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MISCELLANEOUS


With a quantity of original papers and copied research, including original hand-written letters from Charles Alfred Fisher to his parents whilst en-route to and in Malaya, July-October 1941; official letters re his capture, imprisonment and release; original typed and hand- produced programme of the Chungkai Theatre production, ‘Garrison Theatre’, produced by Charles Fisher and performed on 7 & 8 July 1944; the pamphlet, ‘Advice to the Relative of a Man who is Missing’; the booklet, ‘A Handbook for the information of Relative and Friends of Prisoners of War and Civilians in Japanese or Japanese-Occupied Territory’; an extracted article, ‘The Thailand-Burma Railway’, by Charles A. A. Fisher; a paper reprinted from The Scottish Geographical Magazine, ‘The Railway Geography of British Malaya’, by C. A. Fisher, signed ‘Every good wish Charles’; the paper of the inaugural lecture ‘The Battlefield of Wind, Water and Rock’, given by Professor Alice Garnett at the University of Sheffield, 1963, inscribed, ‘To Professor C. A. Fisher with all good wishes’; and the paper of the inaugural lecture, ‘The Reality of Place’, given by Charles A. Fisher at the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London, 1964. Together with Fisher’s copied Japanese P.O.W. records; his curriculum vitae, and obituary. Also with one original and three copied photographs of the recipient.


433


ADDISCOMBEMILITARY SEMINARY, POLLOCKMEDAL, 1st type (1848-55), by B. Wyon, obverse: bust of Major-General Sir George Pollock facing left, in uniform, wearing the star of the Knight Grand Cross of the Bath and the Cabul Medal 1842, with a circumscription in four bands, inner - ‘Major General Sir George Pollock G.C.B. Bengal Artillery’; intermediate 1 - ‘Treachery avenged - British honor vindicated - Disasters retrieved - British captives delivered’; intermediate 2 - ‘Kyber Pass Forced - Jellalabad relieved - Victories of Mamoo Khail - Jugdulluck - Tezeen - Istalif’; outer - ‘To commemorate eminent services; Cabul 1842’; reverse: ‘Military Seminary Addiscombe Pollock Prize, Presented by the British inhabitants of Calcutta and awarded by the Court of Directors of the East India Company to the Most Distinguished Cadet of the Season’, (John Magee McNeile, June 1856), gold, 58mm., 84.5g., in its original B. Wyon, Regent Street fitted case of issue, ref: B.H.M. 2058, Mayo p.249-255, extremely fine, a handsome and rare medal


£2800-3200


John Magee McNeile was born on 4 March 1837, son of the Rev. Hugh McNeile, D.D., Liverpool. He was educated at Cheltenham College, where he was Senior Mathematical Scholar (1852), and at Addiscombe Military College, 1854-56, from where he passed out First Engineer with Firsts in Mathematical and Military Surveying (Pollock Medal, Sword). 2nd Lieutenant, Bengal Engineers, 1856; Lieutenant, 1858; Captain, Royal Engineers, 1868; Major, 1874; Brevet Lieutenant-Colonel, 1881; Lieutenant-Colonel, 1884; Brevet Colonel, 1885; Chief Engineer (2nd Class) and Joint Secretary to the Government of Bengal, Department of Public Works.


434


Medals awarded to Mr J. P. Smith, Director and Chief Engineer, Hawker Siddeley Aviation Ltd.


ROYALAERONAUTICAL SOCIETY SILVERMEDAL, by A. Wyon, obverse: a bird of prey in flight with a balloon above (J. P. Smith “For outstanding contributions to Aircraft Design” 1966) 40mm., silver, in fitted John Pinches case of issue; SHOOTINGMEDAL, by Phillips, Aldershot, obverse: crossed rifles, reverse inscribed, ‘Tanner Cup 1932 J. P. Smith’, 32mm., silvered bronze, in fitted case of issue; another, obverse: soldier standing firing arquebus, reverse inscribed, ‘Tanner Cup 1933 J. P. Smith’, 45mm., bronze, in fitted case of issue; ROYAL MARINES FOOTBALL MEDAL, by Phillips, Aldershot, unnamed, 32mm., bronze, in fitted case of issue; together with a DRAWING SOCIETY MEDAL, reverse inscribed, ‘H. Smith, 1897’, in fitted Elkington case of issue, extremely fine (5)


£150-200


The Royal Aeronautical Society’s Silver Medal was usually awarded annually ‘For work of an exceptional nature leading to major advances or contribution’. The medal was first awarded in 1909; 87 awarded to date. Mr J. P. Smith, a Fellow of the Royal Aeronautical Society, was awarded the Society’s Silver Medal in 1966. He was latterly Director and Chief Engineer, Civil, of Hawker Siddeley Aviation Ltd.


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