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Miltary Medals
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Couple of day ago someone left a message on my answerphone saying they are assuming they had one of my husbands fathers 1914-18 war medals. He said he was trying to unite the medals with the families. He knew our names and our childrens names. What I wondered if anyone else has received this sort of call. How would he get hold of these medals? We have one of his fathers medals but have never lnown about this one. (its only one of the 2 pip and squeak medals). I wonder if he is trying to sell them. I don't want to call him back yet.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.You should be able to do a search at the National Archives to ascertain what medals your father in law was awarded. His medal card should be publicly available. http:// www.nat ionalar chives. gov.uk/
He may be trying to sell them. It may be a scam. On the other hand, he could be genuine. I recently did some research on the family of someone who had been awarded medals and a friend of mine picked up in a junk shop. He was hoping to let the family know. IN the event there were no close relations. This type of info is very very easy to dig up if you know where to look.
He may be trying to sell them. It may be a scam. On the other hand, he could be genuine. I recently did some research on the family of someone who had been awarded medals and a friend of mine picked up in a junk shop. He was hoping to let the family know. IN the event there were no close relations. This type of info is very very easy to dig up if you know where to look.
Yes Vulcan both my fathers and my father-in-laws victory medals have all the details printed around the rim, and this chap said that the one he holds (the silver one) has all the details (correctly) printed around the rim. I just wondered how the dickens he would have got hold of it. My mother-in-law was never aware of its existence as it would have been given to my husband.
julia-mag, curious, that he has only one, if medals are sold it's usually as a set of three. All I can think of is over the years this one has been lost and found again. He can't really sell it as it obviously isn't his, unless he's a distant relative and it came into his possession that way , hopefully he just wants to reunite it with the rightful owners.
Khandro
Manchester Reg museum is in Ashton under Lyne
worth a visit - they will have all sorts of records.
[ I personally didnt find them much help as they had put a child's tourist jellabiah in the Boer War collection and didnt seem to know or be interested ( perhaps because they were busy ) that a flag embroidered in Arabic could not be a Boer vierkleur. omdurman 1895 instead I thought ]
Manchester Reg museum is in Ashton under Lyne
worth a visit - they will have all sorts of records.
[ I personally didnt find them much help as they had put a child's tourist jellabiah in the Boer War collection and didnt seem to know or be interested ( perhaps because they were busy ) that a flag embroidered in Arabic could not be a Boer vierkleur. omdurman 1895 instead I thought ]
Thanks Peter; For the record, and considering the commemorations on now, granddad really deserved another medal as well for his life after the war. In battle he was hit in the thigh by a sniper's bullet - (all that a highly inquisitive child got out of him on the subject) - leg amputated in a field hospital (gawd!) Artificial leg and stick, courtesy of a charity called BLESMA (British limbless ex-service man's association). Worked all the rest of his life as a gate-keeper at 'Metro Vicks' Trafford Park until the 1960's, never lost a day, locally 'famous' as the first person out in the street in all weathers at 5:30am after a pint of tea in a huge white mug with milk and rum "Sergeant-major's tea", 1/4 mile walk and two long bus journeys across Manchester. Never complained about anything, and boy could he whistle!
All this brought back by opening the box for this thread, tears in my eyes, but thanks.
All this brought back by opening the box for this thread, tears in my eyes, but thanks.
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