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#16
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Cambridgeshire Regt badges
Phillip, what a lovely Cambridgeshire Regt badge, as a Cambridgeshire collector, it's a lovely item especially with the medals, thanks for sharing.
Rob |
#17
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Me aged 9 or 10 “curating” my collection, not sure which was my first cap badge but probably in the photo.
Still have the hall marked silver Liverpool Pals cap badge bought when I was about 10 ( more than 60 years ago ) for pocket money and I still have that. P.
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Interested in all aspects of militaria/military history but especially insignia and history of non regular units with a Liverpool connection Members welcome in my private Facebook group “The Kings Liverpool Regiment ( 1685-1958 )” |
#18
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My dad's economy plastic royal signals, which I still have along with his medals
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Regards, Jerry |
#19
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Jerry, still have my Dads RCOS badges and medals but he gave them to me relatively recently in my collecting time.
P.
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Interested in all aspects of militaria/military history but especially insignia and history of non regular units with a Liverpool connection Members welcome in my private Facebook group “The Kings Liverpool Regiment ( 1685-1958 )” |
#20
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Quote:
I was always to inherit my fathers medals, which I received when he passed away in 1993.
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Regards, Jerry |
#21
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I was about 9 or 10, my parents had moved into a Victorian house a few years previously in 1957.
My dad kept chickens at the end of the garden, I was in the chicken run one day feeding the chickens worms, and whilst feeding, one was scratching the soil, up popped a badge. After cleaning it, I found that it was a Middlesex Regiment badge, but it was many years later, when I began to take a real interest in militaria, that I discovered that it was in fact an economy version. I have that badge still. Meanwhile, also at the end of the garden was a rickety old shed. In there, standing on a shelf was, to my eyes, a large yellow coloured badge. I kept this for many years not knowing what it actually was, but eventually found it to be an Officer's QVC Helmet Plate for 1st West India Regiment. The gilt was still in very good, as was the general overall condition. It would have been wonderful to have known the antecedence of the previous occupants of the house. I eventually swapped it for some other stuff when the bug bit and have since seen it on at least 3 dealers sites in the intervening years. Who knows, one of you may have it now in your collections. Regards. Brian |
#22
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I was about 12 or 13 when I was given various family badges -
Then I was about 14 or 15 my grandfather suggested that I collected 1914 infantry badges - Then I started collected - and researching - KLR badges about 17 or 18 but more seriously when I was about 35 lots of KLR in my albums... 1914 Infantry family badges... Last edited by KLR; 21-11-21 at 09:57 PM. |
#23
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My first badge
Actually, here I am wearing my first badge in 1955. Unfortunately I now suspect it was just a copy/restrike/fake or fantasy item!
Tim
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"Manui dat cognitio vires - Knowledge gives strength to the arm" "Better to know it but not need it than to need it and not know it!" "Have more than thou showest, speak less than thou knowest." |
#24
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My Dad gave me his Essex cap badge when I was in my late teens. He was captured at Monte Casino along with his brother. They were sent to Germany and Dad was made to work in a pipe factory. He was released by the Russians, and a Russian soldier and gave him a rabbit skin jacket and I still have it today. He did not like talking about the war. One story he did tell me, that the Russian solders were kept in separate huts from the rest of the troops in the camp.
The Germans were starving them and they were screaming out for food, the Germans sent their dogs into the huts, but they never came out. |
#25
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Quote:
Around this time, I found a .303 cartridge on some waste ground by a public footpath and took it home to show my father. He cleaned the end of the cartridge with a wire brush and showed me the date, 1940. That was it for me, my first piece of actual history and I convinced myself that it was fired from a Spitfire during the Battle of Britain. Like nine years olds do, I took it to school to show my mates and in the playground, a small group of kids had gathered round to see my treasure. The teacher supervising noticed and came over to see what everyone was looking at. After all these years, I can clearly remember her asking me, "What have you got there?!. I showed her and said that it was a WW2 bullet from a Spitfire. She looked at me and said, "you don't want that" and took it from my hand and threw it over the hedge into the field next door. I remember going back after school again and again to look for it but I never found it. If, I had kept the cartridge, I may have got bored and moved onto to other interests, but I honestly think that losing that treasure at such an impressionable age set me off on my endless quest of trying to preserve random pieces of military history. Either that, or I am on the Autistic Spectrum, as yet undiagnosed. |
#26
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Thinking about the photo of me in my post, the full and half wings in the frame back left almost certainly came from the list of the legendary Bill Tobin.
The RAEC brass badge on the piece of black pegboard came from an Army and Navy shop on Byron Street, Liverpool. They had lots of cap badges for sale displayed in the window. A lot of the other badges had belonged to family and friends of the family. On a few occasions my Dad took me to a Junk Shop in Myrtle Street, Liverpool. In there were large boxes full of all sorts of metal military badges of all kinds. With hindsight you could have made a fortune if you had bought selectively and even better no one had ever heard of restrikes and if they had been mentioned , why would they be needed when there were more than sufficient genuine badges to satisfy the collectors of the late 1950s- early 1960s Golden days P.
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Interested in all aspects of militaria/military history but especially insignia and history of non regular units with a Liverpool connection Members welcome in my private Facebook group “The Kings Liverpool Regiment ( 1685-1958 )” |
#27
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....my Grandfathers silver/gilt RAOC Cap badge in his old SD Cap. Cant remember what happened to both.... I was 9. Lost in time.
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Cofion gorau Gruffydd M-J www.paoyeomanry.org.uk "A Yeoman from the Stalwart Rural Cavalry" Lechyd da pob Cymro |
#28
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Quote:
I fairly often think back at all the toys, gifts and books etc that got thrown away in my absence. I used to really look after my stuff too. She had a knack for getting rid of the stuff that I liked and/or held sentimental value to me whilst keeping the stuff I had little interest in. Let's hope the casing your teacher threw over the fence helped somebody else find the collecting bug too.
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"Success is not final, failure is not fatal: it is the courage to continue that counts." |
#29
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Hello everybody
I remember very well my first find. Long time ago I didn't know what it was. This one.. JP |
#30
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Phil,
the strange thing is that I must have found several dozen cartridge cases since that first one and I didn't have any signicant memories of any of them. I am reminded of a line in one of the India Jones films where the eponymous hero meets up with his long divorced wife. I cannot remember the exact dialogue but it goes something like this. Indiana: You were always the love of my life I never once stopped thinking about you. Ex Mrs Jones. I heard that you had many women after me and yet you never settled down with any of them, perhaps you were the problem. Indiana. Those women all had the same problem, they weren't you. |
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