Chris Boonzaier Posted September 8, 2006 Posted September 8, 2006 A lot of guys dont care for these post WW1 commemorative documents....
Chris Boonzaier Posted September 8, 2006 Author Posted September 8, 2006 But how muck more can you have been through than this guy.Of note... he was with the Alpenkorps when the Edelweiss was still an AWARD as opposed to a badge, and Ditto for the Karpathankorps badge. Both entered on the botton right of the doc.
Chris Boonzaier Posted September 8, 2006 Author Posted September 8, 2006 Strangely he was the BMVK 3rd class and wound badge... but no EK2 !!
Tom Posted September 9, 2006 Posted September 9, 2006 Chris,Extremely interesting document you have here. The story behind this document must indeed be enormous if you look at the places he have been.
Chris Boonzaier Posted September 9, 2006 Author Posted September 9, 2006 At last !!! At last !!! a reply !!!Most of the dokument guys are sleeping the last few weeks ;-)
Tom Posted September 9, 2006 Posted September 9, 2006 Haha, when you keep on coming with this high interesting stuff I stay awake all the time.
joe campbell Posted September 9, 2006 Posted September 9, 2006 chris-how can you NOT like this??beautiful illustration with a combat recordyou could make a movie and three sequelsabout....thanks!joe
Bernhard H.Holst Posted September 9, 2006 Posted September 9, 2006 At last !!! At last !!! a reply !!!Most of the dokument guys are sleeping the last few weeks ;-)Hello Chris.Thank you for showing the document. It is the first one I have ever seen. He had an impressive combat record. I am reminded of the campaigns desribed in the history of the Jg.Btl. 10 (Hann.) That unit also saw action in the 1916 battles in the Verdun area together with its sister unit, the Res.Jg.Btl.10 with of course heavy losses.Unsollicited advice to those who are interested in the Verdun battles . The German Reichsarchiv volumes from the 1920's into 1930's about Verdun are very objectively written and give much information on units deployed with losses experienced and other valuable information as to artillery used and so forth. These volumes are available at relatively low cost and if fortunate still contain the maps with which they came originally.Thanks again,Bernhard H. Holst
Tom Posted September 9, 2006 Posted September 9, 2006 Unsollicited advice to those who are interested in the Verdun battles . The German Reichsarchiv volumes from the 1920's into 1930's about Verdun are very objectively written and give much information on units deployed with losses experienced and other valuable information as to artillery used and so forth. These volumes are available at relatively low cost and if fortunate still contain the maps with which they came originally.I totaly agree with you on this Bernhard. When one studies the battle of Verdun the Reichsarchiv are most of the time correct or the most in the wright direction. Also nice are the books of the Reichskriegsministerium, especially part 10. This book contains the working method of the German hight command. Also with maps btw.
Chip Posted September 10, 2006 Posted September 10, 2006 (edited) Chris,I can't imagine a better example from this genre. Though there are many types of these, they all have above average artwork. On my many trips to Germany I saw lots of these, but never got one because of the frames. I regret that decision now. I must admit that I am amazed by this man's extreme fortune to have made it through the entire war with the same well travelled and hard fighting unit. I don't imagine that there were too many soldiers that could boast the same sort of record.Chip Edited September 10, 2006 by Chip
Daniel Murphy Posted September 10, 2006 Posted September 10, 2006 Chris, That is a beautiful document. I know this is off topic, but the only thing I have similar, is a post CW (1870-1880) document like this for a black union soldier with his service recorded on it. I would buy these all day long if I could find them. I assume where the wreath is, was supposed to be a place for a photo, bloody shame it's not there. Dan
Chris Boonzaier Posted September 10, 2006 Author Posted September 10, 2006 Hi,depending on the owner you find them with or without photo, some varaitions have an EK printed between the leaves.Fom the fading on this one there never was a photo.Chip, I hear you. This arrived by mail in a frame... the glass broken.I have become a hardass frame chucker outer. 95% of frames are removed at the door. in the long run its better for the docs.If anyone has a little web savvy and some time, I would be glad, along with a coworker volunteer, and a nod from the chairman, to do a GMIC page on these commemorative docs.
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now