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MISCELLANEOUS 1110


NORTHUMBERLAND AND NEWCASTLE YEOMANRY CAVALRY, engraved presentation medal, 40mm excluding suspension, Obv. ‘This medal was struck to commemorate the Presentation to LT. COL. BELL by the officers of the N.N.V.Y. of a very handsome SILVER CANDELABRUM AT BLAGDON on Thursday 26, Sep. 1867’; Rev. ’PRESENTED by the OFFICERS OF THENORTHUMBERLAND&NEWCASTLE YEOMANRY CAVALRY to MATTHEW BELL ESQr. their much valued LIEUTENANT COLONEL on his retiring from the command of the Regiment after 50 Years Service. 26. Sepr. 1867.’, fitted with rectangular silver bar suspension, very fine £150-200


Matthew Bell was born in 1793, eldest son of the late Matthew Bell, Esq., of Woolsington, High Sheriff of Northumberland in 1797, by Sarah Frances, daughter of Charles J. Brandling, Esq., of Gosforth House, in that county, formerly M.P. for Newcastle-upon-Tyne. He was educated at Eton 1808, and Christ Church, Oxford 1811. By his father’s death in 1811, Matthew Bell, not yet 21, became one of the ‘Great Northern coal owner, was later Sheriff of Northumberland 1816-17, and was appointed Captain in the N.N.Y.C. in 1819. He was, besides acquiring a reputation as a popular public speaker and man of business, also responsible with his uncle Charles John Brandling, M.P. for Newcastle-upon-Tyne 1798-1812, and the county since 1820, for organising the yeomanry after Peterloo and during the 1822-23 Tyne keelmen’s riots. Bell became Conservative M.P. for Northumberland in the by-election of February 1826, caused by Brandling’s death. He was Lieutenant-Colonel commanding the N.N.Y.C. from 1826 to 1867.


Bell commanded the yeomanry during the Tyne pitmen’s strike of 1830-2, rallied the Tories and declared early as a Conservative for the new Northumberland South constituency at the 1832 election, when, despite attempts to ‘blacken’ him and criticism of his voting record, he defeated his cousin, the Liberal William Ord. He sat undisturbed until his retirement in 1852 and died without issue at Woolsington in October 1871 after a protracted illness.


For the First China War medal awarded to his younger brother see Lot 208. 1111


SHROPSHIRE YEOMANRY CAVALRY CENTENARYMEDAL 1895, bronze, unnamed, pierced for ring suspension; WEST SOMERSET YEOMANRY TAUNTON RECEPTIONCOMMITTEEMEDALLION, bronze, unnamed; and an ARMY PRIZEMEDAL, bronze, the reverse inscribed ‘6th. Inf. Bde. 1933 Runners-up 2/Som. L.I.’, generally very fine (3)


£20-30 1112


DEVONSHIRE VOLUNTEER RIFLES SHOOTING MEDAL, silver, the obverse featuring a rifleman in the prone position taking aim; the reverse inscribed ‘Won by John Carson 1st. D.V.R. 1865 & 1866’ within wreath, crown above, with crossed rifles and circular horn suspension bar, suspension bar slightly bent, otherwise extremely fine


£60-80 1113


60TH ROYAL AMERICAN REGIMENT 1815, 5th Battalion, gold medal, 32.3 mm., Obv ‘Royal American Regiment’ surrounding ‘60’ over scroll inscribed ‘Fifth Battn.’, date ‘1815’ below; Rev. inscribed “Presented to A. Hennerhofer, Quartermaster. A Token of Regard from his Comrades who served with him in the Peninsula’, fitted with small gold ring, gilt straight bar suspension, and gilt two-prong ribbon buckle, pin lacking on this, very fine and very rare


£800-1000 Provenance: John J. Ford, Jr. Collection, Stack’s, New York, 18 January 2005 (Ex J. Douglas Ferguson, 26 October 1959).


Augustus Hennerhofer was commissioned Quarter-Master in the 60th Foot, from Quarter-Master-Serjeant, on 25 November 1807. His death is recorded in the London Gazette of 15 April 1815: ‘Quarter-Master-Serjeant John Keins to be Quarter-Master, vice Hannerhoffer, deceased. Dated April 6, 1815.’


The 60th retained its title ‘Royal American Regiment’ until 1824. The fifth battalion was raised in 1797 to serve as riflemen only in America. There were to be 17 officers and 300 men. They were the first to wear the rifleman’s green jacket and gave the present regiment its designation, The Royal Green Jackets. The fifth battalion served in the troubles in Ireland in 1798 and on the Peninsula from 1808-13, and was disbanded in 1815.


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