CAMPAIGN GROUPS AND PAIRS
618
Three: Second Lieutenant L. R. Cooper, late Field Artillery Brigade, Australian Imperial Forces
1914-15 STAR (351 Cpl., 1 F.A.B. A.I.F.); BRITISH WAR AND VICTORY MEDALS (2 Lieut.) mounted court style for wear, nearly
extremely fine (3) £250-300
619
Three: Warrant Officer Class 1 E. P. Hughes, 3rd Australian Field
Artillery Brigade
1914-15 STAR (2363 Cpl., 3/F.A. Bde. A.I.F.); BRITISH WAR MEDAL 1914-20
(2363 ER-W.O. 1, 3 F.A.B. A.I.F.); VICTORY MEDAL 1914-19 (2365 W.O.
Cl. 1, 3-F.A.B. A.I.F.), note light difference in service number on the last,
together with Australian Commonwealth Military Forces cap badge and
a set of old tunic medal ribands, generally good very fine (4) £200-250
Edward Percy Hughes enlisted in August 1914 and was discharged in June 1918.
And if the above described tunic medal ribands are an accurate reflection of
earlier military service, he was a veteran of the Cape of Good Hope operations
and the Boer War, in addition to being the recipient of the Coronation Medal
1902 - well worthy of further research; sold with two old portrait photographs.
620
Three: Private W. H. Smith, Yorkshire Light Infantry
1914-15 STAR (9220 Pte., Yorks. L.I.); BRITISH WAR AND VICTORY MEDALS (9220 Pte., Yorks. L.I.) mounted court style for wear
Three: Private J. Lord, Loyal North Lancashire Regiment
1914-15 STAR (240788 Pte., L.N. Lan. R.); BRITISH WAR AND VICTORY MEDALS (2569 Pte., L.N. Lan. R.) mounted court style for
wear, extremely fine (6) £80-100
Private John Lord, Loyal North Lancashire Regiment, entered the France/Flanders theatre of war on 12 February 1915. Later discharged
and awarded the Silver War Badge. With copied m.i.c.
621
Three: Private E. Bales, Norfolk Regiment
1914-15 STAR (75 Pte., Norf. R.); BRITISH WAR AND VICTORY MEDALS (75 Pte., Norf. R.) mounted court style for wear
Three: Private C. O. Boud, Duke of Cornwall’s Light Infantry
1914-15 STAR (13579 Pte., D. of Corn. L.I.); BRITISH WAR AND VICTORY MEDALS (13579 Pte., D. of Corn. L.I.) mounted court
style for wear, extremely fine (6) £80-100
Private Edward Bales, 1/4th Norfolk Regiment, entered the Balkans theatre of war on 9 August 1915. Discharged 9 July 1916 and
awarded the Silver War Badge. With copied m.i.c.
Private C. O. Boud, Duke of Cornwall’s Light Infantry, entered the France/Flanders theatre of war on 22 September 1915. Later
discharged. With copied m.i.c.
622
Three: Private F. A. Long, Rifle Brigade
1914-15 STAR (Z-2784 Pte., Rif. Brig.); BRITISH WAR AND VICTORY MEDALS (Z-2784 Pte., Rif. Brig.) mounted court style for wear
Three: Private G. Philipson, Royal Fusiliers
1914-15 STAR (X-208 Pte., R. Fus.); BRITISH WAR AND VICTORY MEDALS (208 Pte., R. Fus.) mounted court style for wear, good
very fine and better (6) £80-100
623
Three: Private D. I. Haines, 7th Battalion, Australian Imperial Force
1914-15 STAR (3343 Pte., 7/Bn. A.I.F.); BRITISH WAR AND VICTORY MEDALS (3343 Pte., 7 Bn. A.I.F.), good very fine (3)
£150-200
David Isaac Haines, a labourer from St. Kilda, Victoria, enlisted in the Australian Imperial Force in July 1915. Embarked with the 7th
Battalion in H.M.A.T. Nestor in early October 1915, he presumably witnessed active service in Gallipoli prior to his unit’s evacuation
from the peninsula that December - a very distinguished unit, too, four of its men having been awarded V.Cs for the fighting at Lone
Pine back in August. Having then been stationed in Egypt, the Battalion was embarked for France, and first went into action in May
1916, followed by heavy fighting on the Somme in July-August. In fact by the War’s end, after seeing further action at Passchendaele
and Ypres, and in the bitter fighting of 1918, the 7th had sustained total wartime losses of 1045 killed and another 2075 wounded; also
see Lot 847 for his brother’s awards.
www.dnw.co.uk
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