CAMPAIGN GROUPS AND PAIRS 351 Family group:
Three: Lieutenant G. W. Mason, 19th (3rd City) ‘Pals’ Battalion Liverpool Regiment, killed in action, France, 9 April 1917
1914-15 STAR (Lieut., L’pool. R.); BRITISH WAR AND VICTORY MEDALS (Lieut.) ‘Victory Medal’ renamed, mounted for wear; MEMORIAL PLAQUE (George William Mason) medals and plaque contained in an attractive Spink, London leather case
Three: Second Lieutenant R. C. Mason, South Lancashire Regiment 1914-15 STAR (2 Lieut., S. Lan. R.); BRITISH WAR AND VICTORY MEDALS (2 Lieut.) nearly extremely fine and better (7) £550-650
Medals to brothers.
Lieutenant George William Mason, 19th (3rd City) ‘Pals’ Battalion Liverpool Regiment, was killed in action on 9 April 1917. He was buried in the St. Martin Calvaire British Cemetery, St. Martin-sur-Cojeul, Pas de Calais, France.
352
Three: Captain R. A. Harris, General List and Expeditionary Force Canteens, who was drowned when the S.S. Maine was torpedoed and sunk on 21 November 1917
1914-15 Star (Lieut. R. A. Harris) [no unit]; BRITISHWAR AND VICTORY MEDALS (Capt. R. A. Harris); MEMORIAL PLAQUE (Robert Arthur Harris) these contained in a damaged leather case, extremely fine (4)
£400-500
Captain Robert Arthur Harris, General List and Expeditionary Force Canteens, was drowned when the French cargo ship, the S.S. Maine, of 773 tons, was torpedoed and sunk by the German submarine UB-56 some 30 miles off Newhaven. His name is commemorated on the Hollybrook Memorial, Southampton.
With named commemorative scroll; slip to accompany the plaque; the book, West and East with the E.F.C., by Captain E. Vredenburg; together with copied research - including ‘Buckingham Palace’ telegram from the Keeper of the Privy Purse on behalf of the King and Queen, to his wife.
353
Three: Lieutenant W. Langley, Army Remount Service 1914-15 STAR (Lieut. W. Langley) [no unit]; BRITISH WAR AND VICTORY MEDALS (Lieut. W. Langley) good very fine (5)
£80-100 With Army Remount Service cap badge and cloth wound stripe.
354
A Great War group of five awarded to Dr John Warnock, C.M.G., M.D., Director of Lunatic Asylums in Egypt
1914-15 STAR (J. Warnock) [no unit]; BRITISHWAR ANDVICTORYMEDALS, M.I.D. oak leaf (J. Warnock); JUBILEE 1935;CORONATION 1937, these unnamed, mounted for wear, extremely fine (5)
£140-180
John Warnock was born in Maldon, Victoria, Australia in 1864 and was educated at Horton College, Tasmania and Edinburgh University. Gained the medical degrees M.B., C.M.,
B.Sc., M.D., M.R.C.S. He was employed in Egypt from 1895 to 1923 and was appointed Director of the Government Hospital for the Insane, Cairo, in 1895; Lecturer of Mental Diseases, Cairo Medical School in 1910 and Director of the Lunacy Division, Ministry of the Interior, in Egypt, 1914. During the Great War he continued to serve in Egypt as Consultant on Mental Diseases to the British Forces and commanded the Army Hospital for Mental Diseases, 1915. In recognition of his services as Director of the Lunatic Asylums in Egypt, he was awarded the C.M.G. in 1917. Additionally awarded the Order of Osmania, 3rd Class, in 1910 and the Order of the Nile, 3rd Class, in 1924.
With copied m.i.c. and some service details.
355
Three: Lieutenant S. C. Knight, Royal Marine Artillery, who died of wounds, Flanders, 12 July 1915 1914-15 STAR (Lieut., R.M.); BRITISH WAR AND VICTORY MEDALS (Lieut., R.M.) good very fine (3)
£300- 360
Stanley Charles Knight was the son of Charles Knight, of Wingfield House, Banstead, Surrey and grandson of Sir Henry Knight, Alderman of the City of London. He was educated at Rose Hill School, Banstead and Felstead School. Knight joined the Royal Marine Artillery in March 1913, was appointed a 2nd Lieutenant in October 1914 and a Lieutenant in May 1916. Lieutenant Knight died of wounds on 12 July 1915, aged 22 years. He was buried in the Adinkerke Churchyard Extension, De Panne, West Vlaanderen, Belgium.
A note with the lot reads: ‘.... at Nieuport ..... On July 16th (sic), Lieut. S. C. Knight was mortally wounded in a gallant action against hostile aeroplanes; whilst the section was being shelled, Lt. Knight remained in an exposed position observing the fire of his section, and in spite of heavy shelling kept his guns in action until he was hit.’
With copied newspaper extract and other research. 356 Three: Bombardier C. Hetherington, 8th Calcutta Field Battery
1914-15 STAR (No. 27 Gnr., 8 Cal. Fd. Bty.); BRITISHWARMEDAL 1914-20 (27 Bdr., Cal. Vol. Bty.); VICTORYMEDAL 1914-19 (27 Bdr., 8 Cal. Field Bty.) good very fine (3)
£180-220 The 8th Calcutta Field Battery served in East Africa as light artillery. With copied m.i.c. 357 Four: Havildar Arjan Singh, 76th Punjabis
1914-15 STAR (No. 700 Nk., 76/Punjabis); BRITISHWAR AND VICTORY MEDALS (700 Nk., 76 Pjbis.); INDIA GENERAL SERVICE 1908 -35, 4 clasps, Afghanistan N.W.F. 1919, Waziristan 1919-21, Waziristan 1921-24, North West Frontier 1930-31 (700 Havr., 1/76/Pjbs.) this with clasps linked by cotton and unofficial connections, fine and better (4)
£120-160
www.dnw.co.uk
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