Single Campaign Medals 1158
South Atlantic 1982, with rosette (AB(S) S Horsley D181353N HMS Plymouth) good very fine
£400-£500
H.M.S. Plymouth was a ‘Rothesay’ Class type 12 anti-submarine frigate of 2,800 tons, launched at Devonport in 1959 and commissioned in 1961. Heavily involved in the Falklands War, she sailed with tanker R.F.A. Tidepool and destroyer H.M.S. Antrim to South Georgia with Royal Marines and S.A.S. aboard. She then provided cover for the aircraft carriers and amphibious vessels and was one of the first Royal Navy ships to enter San Carlos Water. On 21 May 1982 she went to the assistance of the frigate H.M. S. Argonaut that had suffered bomb damage. On 8 June she was attacked by five Mirage aircraft. In the ensuing action she managed to destroy two and damage two others but was hit by four bombs and numerous shells; five men were injured in the attack.
Max Hastings and Simon Jenkins give their account of these events in The Battle for the Falklands: ‘Even as the rescue operation was being mounted at Fitzroy, urgent efforts were being made to save the frigate Plymouth, which had been heavily attacked that afternoon. It is still uncertain whether the Argentine air force deliberately conceived the attack on the frigate as a diversion to distract attention from their imminent attack on Bluff Cove, but it undoubtedly had that effect on the British Harrier Combat Air Patrol. Plymouth was warned to break off her bombardment of Mount Rosalie on West Falkland before an imminent air attack, expected at 1.30 but it was some minutes short of that time when five Mirage Vs raced towards her up the Falkland Sound, turned and attacked from the port quarter. To the men on the ship’s bridge, Plymouth seemed agonisingly slow to answer the call for full speed. A Sea Cat struck the leading Mirage, and an oerlikon gunner hit the second, but the ship was hit by four 1000-pound bombs of the ten that were dropped. One hit a depth charge which exploded, caused major damage and started a fire. One passed through a funnel. The others passed two feet above the heads of a horrified group of men caught on the upper deck manning an anti-submarine mortar. Bleeding smoke, Plymouth limped into San Carlos Water and set about controlling her fires and patching her holes, in which she was eventually successful. The Harrier Combar Air Patrol which had been covering Fitzroy all that morning had been drawn off to meet the attack on Plymouth, only minutes before the Skyhawks struck Galahad.’
After these emergency repairs Plymouth returned to the fleet and was able to provide gunfire support to the land forces. She returned home on 21 June. During the course of the Falklands War she had steamed 34,000 miles, fired 900+ 4.5 inch shells and destroyed five aircraft. H.M.S. Plymouth was decommissioned on 28 April 1988 and was preserved, being open to the public at Birkenhead since 1992.
Simon Horsley, a native of Maidenhead, Berkshire, joined the Royal Navy at Torpoint on 20 November 1979 aged 17 years and 1 month and served in H.M.S. Plymouth during the Falklands War. He was discharged in the rate of Able Seaman on 27 December 1982.
Sold with the recipient’s discharge certificate, a contemporary newspaper cutting relating to the recipient’s service and some photographs including two of the battle damaged H.M.S. Plymouth at the Falklands.
1159
Gulf 1990-91, 1 clasp, 16 Jan to 28 Feb 1991 (MEM (M) 1 E G A Ayers D182645D RN) officially re-impressed naming; together with the recipient’s two identity tags, good very fine
£240-£280
Edward George Albert Ayres was born in Gravesend, Kent, on 2 April 1959, and joined the Royal Navy on 5 February 1980. After initial training he joined the Submarine Service at H.M.S. Dolphin on 18 August 1980, and served for the next decade in the Oberon- class Submarine H.M.S. Otus, including active service during the first Gulf War, where H.M.S. Otus was involved in deploying and recovering Special Forces personnel. Ayres’ final sea-going posting was in the Trafalgar-class Submarine H.M.S. Tireless, from 9 February 1993 to 26 April 1994, before he was discharged on 30 May 1994.
Sold with copied record of service; various photographs of H.M.S. Otus (including one of the ship’s crew); and a VHS cassette tape of H.M.S. Otus returning from the Gulf War.
1160
Iraq 2003-11, no clasp (25119159 L Cpl A G Stanton RLC) in named card box of issue; together with a N.A.T.O. Medal 1994, 1 clasp, Non Article 5, unnamed, in box of issue, extremely fine (2)
£80-£120
Provenance: Dix Noonan Webb, June 2007. A. G. Stanton served with 29 Regiment Royal Logistics Corps in Iraq.
Sold with the recipient’s beret with cloth badge and with three copied photographs of the recipient and others in Iraq.
The N.A.T.O. Medal was awarded to ‘25111598 Private Stanton’ (a relative of L/Cpl. A. G. Stanton), who served with 29 Regiment Royal Logistics Corps in Operation Agricola (Kosovo), October 2002-April 2003. During this period the regiment was attached to the 4th Armoured Brigade. Sold with the named certificate of issue.
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