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#1
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Good Conduct chevrons.
Can anybody tell me if good conduct chevrons were ever awarded for less than two years service in the British Army please?.
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#2
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Never for the regular army
The VF/TF and Militia/SR are a slightly greyer area as less well documented but I am pretty sure also never. Colonial and Commonwealth forces in war time also not entirely transparent. |
#3
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Thanks Grumpy, that is what I thought. The reason I ask is because of the news today concerning a former Lance Corporal of the Royal Fusiliers and taxi driver murderer. I recall him being at Catterick Barracks, Bielefeld during his trial and he was wearing a good conduct chevron on his left sleeve. As I understand it he was born on the 30th April 1947 and enlisted in 1965 at the age of 18 so after April 30th that year. He murdered the unfortunate Felix Reese on the 3rd of December 1966 and was found guilty and sentenced early the following year. I just don't get it.
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#4
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Dodgy mob those Royal Fusiliers, must be all the bourbon they drink
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#5
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Quote:
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. |
#6
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Has he sniffed it then? Or murdered someone else? |
#7
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It's a case of Intravenous rather than drinking nowadays anyway (blood group JB by the way, if any of you are donors). |
#8
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If it was borrowed then surely somebody would have noticed the chevron, unless it was somebody with a perverse sense of humour.
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#9
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You presume correctly. He's still alive at the moment so I hear. As for the question of murder, by calling himself an actor he's been getting away with murder for a good forty years. Mind you, the reason he's around today and living free is because he got away with murder in the first place. Bless you Lizel Reese.
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#10
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A picture might be of interest!
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." |
#11
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Blimey, that takes me back. Look at him, a lifelong cocky git. He should have been strung up in 1967 for what he did. He did ten years, Lizel, the widow of Felix Reese, got a lifetime of grief and bewilderment. The sheer injustice of it all makes me sick.
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#12
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Was he possibly a boy-soldier or CCF and got the chevron from there?
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#13
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Not from what is known of him, although I don't think boys service would count towards it anyway.
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#14
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6 QR 1961: “in the case of soldiers enlisted for 12 years service from the date of attaining the age of 18, unforfeited service prior to that age shall also be reckoned" . I have to confess that I do not understand this, but such cases would be rather rare. |
#15
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