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    Brett Hendey

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    Posts posted by Brett Hendey

    1. I have been asked to assist a granddaughter in finding out more about the military history of Samuel Herbert Hall-Thompson.    Key words in her recollections are Royal Artillery, Belfast and World War I.    The two photographs below should also be revealing.    I would be most grateful, as would the granddaughter, for any information about the man and his military service.

      Photos.docx

      Brett

      The photos failed to load, so I will try again later.   My apologies.

    2. Thank you for another excellent contribution, Brian.   Like you, I am old enough to have known veterans of WWI.   In the early 1950s I even shared a hospital ward with a Boer veteran of the Anglo-Boer War.  Like you, I regret not taking the opportunities of learning about their experiences in those far off conflicts.

      Kind regards,

      Brett  

    3. Sorry, Stef.   I know of 'Rosie' only by his reputation.   My wife had an uncle (now deceased) who was a SAAF pilot seriously burned in a crashed aircraft during the Abyssinian campaign, and, after several years in hospital, he was desperate to get back on active service.   After many disappointments, his friend 'Rosie', who was by then a senior officer, intervened and arranged for him to see out the war flying Spitfires in Italy.    Uncle Neville was most grateful to 'Rosie' and was effusive in his praise for the man.

      Regards

      Brett

    4. Mike and Ian, thank you both for you replies.

      Mike - There is no maker's name on the truncheon.   It has been suggested that it was a specially imported presentation piece for the Chief Constable.    In the mid-1850's and for a hundred years thereafter, Natal tried hard to be more British than the British.

      Ian  - It is reassuring to know that Mervyn had one of these truncheons.  It would be a sad irony for him to have lived in Natal for so long and missed out adding one to his collection.

      Regards

      Brett

      1972469668_Natalbumpersticker.jpg.a71983744b938c0b357765a21747ca50.jpg

    5. http://gmic.co.uk/topic/36876-pietermaritzburg-borough-police-badges/

      The Pietermaritzburg Borough Police, about which very little has been published, has come to my notice again.  A friend in Cape Town has given me a decorated truncheon of the type typical of mid-Victorian police forces in Britain.   It's origins are clearly with the Pietermaritzburg Borough Police (see below). In spite of enquiries, no-one has seen anything like it for any other Colonial police force.   Sadly, it is too late to ask Mervyn Mitton.  I am sure that he would have had something to say about it.

      The truncheon is colourfully decorated with representations of an Imperial crown, a large curliqued 'V', and red cartouche depicting elements from the PBP badge - 'UMGUNGUNHLOVU', the Zulu name for Maritzburg, and an elephant.    There are also the dates '1838', '1848' and '1854', which are significant in Maritzburg's  civic history.

      I would be very grateful for any comments on this object.

      Regards

      Brett

      Composite batton pictures.docx

       

    6. Dan

      Thank you for bringing me back to earth!   I have spent so much time recently learning about the 45th and other British regiments in mid-Victorian times, it never occurred to me that the soldier could have been a Natal Colonial.  That indeed is what he was, and his regiment was almost certainly the Natal Carbineers, a mounted infantry regiment armed with the Martini Henry carbine, just as Bayern surmised.  The illustration below is from the history of the NC by the Rev John Stalker, which was published in 1912.  Adding to my embarrassment is the fact that I use the helmet badge of this regiment  as my avatar.  During the Anglo-Zulu War (1879), the men in the photograph below would have worn this badge on a white helmet.

      Than you again to Mike, Bayern and Dan.

      Regards

      Brett

       

      NC OTHER RANKS 1879.JPG

      The illustration below, which was painted by the late Andy May, shows the active service helmet worn by the Natal Carbineers during the Anglo-Zulu War.   Although it is not clear in this picture, the helmet badge is that shown in my avatar.

      Brett

      ANDY MAY - ZULU WAR - NC & 24th.jpg

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