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MISCELLANEOUS 523 MEMORIAL PLAQUE 1914-18 (Raymond Victor Kann) good very fine £60-80


Raymond Victor Kann was born in Lancaster Gate, London. He was educated at Charterhouse and Geneva. He attested for the 6th Battalion Suffolk Regiment (T.F.) at Saxmundham on 4 October 1914, aged 18 years. On 31 January 1915 he was discharged to a commission in the 7th Battalion Royal Scots Fusiliers. With them he served in France, taking part in the battle of Loos. In June 1916 he transferred to the Royal Flying Corps and thence the Royal Air Force. Serving with the Central Flying School, R.A.F. he was killed in a flying accident on 21 August 1919, aged 22 years. The son of Rene Kann and husband of Dorothy Kann, of 96 Adelaide Road, Hampstead; he was buried in Hampstead Cemetery. With copied research.


524 MEMORIAL PLAQUE 1914-18 (Hussey Burgh George Macartney) nearly extremely fine £60-80


Captain Hussey Burgh George Macartney, 1st Battalion Royal Fusiliers, entered the France/Flanders theatre of war on 10 March 1915. He was killed in action on 24 June 1915, aged 40 years and was buried in the La Brique Military Cemetery No. 2. He was the son of Hussey Burgh Macartney, Clerk of Holy Orders and Emily Macartney, of Caulfield, Victoria, Australia. With copied m.i.c. and casualty details.


525 MEMORIAL PLAQUE 1914-18 (Ralph Mackintosh) in card envelope, nearly extremely fine £40-60


Ralph Mackintosh was born and lived in West Herrington, Co. Durham and enlisted at Elswick. Serving as a Gunner in the 332nd Siege Battery, R.G.A., he was killed in action on 30 August 1918, aged 30 years. He was buried in the Hem Farm Military Cemetery, Hem- Monacu, Somme, France. He was the son of Ralph Mackintosh of West Herrington, Sunderland and the late Mary Ann Macintosh.


526 MEMORIAL PLAQUE 1914-18 (Thomas Martin Phillips) very fine 2nd Lieutenant Thomas Martin Phillips, 103 Squadron, Royal Air Force, was killed in action on 18 September 1918.


During a raid on Harbourdin, 2nd Lieutenant Phillips and 2nd Lieutenant Owen, flying a DH-9, were killed in action over Lille, assumed to be hit by ack-ack and observed to spin down and crash from 15,000 feet, but now believed to have been shot down by Jasta 52 pitot OfStv O. Sowa. He is buried in Rue-Petillon Military Cemetery, Fleurbaiz. He was the son of Howell and Hannah Phillips, of Manselton, Swansea, and aged 24.


527 528 MEMORIAL PLAQUE 1914-18 (William White) in card envelope, extremely fine £30-50


MEMORIAL PLAQUE 1914-18 (Anthony Theodore Clephane Wickham) nearly extremely fine


£80-100


Lieutenant Anthony Theodore Clephane Wickham, Connaught Rangers entered the France/Flanders theatre of war on 25 September 1914. Serving with the 4th Battalion, attached to the 2nd Battalion Connaught Rangers, he was killed in action on 2 November 1914, aged 27 years. Wickham was the only son of the Rev. J. D. C. Wickham and Mrs Wickham, of Holcomb Manor, Holcomb, Stratton-on-Fosse, Somerset. With an original portrait photograph of the recipient and copied research.


£100-150


529


CANADIAN MEMORIAL CROSS, G.V.R. (3234334 Spr. C. J. Smith) good very fine


£50-70


Sapper Clarence James Smith, Canadian Railway Troops, died of disease on 25 October 1918. He was buried in the Brighton (Lewes Road) Borough Cemetery, Suusex.


530 531 CEYLON VOLUNTEER SERVICE MEDAL 1914-19 (G. S. S. Perera) bronze, very fine £70-90


AGREATWAR RETURNING P.O.W. TRIBUTE MEDAL FROM THECITY OFNEWPORT, in 9ct. gold, Birmingham hallmarks, obverse, Britannia greets a returning prisoner outside the city hall with the dates ‘1914’ and ‘1918’ above and below, reverse, city arms with surround inscription, ‘Prisoner of War / Newport is Proud of You’, 33mm. diam., integral loop and double-ring suspension, very fine


£200-250


www.dnw.co.uk


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