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-   It's a Mystery -Unknown Insignia for Identification (https://www.britishbadgeforum.com/forums/forumdisplay.php?f=14)
-   -   Unknown badge, Hong Kong, May 1918 (https://www.britishbadgeforum.com/forums/showthread.php?t=19936)

gwulo 06-10-11 02:38 PM

Unknown badge, Hong Kong, May 1918
 
Hello, I'll be grateful if anyone can help identify this gentleman's badge:
http://gwulo.com/node/9305
(There's a slider below the photo that lets you zoom in - but it's not great detail unfortunately.)

You can see the full photo it's been cropped from at:
http://gwulo.com/node/9270

The man on the right of the full photo has been identified as RMLI, but no luck yet with the one on the left.

Thanks & regards,

David

Postwarden 07-10-11 09:36 AM

Unidentified cap badge in Hong Kong
 
David,

Looks like the cap badge of the Middlesex Regiment to me. Their 25th (Garrison) Battalion arrived in Hong Kong in April 1917 and stayed ther until August 1918 when it went to Siberia (source: Brig James; British Regiments 1914-1918.

Regards

Postwarden

GriffMJ 07-10-11 10:14 AM

I agree with Postwarden :)

Gwulo = Ghost Face in Chinese parlance..... its the same as us calling the Chinese "Chinks"....... I chinned a Chinese soldier (Royal HK Volunteers) in Hong Kong, in 1995, for calling me this name..... whilst setting up an OP in western New Territories ;)

Neil Pearce 07-10-11 11:28 AM

Hi Gwulo

Great site! Thanks for posting the link.
Regards
Neil

Toby Purcell 07-10-11 11:31 AM

Yes I agree also with Middlesex Regiment.

gwulo 08-10-11 07:00 AM

Middlesex
 
Gents,

Thanks very much for the quick reply.

Funnily enough I'd recently written about the Middlesex Regiment's arrival in Hong Kong in 1917, as we have a photo of them from that time with a cap 'badge' I'm pretty sure hasn't been seen here before: http://gwulo.com/node/9084

But I couldn't see the badge's wreath in the 1918 photo (and had also got too attached to the idea the 1918 photo showed an anchor), so decided it couldn't be a Middlesex badge. After reading your comments and looking again, I see that the 1918 photo just shows the silver parts of the badge clearly, and the bronze parts are lost in the gloom.

Thanks for setting me straight,
David

PS Griff, the word you're thinking of sounds something like 'gwailo'. 'Gwulo' is much more harmless, and just means 'old'.


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