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GROUPS AND SINGLE DECORATIONS FOR GALLANTRY


d. ‘Buckingham Palace, late 53.’


ii) Copy of Certificate of Service, which states: ‘As a reservist he was recalled to the Colours for service in Korea and took part in the heroic stand of the 1st Bn. Gloucestershire Regiment in the action on the Imjin River in April 1951. A capable and efficient N.C.O. who was promoted to Acting Sergeant in the field and has rendered valuable service to his regiment.’


iii) Original war pensions letter which states that his degree of disablement is assessed at seventy percent arising from ‘gunshot wound left arm and hand with median nerve palsy, gunshot wound right hand and contracture 4th and 5th fingers, gunshot wound legs and thighs, malnutrition and privation and dysentery.’


iv) Four sides of letters written by recipient concerning the sale of his medals and giving some further detail, from which the following is extracted:


‘... Major General Farrar-Hockley’s book, The Edge of The Sword. I met him last at Buckingham Palace when he told me that I occupied a paragraph. It is correct to a point, unfortunately two of my Bren gunners were killed early on and so I had one of my very own!


The Chinese People’s Army used Russian methods. Directed by tracer fire and bugles the first wave had the weapons, while the second picked up what they could from the dead. It did make life easier, but there were far too many of them. Anyway this is history, the Regiment was happy to have another Battle Honour, The American Presidential Citation and to be known as ‘The Glorious Glosters.’ We weren’t so pleased to do two years in a P.O.W. Camp!’


Stanley Robinson was born in 1920 and saw service in North West Europe during the Second World War. He was re-mobilized in August 1950 and served with the Gloucestershire Regiment in Korea, where he was seriously wounded and taken prisoner of war. Repatriated in April 1953 he was medically discharged as a result of wounds the following September.


Note: The M.M. group awarded to Private J.A.W. Robson, Gloucestershire Regiment, awarded for the same action was sold at D.N.W., 7 July 2010, lot 888 for a hammer price of £55,000.


1238


An Indian Police Medal awarded to Mirza Khan, Havildar, Burma Military Police


INDIAN POLICE MEDAL, G.V.R., for Distinguished Conduct (Mirza Khan, Havr., Burma Mily. Police) very fine


£240-280


Indian Police Medal Burma Gazette 12 January 1935. ‘Distinguished service under difficult conditions during the operations in the Wa States, Burma’.


With copied gazette extract.


1239


An Indian Police Medal awarded to Deputy Superintendent Khan Malik Sher Khan, Punjab Police


INDIAN POLICE MEDAL, G.VI.R., for Distinguished Conduct (Khan Sahib Malik Sher Baz Khan, Deputy Superintendent of Police, Punjab) on substitute ribbon, corrections to rank, edge bruising, very fine


£180-220 1240


A Medal of the Order of the British Empire pair awarded to Colour Serjeant T. Ambler, Nagpur Volunteer Rifles


MEDAL OF THE ORDER OF THE BRITISH EMPIRE (Civil) unnamed, in John Pinches, London case of issue; VOLUNTEER FORCE LONG SERVICE (India & the Colonies) G.V.R. (Colour Serjt. T. Ambler, Nagpur Voltr. Rfls.) engraved naming, good very fine and better (2)


£260-300


O.B.E. Medal (Civil) London Gazette 2 March 1920. ‘... in recognition of meritorious services in connection with the production of Munitions and Materials of War in India.’ ‘Ambler, Thomas’


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