This page contains a Flash digital edition of a book.
CAMPAIGN GROUPS AND PAIRS Ex D.N.W. 17 September 2004. Sold with a large quantity of original paperwork, including:


1. Commission Document (3), G.III.R., appointing George Fade (sic) to be Second Lieutenant in the Royal Regiment of Artillery, dated 15 December 1760; another, appointing George Fead to be Captain in the Royal Regiment of Artillery, dated 7 July 1779 and another (torn), appointing him Major in the Royal Regiment of Artillery, dated 16 November 1792. Sold with copied biographical research on George Fead, 1729-1815, who attained the rank of Lieutenant-General, and who in his early military career was present at the siege of Louisburg and served in the Flanders Campaign of the Duke of York. He was made Governor of Port Royal in 1810. 2. Letter from the Herald’s College, requesting the return of the Order of the Bath Companion’s badge, following the death of the recipient - Lieutenant-Colonel George Fead (son of the above, 1782-1847), together with a receipt for the same. Fead was a Captain and Lieutenant-Colonel in the 1st Foot Guards, wounded at Waterloo. His C.B. was awarded for the battle. Also with a hand-written memorial and a letter to Mrs Fead, his wife, from Windsor Castle, dated November 1846. 3. Commission document, V.R., appointing Henry John Tribe (1821-63) to be First Lieutenant in the Royal Marines, dated 7 July 1847; together with hand-written pages from a diary detailing his military service including that during the Second China War; a letter to Mrs Tribe following the death of her husband from Yellow Fever at Bermuda; various newspaper cuttings. 4. Commission document, V.R., appointing Cecil Walford Tribe (son of the above, 1859-1945) to be 2nd Lieutenant in the Land Forces (100th Foot), dated 8 January 1880; Royal Military College Farnborough Report, January 1880; three photographs of the recipient in uniform and an ‘Anonymous Letter’ addressed to Mr Tribe from Irish Republican Headquarters, ‘You have already got 3 weeks notice to leave this country so you better make the most of the next 2 weeks or you will be sorry you did not take your warning when you got it. So clear out at the end of the coming 2 weeks or before if you can but not later or you wont be able to go. ...’ Also with associated certificates of birth, marriage etc. 5. Commission document, G.V.R., appointing Henry Edward Scott Tribe to be 2nd Lieutenant in the Land Forces (A.S.C.), dated 26 June 1915; together with some wartime papers and a photograph of the recipient. Together with family trees and other papers, both original and copied.


1343


Pair: Corporal G. Emery, 24th Foot, late 69th Regiment


CANADA GENERAL SERVICE 1866-70, 1 clasp, Fenian Raid 1870 (978 Sejt. G. Emery, 69: Regt.) impressed naming; SOUTH AFRICA 1877-79, clasp, 1879 (1880 Corpl. G. Emery. 1-24th Foot) minor contact marks and edge bruising, otherwise good very fine and a rare combination (2)


£1000-1200


Sergeant George Emery served with the 69th Regiment in Canada and was present at the action at Trout River on 27 May 1870. A Canadian force of 250 strong, consisting of the 50th Battalion (Huntingdon Borderers), Montreal Artillery and Montreal Engineers, along with a detachment of the 69th Regiment, met the Fenians early in the morning. After an advance of great steadiness by the Canadians and British, the Fenians broke and fled across the border. Three Fenians were killed, several wounded and one man was captured.


George Emery was born in the Parish of Stoke-upon-Trent, near Longton, Staffordshire, and attested for the 69th Regiment at Gosport on 25 July 1864. He was a potter before enlistment. In February 1879 he volunteered to the 25th Brigade of Infantry and joined the 1st 24th Regiment, with whom he served in South Africa from March to October 1879. In January 1880 he transferred again, this time to the 2nd Northumberland Fusiliers, and went out to India. He suffered a self-inflicted gun shot wound to his left cheek when at Agra in July 1882, but was not discharged from the Army until 29 December 1885. Sold with copied service papers.


1344 Three: Assistant Commissary General E. Fitzstubbs, Commissariat and Transport Staff


ASHANTEE 1873-74, no clasp (Asst. Comsy. Fitzstubbs, Control Dept. 1873-4); EGYPT AND SUDAN 1882-89, dated reverse, no clasp (A.C. Genl. E. Fitzstubbs, C. & T. Staff); KHEDIVE’S STAR 1882, unnamed, some contact marks, very fine and better (3) £350-400


Assistant Commissary Edwin Fitzstubbs served in the Ashantee War under Sir Garnet Wolseley. He was based at Accrofumu with a detachment engaged in keeping open the lines of communication. He was appointed to the Commissariat and Transport Staff in January 1880 and served in the Egyptian War of 1882 as Assistant Commissary General. With copied roll extracts.


1345 Pair: Quarter-Master Sergeant T. M. Scott, South Wales Borderers


SOUTH AFRICA 1877-79, no clasp (2270 Lce. Corpl. T. M. Scott. 2-24th Foot); ARMY L.S. & G.C., V.R., small letter reverse (1482 Q.M. Sgt. T. M. Scott. S. Wales Bord:) the first with correction to regimental number, very fine (2)


£250-300


Thomas Mattingley Scott was born at Northchurch, Hertfordshire, and enlisted for the 13th Brigade at Liverpool on 21 February 1877, aged 18 years 6 months. He was posted to the 2nd 24th Foot in April 1879 and subsequently served at the Cape of Good Hope, 29 May 1879 to 12 January 1880, and at Gibraltar until August 1880, when he went out to India with the regiment. He served just over four years in India but suffered badly from the effects of the climate which eventually manifested itself in chronic Brights disease and was the cause of his discharge on 4 August 1896. He was latterly serving as Quarter-Master Sergeant on the Permanent Staff of the 4th Battalion, South Wales Borderers. Sold with copied discharge papers.


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