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MISCELLANEOUS 416


THEMOST EMINENTORDER OF THE INDIAN EMPIRE, gold brooch bar for 1st type C.I.E., 5.74g.; together with an unrelated gilt slip bar, good very fine (2)


£100-140 417


DISTINGUISHED SERVICE ORDER bestowal document, named to Major Edward Charles Lloyd Wallace, 30th Punjabis, Indian Army, dated 27 July 1918, mounted in glazed wooden frame, a little discoloured, good condition


£80-100


D.S.O. London Gazette 27 July 1918. M.I.D. London Gazette 20 October 1920.


Edward Charles Lloyd was born in Loughborough, Leicestershire on 14 October 1875. Entering the Indian Army, he was appointed a 2nd Lieutenant in the Unattached List on 14 August 1895 and was posted to the Indian Service Corps in December 1896. Promoted to Lieutenant in November 1897, he served in the China campaign of 1900 (Medal with clasp). Promoted to Captain in August 1904 and to Major in August 1913. Serving in the Great War with the 30th Punjabis, he was mentioned in despatches and created a companion of the Distinguished Service Order.


418 419 MILITARY MEDAL, Second Award Bar, good very fine £60-80


MENTION INDESPATCHES CERTIFICATE to Flight Lieutenant H. S. Lowerison, Royal Canadian Air Force, London Gazette 14 June 1945, mounted in glass-fronted frame; COMMISSION DOCUMENT appointing George Alexander Mortimer a Pilot Officer in the Royal Canadian Air Force Special Reserve, dated 17 September 1943, this last a little worn, generally good condition (2)


£120-160 M.I.D. Certificate to Lowerison with accompanying R.C.A.F. letter dated 17 October 1947.


George Alexander Mortimer came from Sackville, New Brunswick. As a Flying Officer (Air Bomber), serving with No. 195 Squadron, he was killed in action on 4 November 1944, aged 21 years, when his Lancaster bomber (NG219) crashed at Wermelshirchen, Germany. Originally buried at Wermelshirchen, his body was later exhumed and reburied in the Rheinburg War Cemetery. He was the son of John Chapple Mortimer and Jessie MacLean Smith Mortimer of Sackville, New Brunswick.


420 Nine: G. Clarke, St. John’s Ambulance Association


ORDER OF ST. JOHN, Serving Brother’s breast badge, silvered metal and enamel, unnamed; ST. JOHN AMBULANCE ASSOCIATION MEDAL (7) silver and gilt, reverse inscribed, ‘George Clarke winner of Molloy Ambulance Challenge Cup, North Western Division, Bolton, 30th July 1900’; another; reverse inscribed, ‘N.E.L.C.C. Manchester 1901’; another, reverse inscribed, ‘’N.E.L.C.C. Todmorden 1904’; another, unnamed; another, silver, unnamed; ST. JOHNAMBULANCEASSOCIATION RE-EXAMINATION CROSS, silver (George Clarke, No. 21275), 1 silvered bar, 1907; PRIZEMEDAL, silver and gold, reverse inscribed, ‘Presented to D97 G. Clarke as Instructor by a class of the D. Division M.C.P. .... May 1897’; TRAFFORD PARK FETEMEDAL 1903, silver and enamel, unnamed; together with a 1939-45 STAR and WAR MEDAL 1939-45, unnamed, good very fine (11) £100-140


421


ARCTICMEDAL 1818-55, unnamed, lacking suspension, minor edge bruise, good very fine


£400-500


422


NAVAL GOOD SHOOTINGMEDAL, E.VII.R., 1 clasp, H.M.S. “Bacchante” 1904 9.2” (129967 J. Ellis, P.O. 1Cl., H.M.S. Bacchante. 1903. 9.2 in. B.L.) slight edge bruising, nearly very fine


£350-400 H.M.S. Bacchante was a Cressy Class armoured cruiser.


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