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#1
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Can you identify these Officers & /or statley home?
Hi, Can anyone help?
I've two unknown senior officers and an entrance to a statley home to ID. I'm more hopeful of the entrance moulding as I know I'd probably recognise any Statley home I'd visited. The officers may both be Lt.Colonels. The one wearing a Cap has General Service coat of arms insignia and no Sam Browne. The Beret wearing officer has a small Light Infantry type cord device on his beret. It is from a large group photo with mixed capbadges and sexes and I have no idea who, what or where. Hope you can help. Feel free to share amongst any forums you may belong to. |
#2
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The ATS are wearing the RA or RE grenade as a breast badge, similar insignia possibly worn by at least one man in his FSC.
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#3
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The officer wearing the beret - as viewed on my phone the image appears to have "LONDON" and another line of lettering embossed in the area of his beret and above.
A ghost of a postmark? |
#4
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Definitely at least two ghosts, centre right.
Marc
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I am still looking for British Army cloth Formation, Regimental, Battalion, Company and other Unit sleeve badges, from 1980 onwards. |
#5
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The picture is ink stamped Panora Ltd. London W??? but I cannot see an overstamp on the Officer on the original.
There's lots of RA attached women but many more with other insignia. |
#6
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I think the officer in the beret may be wearing grenade collars and possibly a RNF or similar design cap badge, the gilt showing dark and the silver design on the ball showing bright.
Then again I look at that beret and wonder if there's a toorie on top. Nice little mystery. Last edited by leigh kitchen; 20-08-18 at 08:02 PM. Reason: I say toorie, predictive says goodie. |
#7
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I think, based on the black beret, the cap star, the lack of collar badges and the dark shade of shirt and tie, that the officer in the beret is in a Tank Battalion of Coldstream, Scots or Irish Guards. Two NCOs in the back row are wearing formations signs - which I cannot make out. Mike
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#8
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If Guards the button spacing should indicate which regiment?
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#9
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identify
The NCO are wearing shirt and tie, plus GS caps, so I would suggest this is late 1944 or 1945. The shirt and tie was unofficial for some time so if Guards I doubt they would have got away with wearing it.
I had wondered if the archway may have been Western Europe but the presence if ATS in service dress, and the London post-mark seem to rule this out. Stephen
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Life is just a hallucination caused by breathing oxygen, because when you stop breathing it, everything goes away |
#10
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More pics, hope they are better.
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#11
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Close ups...
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#12
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The officer in the 'beret' looks like it has a dark hackle in the front. His uniform also has black buttons, a dark lanyard and what looks like a black Sam Browne.
Also the beret is poorly shaped, and I don't think any soldier by that period in the war would not know how to shape and wear a beret properly (General officers excepted, of course). Could it be, and I'm no expert here, a Caubeen rather than a beret? Cheers, Dan. |
#13
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Last picture is RAMC on the right hand man, The one in the middle is indeed GS Corps.
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#14
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Thank you all for having a look and contributing. I was hoping one or both of the Officer's would be well known faces or at least the statley home might be recognisable. Shame there's no joy on both scores. A known unit or place would have helped when I frame it. On a closing note, under a glass, the beret definitley has a bugle on a cord boss on it, no hackles or toorie visible.
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#15
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Wearing collar badges, so not Guards.
Andy
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Leave to carry on Sir please. |
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