Aggression...

      Henry Partlow Hartley

      Corporal, Captain Burroughs? Company, Tennessee Light Artillery, CSA

      John Washington Lawson

      Private, Company F, 21st North Carolina Troops, CSA

      Thomas Jefferson Hartley

      Private, Company B, 6th Virginia Cavalry, CSA

      Francis Compton Hartley

      Private, Company E, 49th Virginia Infantry, CSA

      Stephen S. Corvin

      Private, Company A, 63rd Virginia Infantry, CSA

      Gordon C. Corvin

      Private, Company A, 63rd Virginia Infantry, CSA

      ....and like Dave Danner I also have one who was on the winning rebel side against Mother England..

      Michael Krieger, Sr.

      Private, Captain James Fenley's Company of Montgomery County, Virginia Militia

    4. but would the fifth grenadier regiment were a grenadier eagle on their helmets and not the line chicken?

      Chip

      According the reference work I have, Imperial German Headgear (1888-1914) Field Guide, by James D. Turinetti and Jn. Albert O'Connor the Grenadier-Regiment K?nig Friedrich I (4. Ostpreu?isches) Nr.5 wore the old style grenadier eagle that looked almost like the line eagle except it has the oval on the chest with the FWR cypher on it. They changed to the bigger grenadier eagle in 1913.

    5. Thanks Mike....... :beer:

      No my field of collecting, ...Is there a collectors market for those?

      ...and ......$...?

      I'm afraid this isn't my area of collecting either, I just happened to see your posting. I would think there would be a collectors market, but I have no clue about it or what the price would be. :unsure: Sorry. :unsure:

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