GROUPS AND SINGLE DECORATIONS FOR GALLANTRY 1733
A Great War Gallipoli landings D.S.M. group of five awarded to Chief Petty Officer K. S. Muskett, Royal Navy, who was decorated for his services in the battleship H.M.S. Implacable
DISTINGUISHED SERVICE MEDAL, G.V.R. (J. 1325 K. S. Muskett, Lg. Sean., H.M.S. Implacable); 1914-15 STAR (J. 1325 K. S. Muskett, D.S.M., L.S., R.N.); BRITISH WAR AND VICTORY MEDALS (J. 1325 K. S. Muskett, P.O., R.N.); ROYAL NAVY L.S. & G.C., G.V.R., 2nd issue (J. 1325 K. S. Muskett, P.O., H.M.S. Benbow), mounted as worn, contact marks and polished, thus fine or better (5)
£600-800 D.S.M. London Gazette 16 August 1916:
‘In recognition of their services, as mentioned in the foregoing despatch.’ Namely the Naval despatch of 1 July 1915, covering the Gallipoli landings 25-26 April 1915.
Kenneth Sydney Muskett entered the Royal Navy as a Boy 2nd Class in May 1908 and was serving as a Leading Seaman in the battleship H.M.S. Implacable on the outbreak of hostilities in August 1914. And it was in the same capacity that he won his D.S.M. in the Gallipoli landings of 25-26 April 1915, when Implacable assisted in the disembarkation of the 2nd Battalion, Royal Fusiliers on ‘X’ Beach on the western side of the Peninsula, and afterwards supported them with heavy gunfire, on one occasion breaking up a Turkish unit that had been brought up for a counter-attack.
In the following month, Implacable was withdrawn from Gallipoli to assist the Italians against the Austro-Hungarian Fleet in the Adriatic, and later still served on the Suez Canal Patrol, in addition to assisting the French Navy in blockading the Aegean coasts of Greece and Bulgaria.
Returning home to an appointment at Pembroke I in April 1916, where he was advanced to Petty Officer, Muskett removed to the destroyer Porcupine in February 1917, and to the Dalhalla in July 1917, in which latter capacity he remained employed until September 1918. Post-war, he was advanced to Chief Petty Officer in July 1926, and he was still serving at the end of the decade.
1734
A Great War Gallipoli operations D.S.M. group of five awarded to Chief Petty Officer L. J. Hawkins, Royal Navy, who was decorated for his services in the battleship H.M.S. Glory
DISTINGUISHED SERVICE MEDAL, G.V.R. (207596 L. J. Hawkins, P.O., Gallipoli Opns., 1915-16); 1914-15 STAR (207596 L. J. Hawkins, P.O., R.N.); BRITISH WAR AND VICTORY MEDALS (207596 L. J. Hawkins, P.O. 1, R.N.); ROYAL NAVY L.S. & G.C., G.V. R., 1st issue (207596 L. J. Hawkins, P.O., H.M.S. Renown), contact marks, generally very fine (5)
£600-800 D.S.M. London Gazette 15 May 1916:
‘In recognition of services rendered by Petty Officers and men of the Eastern Mediterranean Squadron between the time of landing in the Gallipoli Peninsula in April 1915 and the evacuation in December 1915 - January 1916.’
Leonard John Hawkins was born in Fareham, Hampshire in September 1883 and entered the Royal Navy as a Boy 2nd Class in January 1900. A Leading Seaman serving in the battleship H.M.S. Glory on the outbreak of hostilities in August 1914, he was quickly advanced to Petty Officer and, following convoy escort work in the Atlantic, arrived in the Dardanelles in April 1915. Glory was subsequently engaged off Gallipoli until the end of the year, and thrice came under heavy enemy bombardment in Suvla Bay in October.
Returning home to an appointment at the training establishment Vernon in April 1916, Hawkins removed to the battleship Renown that September, and remained similarly employed until brief spells at the torpedo establishment Defiance, and aboard the destroyer Tenacious, in July-August 1917. And his final wartime seagoing appointment was back in the Glory between October 1917 and October 1918, when he served in the British North Russia Squadron at Archangel.
Hawkins, who was awarded his L.S. & G.C. Medal in November 1916, finally came ashore as a Chief Petty Officer in September 1923.
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