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CAMPAIGN GROUPS AND PAIRS 1580 Seven: Acting Chief Petty Officer A. C. Tapp, Royal Navy


1939-45 STAR; ATLANTIC STAR, clasp, France and Germany; AFRICA STAR; clasp, North Africa 1942-43; BURMA STAR, clasp, Pacific; WAR MEDAL 1939-45, these unnamed; NAVAL GENERAL SERVICE 1915-62, 1 clasp, Near East (D/JX.1151261 A/C.P.O., R.N.) number in part double struck; ROYAL NAVY L.S. & G.C., E.II.R., 2nd issue (D/JX.151261 P.O., H.M.S. Raleigh) minor contact marks, very fine and better (7)


£200-240 With a lot stating recipient transferred to the Royal New Zealand Navy in April 1956. 1581


Three: Sailor A. L. Hopkin, Merchant Navy, who was taken prisoner after the capture of the Port Wellington by the famous German raider Pinguin in December 1940 - his accompanying wartime photograph album from Milag Nord internment camp is an evocative record of his time behind wire


1939-45 STAR; ATLANTIC STAR; WAR MEDAL 1939-45, together with a gilt and enamel Merchant Navy lapel badge, extremely fine (4)


£300-350


Arthur Llewelyn Hopkin, who was born in Llandovery, Carmarthenshire, in January 1905, entered the Merchant Navy a year or two before the renewal of hostilities in September 1939. Having then served in the Anglo-American Oil Company’s tanker Schuykill, he removed to the Port Line steamer Port Wellington, and was similarly employed at the time of her capture by the famous German raider and auxiliary cruiser Pinguin on 1 December 1940, when bound from Adelaide to Durban.


The Pinguin’s oil-supply ship the Storstad was the first to spot the Port Wellington on the horizon, Kapitain Kruder of the former quickly closing to within a mile before opening fire without warning with his 5.9-inch guns - the very first salvo destroyed the radio room killing the operator and mortally wounding the ship’s master, while other shells put the steering gear out of action and caused widespread fires. In the event, however, 81 crewmen and seven passengers, all of them Salvation Army women, were got safely away in the boats and were picked up by Pinguin. The Port Wellington was then scuttled.


Having by then sunk over 20 Allied merchantmen, the decks and holds of the German raider were crammed with prisoners, so much so that Kapitain Kruder decided to have them transferred to his larger consort, the Storstad, in which ship they were conveyed to France and captivity, arriving off the Gironde in February 1941.


Sold with the recipient’s original wartime P.O.W’s photograph album, comprising numerous scenes from Milag Nord, the internment camp near Bremen (approximately 110 images), well captioned, and including the recipient and named personnel in addition to a fine series of images from around the camp, among them the P.O.W’s secret radio set and a fence warning sign ‘You will be shot without challenge’ (said in the recipient’s caption to have made excellent firewood), and others taken at the time of the camp’s liberation by the Guards Armoured Division in April 1945, including enemy dead, worn cloth binding, the front cover with central swastika and inscription ‘Kriegsgefangenenlager, Deutschland, 1941-45’, and the title page inscribed ‘Milag Nord, Merchant Navy Internment Camp, Westertimke, Nr. Bremen, Germany 1941-45’, in all a fascinating and most unusual photographic archive; together with a copy of Milag: Captives of the Kriegsmarine, by Gabe Thomas, signed by the author and three ex-prisoners, and in which Hopkin is mentioned for his work in the manufacture of certificates and posters.


1582


Six: attributed to D. E. Vint, Fleet Air Arm


1939-45 STAR; ATLANTIC STAR; AFRICA STAR, clasp, North Africa 1942-43; PACIFIC STAR; DEFENCE AND WAR MEDALS, all unnamed, extremely fine (6)


£50-70


Medals in card forwarding box addressed to ‘Mr D. E. Vint, 39 Southwold Crescent, St. ....?, S. Benfleet, Essex’. Card box additionally inscribed, ‘FAA682236’.


www.dnw.co.uk


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