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    peter monahan

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    Posts posted by peter monahan

    1. The 6th had 13 battalions during WWII.  The 4th Battalion was there for sure - see excerpt at bottom and the 6th earned two VCs in Africa, one in '41 in Eritrea and one in '43 in Tunisia.

      East African campaign awards

       

      ·        Subadar Richhpal Ram6th Rajputana Rifles (posthumous award)

      On 7 February 1941, at Keren, Eritrea, Richhpal Ram led a successful attack on the enemy and subsequently repelled six counter-attacks and then, without a shot left, brought the few survivors of his company back. Five days later, when leading another attack, his right foot was blown off, but he continued to encourage his men until he died.

      Tunisian campaign awards

      ·         Company Havildar Major Chhelu Ram6th Rajputana Rifles (posthumous award)

      On the night of 19–20 April 1943, at Djebel Garci, Tunisia, despite being wounded took command of the company, leading them in hand-to-hand fighting. Wounded again, he continued rallying his men until he died.

       

      https://qz.com/india/464490/bombed-to-hell-a-story-of-indian-bravery-in-africa-in-the-second-world-war/

    2. Nice!  I went to school with a fellow [in Canada] who'd father survived the war partly because he was in a hospital in Germany after wrapping himself, his motorbike and the Wehrmacht officer he was chauffeuring around a stone wall somewhere on the Eastern Front in early 1945.  Jerry said his Papa always said the accident was the best thing to happen to him in his brief military career! 

    3. I have seen medals, over the years, with various holes and slots carved in them.  Decades ago I handled a clutch of Victorian campaign medals which had been mounted on silver legs and had slots in the top edges, all suspenders gone, for use as place card holders.  What a desecration!

      This may be something similar - modified by someone to create a piece of jewellery or a 'knickknack'/ table ornament/ etc. :(

       

    4. On 20/08/2018 at 06:50, BalkanCollector said:

      First time seeing Nigerian awards. I see they are greatly influenced by the UK.

      Yes, part of the relics of colonialism, though when I was there in the early '80s mosty of the Army officers I met had trained in the US - many at Ft Knox.  I suspect, thought I've never checked, that early post-independence medals and awards were designed and struck in the UK and certainly the rank structure and so on mimc the British, as do most Commonwealth forces.  

    5. On 22/08/2018 at 16:10, Noor said:

      Herbert DeWolfe Cunningham it is!

      He served only in UK so his BWM must be his sole entitlment! Other guy, Hubert won MC and was reported missing.

      Herbert on other hand crash landed in UK and was reported insured.

       

       

       

      I suspect he was 'injured'.  I hope he was 'insured' as well! ;)

      One of the "Local Boys", the 70 men from my area whose names are on the 3 local war memorials, signed on for the RAF in Toronto, Canada and did some training at Camp Borden, just up the road from me, before going to the UK.  He was injured in the crash of a 2 seater on a training mission on November 9 and died on November 11, 1918, one of two men from here who died that day.

    6. Mount Forest is just up the road from me. 

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frederick_William_Campbell

      He was 48 at the time of his deed and death - 4 days apart.

       

      Image_Wellington08.jpg

      Medals went to widow, living in Mount Forest, but his address was given as 'Toronto', amended to 'Detroit' at some point.  

      Capture.JPG

      OTOH, apparently Lord Ashcroft bought his VC in 2017 and the web site shows a group: QSA, trio and VC.  So, possibly not the same 'F.W. Campbell.  There are 5 Frederick William Campbells in the Cdn records, two of them officers.  

      http://www.lordashcroftmedals.com/collection/frederick-william-campbell-vc/

       

    7. Not my field at all, but apparently Steyr of Austria produced 200,000 Gras bayonets for the French Army, so my guess is that the 'B' indicates 'Bayonne' [ie: French made] and LJ the initials of the company.  But just a WAG. :)

    8. 'OPERATION ZAMAN LAFIYA' is bugging the heck out of me! 

      My very very rusty Hausa vocabulary and the use of several Hausa English dictionaries suggest that this phrase translates as either

                 'zama' [to be] & 'lafiya' [happy, well] with the 'n' on 'zaman' being a grammatical form which connects the two words

      OR

                'zaman' [war/conflict] & 'lafiya' [happy, well]. 

      Lafiya is a common greeting  in Hausa common greeting in answer to a series of formal questions: 'How is your work? Lafiya.  'How is your tiredness?' Lafiya. etc.

      So, it seems to translate as 'Operation Happy War' or 'Operation Being Happy/ Happiness'.  Which seems to suggest that the Nigerian federal army, like many others, has a department devoted to producing silly and undignified code names for military operations!

      I can't say I care much for the colour scheme on the medal either, but thanks very much for sharing it, Antonio. 

    9. Harold

      Just wanted to say welcome to the GMIC. 

      I'm afraid I have nothing to offer on the medal - a fairly obscure collecting area, if I may say so - but hope some of the membership will be able to help.  I did collect Indian Army medals at one point and can say that variations in the naming style with those often indicated a later issue or a second mint doing the work but rarely an outright fake.  For what it's worth. 

      Peter

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