Цены, указанные на сайте, могут быть изменены.
Для уточнения актуальных цен свяжитесь с нами или воспользуйтесь формой обратной связи.
Отображение 113–128 из 373
Фильтры-
#29 – Great War Pair of Medals to the 9th (Cyclist) Battalion Hampshire Regiment (Лот: 1486)
Great War Pair of Medals to the 9th (Cyclist) Battalion Hampshire Regiment, British War and Victory medals, ‘356436 PTE. E. SANDERS HAMPS R.’. Edward Sanders is entitled to a pair only for his war service. The 1/9th Battalion served in India and in Russia during the Great War returning to the UK in December 1919. Late Rod Flood collection
-
#29 – A Nice Collection of Prize Medals to the Hampshire Regiment (Лот: 3249)
A Nice Collection of Prize Medals to the Hampshire Regiment, Hallmarked silver medallion, reverse engraved ‘BAYONET FIGHTING 1913 CQM SGT GOSLING’. Bronze pin back badge, ‘CHINA CUP TEAM HANTS 1889’. Hallmarked silver shooting medal, obverse engraved ‘4TH BN HAMPSHIRE REGT’. Bronze pin back medallion, reverse engraved in 6 lines ‘2ND VB HANTS/ REGT/ LONG RANGE CLUB/1893/ WON BY/ BANDS DAVIS. Late Rod Flood collection
-
#29 – Imperial Yeomanry Long Service and Good Conduct Medal to the Ayrshire Imperial Yeomanry (Лот: 5932)
Imperial Yeomanry Long Service and Good Conduct Medal to the Ayrshire Imperial Yeomanry, EVII, ‘182 CPL D. WILSON AYRSHIRE I.Y.’ Medal has been previously broached; broach marks present on the reverse of the medal and claw has been tightened. Medal confirmed in Army Orders, February 1905. 59 medals issued to the unit.
-
#29 – Queens South Africa Medal to the Duke of Edinburgh’s Own Volunteer Rifles (Лот: 8622)
Queens South Africa Medal to the Duke of Edinburgh’s Own Volunteer Rifles, medal with clasp Cape Colony, impressed naming, ‘2596 PTE A.C. NELSON D. OF E. OWN V.R.’ some edge knocks. onfirmed on the roll for the Cape Colony clasp and also entitled to the South Africa 1901 clasp. Served with Imperial Light Horse (#1299)
-
#30 – Great War Memorial Plaque to the Royal Artillery (Лот: 1487)
Great War Memorial Plaque to the Royal Artillery, Bronze Memorial Plaque, ‘GILBERT AUSTIN COTTER’. A unique name, 42799 Sergeant Gilbert Austin Cotter, a resident of Southsea, Portsmouth was killed in action on 3rd August 1917 whilst serving in ‘B’ Battery, 174th Brigade Royal Field Artillery. He is buried in Vlamertinghe New Military Cemetery, Belgium.
-
#30 – Victorian Volunteer Long Service Medal with a Number of Competition Medallions 2nd Volunteer Battalion Hampshire Regiment (Лот: 3250)
Victorian Volunteer Long Service Medal with a Number of Competition Medallions 2nd Volunteer Battalion Hampshire Regiment, Volunteer Long Service medal, VR, engraved naming, ’20 SERGT T. TERREY 2ND V.B. HANTS REGT 1895′ Also present in this lot are the following, Pair of collar badges, Enamel and white metal competition medal, reverse engraved in 6 lines, ‘ST GEORGES/WIMBLEDON 1884/ WON BY/ T. TERREY/ 2ND V.B. HANTS/ 34 POINTS’, Bronze Shooting medal, reverse engraved in 6 lines,’2ND V.B.H.R./ LONG RANGE CLUB/1890/ WON BY/ SERGT TERRY/ 76 POINTS’ note spelling of name. Hallmarked silver shooting medal, engraved, ‘2ND V.B.H.R./LONG RANGE CLUB/1891/ WON BY/ SERGT TERREY/ 66 POINTS’. White metal medallion for the 1st Hants RVC, reverse engraved ‘CHALLENGE VASE WON BY L CORPL T L H LLOYD 1876’. Late Rod Flood collection
-
#30 – Full Entitlement Medal Group of Three for Service in Both the Boer War and Great War, Rifle Brigade & Ox and Bucks Light Infantry (Лот: 5933)
Full Entitlement Medal Group of Three for Service in Both the Boer War and Great War, Rifle Brigade & Ox and Bucks Light Infantry, Queens South Africa medal, ghost dates on reverse with clasps Transvaal and Laing’s Nek, engraved naming, ‘5718 PTE H PIESLEY RIFLE BDE’, Kings South Africa medal with 2 clasps, South Africa 1901 and South Africa 1902, impressed naming, ‘5718 PTE. H. PIESLEY RIFLE BRIGADE’, British War medal, ‘20467 PTE. H. PIESLEY OXF. & BUCKS L.I.’ Medals and clasps confirmed on the relevant rolls and British War medal is confirmed as his full entitlement for the Great War. Change of service number is confirmed on his service records. Henry Piesley, an 18 year old groom from Hammersmith, London, attested for service in the Rifle Brigade on 2nd April 1898. He was discharged to class B reserve on 1st April 1910 on termination of his period of engagement. During the Great War he served with the 1st Garrison Battalion Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry in India from October 1916 to November 1919 and was discharged to Class Reserve the following month.
-
#30 – Queens South Africa Medal to the Royal Army Medical Corps, Killed in Action in 1917 During the Great War (Лот: 8623)
Queens South Africa Medal to the Royal Army Medical Corps, Killed in Action in 1917 During the Great War, medal without clasp, awarded to ‘8840 CORPL. S.J.A. LEE R.A.M.C.’ 18-year-old Sidney Jamed Arthur Lee, from Paddington London, attested at Aldershot on 12th July 1890. He served for a total of 11 years and 80 days which included 2 years and 65 days in Egypt (no medals) and 1 year and 110 days in South Africa. He was discharged medically unfit for further service on 15th October 1901. The medal roll shows service in No.14 Stationary Hospital and in Base Hospital Maritzburg, he is entitled to the Natal clasp with a later roll (05/01/1905) also showing entitlement to the South Africa 1901 clasp. e went on to serve in the Great War and 46544 Serjeant Major Sidney Arthur James Lee was killed in action on 7th June 1917 serving with 70th Field Ambulance and he is remembered at the Railway Dugouts Burial Ground (Transport Farm).
-
#31 – Great War Memorial Plaque to the Royal Artillery (Лот: 1488)
Great War Memorial Plaque to the Royal Artillery, Bronze Memorial Plaque, ‘CHARLIE EDGAR SMITH’. 115226, Gunner Charlie Edgar Smith from Brixham in Devon was killed in action on 23rd July 1917 whilst serving with 240th Siege Battery, Royal Garrison Artillery. He now rests in an identified grave in Heudicourt Communal Cemetery Extension, France
-
#31 – Campaign Medal Group of Six Covering Three Conflicts Over an Impressive 40 Year Period (Лот: 5934)
Campaign Medal Group of Six Covering Three Conflicts Over an Impressive 40 Year Period, Queens South Africa medal with clasps Cape Colony, Orange Free State and Transvaal, impressed naming, ‘13884 DR: G.J. LARKHAM A.S.C.’, Kings South Africa medal with 2 clasps, South Africa 1901 and South Africa 1902, ‘13884 CORPL G. LARKHAM A.S.C.’, 1914-15 Star medal, ‘13884 SJT. (A. C.S MJR) G.J. LARKHAM A.S.C.’, British War and Victory medals, ‘SS-13884 W.O.CL.2 G.J. LARKHAM A.S.C.’ and Defence medal, unnamed as issued. Group mounted for wearing on pin back bar. Both Boer War medals and clasps are confirmed on the relevant rolls (No29 Company A.S.C). Great War medals are confirmed on the medal index card. George John Larkham was born in Deal, Kent and attested or service in the Oxfordshire Light Infantry in December 1892 and was discharged by purchase in January 1895. On 13th May 1898 he attested for the Army Service Corps and served through to his discharge on 28th December 1919, having completed almost 22 years which included 6 years and 5 months in South Africa and 3 years and 2 months overseas with the B.E.F. His records do not show any entitlement to any Long Service medal and this may be due to the fact that he was tried by Court Martial in January 1915 due to drunkenness on active service being reduced to the rank of Sergeant. On discharge he gave his intended place of residence as Basingstoke, Hampshire and 1939 he is recorded as being an Army Pensioner in Highclere, Hampshire with the additional responsibility of being an A.R.P. Warden, a responsibility that would have most likely qualified him for the Defence medal. 71 year old George Larkham died in the 2nd quarter of 1944.
-
#31 – An Interesting Boer War Medal to a Canadian who Served for 22 Years in the British Army with this Being his Only Medal (Лот: 8624)
An Interesting Boer War Medal to a Canadian who Served for 22 Years in the British Army with this Being his Only Medal, Queens South Africa medal with clasp Cape Colony, ‘4943 CPL. C.C MCGREGOR R.A.M.C.’harles Cameron McGregor was born in Quebec, Canada on 12th November 1860 and he attested for the 40th Brigade at Winchester on 12th May 1879 aged 18. He transferred to the Hospital Corps on 1st February 1882 remaining with the Corps until his discharge on 25th May 1901 having completed 22 years and 14 days service. During this time, he served in Egypt, West Indies, Bermuda and twice in South Africa (20th November 1900 to 23rd July 1900 and 4th August 1900 to 20th April 1901). The issue of the medal is confirmed on the roll, but we have been unable to confirm his entitlement to the clasp.e looks to have struggled to adjust to civilian life as he had several convictions in the years following his discharge, being convicted of stealing postal letters on 27th June 1903 and sentenced to 12 months imprisonment without hard labour. On 13th June 1904 he was convicted of ‘refusing to work in the Wallingford Union’ and sentenced to 14 days Hard Labour. Immediately on his release, he was convicted at Henley on Thames on 27th June of wilful damage to a window and sentenced to 7 days imprisonment with Hard Labour. The absence of any further recorded convictions hopefully indicates him settling into civilian ways.
-
#32 – Great War Memorial Plaque to the Royal West Kent Regiment (Лот: 1489)
Great War Memorial Plaque to the Royal West Kent Regiment, Bronze Memorial Plaque, ‘JAMES GROVER’, in cardboard folder of issue. A unique name in the Commonwealth War Graves records. 28 year old James Grover from Worplesden, Surrey was killed on 4th October 1916 whilst serving with the 7th Battalion Queens Own (Royal West Kent Regiment). His body was never recovered, and he is commemorated on the Thiepval Memorial, France.
-
#32 – Queens South Africa Medal for Service in the Edinburgh and East of Scotland Hospital Company, Royal Army Medical Corps (Лот: 8625)
Queens South Africa Medal for Service in the Edinburgh and East of Scotland Hospital Company, Royal Army Medical Corps, medal with clasp Cape Colony, ‘13712 CPL A. BROWN R.A.M.C.’, ghost dates to reverse of medal, edge knock at 7 o’clock position. lfred Brown was a 21-year-old medical student from St. Lennard’s, Edinburgh when he attested for service in the Royal Army Medical Corps. He served for a total of 275 days of which he spent 216 days in South Africa. edal and 1 clasp is confirmed on the Edinburgh and East of Scotland Hospital roll.