Miscellaneous 762
The scarce ‘She died’ lady’s Memorial Plaque to Staff Nurse Miss Ada Moreton, Queen Alexandra’s Imperial Military Nursing Service, who died of Cholera in Bombay on 7 September 1916
Memorial Plaque, ‘She died’ lady’s issue (Ada Moreton) good very fine £3,000-£4,000
Miss Ada Moreton was born in Stoke Damarel, Devon, in 1878, the daughter of Engineer J. F. Moreton, R.N., and served during the Great War as a Staff Nurse with Queen Alexandra’s Imperial Military Nursing Service in India. She died of Cholera in Bombay on 7 September 1916, and is buried in Bombay (Sewri) Cemetery. Owing to the fact that the Commonwealth War Graves Commission found it impossible to maintain the many burials in a large number of different and often remote cemeteries in India, she is formally commemorated on the Kirkee Memorial, India.
Sold with copied research including a photographic image of the recipient. 763
Memorial Plaque, embossed ‘Specimen Colonial Office MCMXIX’; together with a blank Memorial Plaque, this mounted in a wooden display frame; and a reduce-sized copy Memorial Plaque, this similarly mounted, edge bruising to first, good very fine, the first a rare specimen (3)
£80-£120
Presumed to be one of a number of sample Memorial Plaques sent to the Dominions and Colonies as an example of what would be produced.
764
Commemorative Plaque for the Zeebrugge Raid 1918. A near rectangular plaque, by Pieter de Soete, 81mm x 42mm, bronze, the obverse featuring Victory rising from a cloud, St George slaying the dragon in the background, ‘Zeebrugge on St. George’s Day. April 23d. 1918’ at base; the reverse inscribed ‘To six very gallant Gentlemen: Lt. R. D. Sandford, V.C., R.N., Lt. J. Howell-Price, D.S.O., D.S.C., R.N.R., Sto. H. C. Bendall, C.G.M., Ldg. Sea. W. G. Cleaver, C.G.M., D.S.M., Petty Officer W. Harner, C.G.M., E.R.A. A. G. Roxburgh, C.G.M. 1918-1927’, very fine
£60-£80 London Gazette 23 July 1918: Honours for Services in the Operations against Zeebrugge and Ostend on the night of the 22nd-23rd April 1918:
V.C.: Lieutenant Richard Douglas Sandford, R.N. ‘For most conspicuous gallantry. This officer was in command of submarine C.3, and most skilfully placed that vessel in between the piles of the viaduct before lighting her fuse and abandoning her. He eagerly undertook this hazardous enterprise, although well aware (as were all his crew) that if the means of rescue failed and he or any of his crew were in the water at the moment of the explosion, they would be killed outright by the force of such explosion. Yet Lieutenant Sandford disdained to use the gyro steering, which would have enabled him and his crew to abandon the submarine at a safe distance, and preferred to make sure, as far as was humanly possible, of the accomplishment of his duty.’
D.S.O.: Lieutenant John Howell-Price, D.S.C., R.N.R. ‘His assistance in placing Submarine C.3 between the piles of the viaduct before the fuse was lighted and she was abandoned was invaluable. His behaviour in a position of extreme danger was exemplary.’
C.G.M.: Stoker 1st Class Henry Cullis Bendall; Petty Officer Waler Harner; Leading Seaman William Gladstone Cleaver; and Engine Room Artificer 3rd Class Allan Gordon Roxburgh: ‘These four ratings were members of the crew of the Submarine C.3, which was skilfully placed between the piles of the Zeebrugge mole viaduct and there blown up, the fuse being lighted before the submarine was abandoned. They volunteered for and, under the command of an officer, eagerly undertook this hazardous enterprise, although they were well aware that if the means of rescue failed, and that if any of them were in the water at the time of the explosion, they would be killed outright.’
765 Royal Warrant Holders Association Medal, E.II.R., 1977 Silver Jubilee Medal (R. E. Stevens) extremely fine
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