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    Speedy

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    Posts posted by Speedy

    1. 6 hours ago, Fritz die Spinne said:

      I'd say 2.k or 3.k, depending how the pigments photographed. 

      Troddeln, Faustriemen.jpg

      Provide his name and town or birthdate, I am sure a lot more information can be found. Great portrait to have of your Urgroßvater!

      My Urgroßvater Alfred Kranz was born in Blasewitz (today part of Dresden) 16.2.1894. He was a telegraph worker in Dresden already before the war and before his military service. Later he was promotet to telegraph assistant. Unfortunately, there are only few facts known about his life and by now I could not proof them.

      I was told that he worked on the telephone line for the royal residence in Dresden, putting the cables from the roof to the basement before the war. But there is no trace of him living in or near Dresden before 1921. I was told he used to be prisoner of war. But I could not find him neither in the German casualty lists nor in the french POW-lists. My Grandma told me, he used to work on a farm near Marseille and still was in mail contact with the farmer when she was a young girl (born 1921).

      In his things I found a EK2 and a St. Heinrichs silver medal but I cannot trace him in the lists. So, questions over questions.

       

    2. The only thing I know for sure about the pictures enclosed they have been taken in Pirna near Dresden. The unit numbers are not visible but the Pirna garrison consisted of 2. Field Artillery Regiment No. 28 (until 1913), 5. Field Artillery Regiment No. 64 and 1st Pioneers No. 12 (from 1913). Of course the soldiers could be from the nearby Dresden garrison as well. Maybe you can tell me more about the soldiers shown:

       

       

      Picture number 3 could have been taken at the Graue Kaserne - home of FAR28 

    3. It is the so called Ullrichskreuz remenbering the Schlacht auf dem Lechfeld of the year 955.

      All remarks on a military backround refer to the Wiki-site about the battle. But afaik it is wrong.

      The crosses also called Benediktuskreuz were very popular among pilgrims in the south of Germany. So, they are a kind of early souvernirs

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