Stan Posted September 26, 2006 Posted September 26, 2006 The interesting thing is that I have not until now been able to get any info on Tiekenhenrich, but the date of his award is the same as Stadel's, 3.3.41, so he almost certainly was in the same Kampfgeschwader Greif.Can Francois Saez or anyone else confirm this?Stan
Richard Gordon Posted September 26, 2006 Author Posted September 26, 2006 StanNot often you see 2 with the same date! Yours looks to be in superb condition too. I do not believe the same award date means they were in the same geschwader but I will look through my KG55 references to see if I can find the name.RegardsRich
barnstormer1 Posted September 26, 2006 Posted September 26, 2006 Beautiful, Stan. Can you tell us about the one on the left? WWI? Whose? etc.
VtwinVince Posted September 26, 2006 Posted September 26, 2006 Hi Stan,Ditto to the above, I'd love to see some closeups of your Ehrenbecher.
Stan Posted September 27, 2006 Posted September 27, 2006 Hi Stan,Ditto to the above, I'd love to see some closeups of your Ehrenbecher.Herewith the requested close-ups. It is of course a WW1 Goblet and is the type made of silver. From the close-ups you will see the hallmarks which include the Prussian Crown which dates it as pre- November 1918.I bought around 10 years ago during a business trip to Germany. My wife wants me to clean it but I just wipe it over with a silver cloth occassionally. Stan
Guest WAR LORD Posted September 27, 2006 Posted September 27, 2006 would be interested to see the salver, were did you find it? Great rarity.
VtwinVince Posted September 27, 2006 Posted September 27, 2006 Thanks for posting those photos, Stan, that is a really nice example. Any idea who the recipient was?
Stan Posted September 28, 2006 Posted September 28, 2006 would be interested to see the salver, were did you find it? Great rarity.Warlord,I'll post photos of the salver on a new thread in a couple of days. In actual fact you have seen this salver before when I visited you last year.Stan
Stan Posted September 28, 2006 Posted September 28, 2006 Thanks for posting those photos, Stan, that is a really nice example. Any idea who the recipient was?Sorry, no idea who the recipient was. Alas, that information has been lost to time.Stan
Guest Brian von Etzel Posted September 28, 2006 Posted September 28, 2006 Very nice. If anyone it would be Fran?ois who would dig this out.
Michael Johnson Posted September 28, 2006 Posted September 28, 2006 (edited) Small Update****I was trying to research further and came across some info on P/O JH Pickering...He was a BoB veteran and was shot down several times.P/O J.H.T.Pickering of No 66 Squadron was rescued unhurt out of the sea off Aldeburgh on the 30th of August 1940 after being shot down in his Spitfire I (R6715) by return fire from a Do 17 at 17:00hrs. P/O J.H.T.Pickering was injured on the 11th of October 1940 when Spitfire I (X4052) was shot down by Oberst W. M?lders of JG 51 in a Bf 109 over Canterbury at 11:15hrs.Later KIA. PICKERING, P/O J. H. T. 80821 British. 66 Squadron. Killed February 15th 1942Thanks again to everyone's contributions and comments. If you hear of or see any docs to Otto Stadel, please let me know.Rich http://www.cwgc.org/search/casualty_detail...asualty=2717403Commonwealth War Graves gives a slightly later date. It appears he was killed in a training accident. Ironic that he was taken off ops, probably as a break, and sent as an instructor.Wouldn't be too far to go over to Glamorganshire, or perhaps some Gentleman lives close by?Interestingly enough, the grave next to his, and with the same date of death, is that of an Aircraftswomanhttp://www.cwgc.org/search/casualty_detail...asualty=2717411Since there are 53 burials, his grave should be about halfway back. I can't locate a cemetery map, but I think C. 25 is the the right-end grave in the fourth row (by the stone wall). There are three rows of six, and the fourth row contains a foreign grave, which wouldn't be counted in the numbering.Llantwit Major Cemetery Edited September 28, 2006 by Michael Johnson
Michael Johnson Posted September 28, 2006 Posted September 28, 2006 (edited) Here's a good bird's-eye view.http://www.google.ca/maps?f=q&hl=en&am...mp;t=k&om=0The white polygon to the left is the Cross of Sacrifice. Edited September 28, 2006 by Michael Johnson
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