Welcome, Guest
Username: Password: Remember me

TOPIC:

QSA with the British South Africa Company Medal 7 months 1 week ago #97887

  • djb
  • djb's Avatar Topic Author
  • Offline
  • Administrator
  • Administrator
  • Posts: 33298
  • Thank you received: 5130


The pair to Pte R Scott, Royal Highlanders, from Britannia yesterday.
Dr David Biggins
Attachments:

Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.

QSA with the British South Africa Company Medal 5 months 4 days ago #98899

  • djb
  • djb's Avatar Topic Author
  • Offline
  • Administrator
  • Administrator
  • Posts: 33298
  • Thank you received: 5130

Picture courtesy of Aubrey's

BSACM Rhodesia 1896 (3033 Pte. W. Bushell, 2/ Y. & Lancr Regt);
QSA (6) Cape Colony, Tugela Heights, Orange Free State, Relief of Ladysmith, Transvaal, Laing's Nek (3033 Pte. W. Bushell, 2/ Yk. & Lanc Regt);
KSA (2) (3033 Pte. W. Bushell, 2/ York: & Lanc: Regt).

Private William Bushell was born 1873 in Norfolk he joined the regiment in1891 at the age of 18. His previous occupation was that of a groom. Having passed out from two courses (Big Gun Drill and Mounted Infantry) he was appointed to the Mounted Infantry whilst in South Africa with the 2nd Battalion. During the deployment of the Mounted Infantry to Southern Rhodesia he served under Captain Kekewich. He was then posted to India from where he took his discharge after 7 years service in January 1899. By November of that year he was recalled to the colours as a reservist, he was then posted to South Africa for the duration of the Boer War, then discharged for the second time in August 1903 after serving with the 1st Battalion.
Dr David Biggins
Attachments:

Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.

QSA with the British South Africa Company Medal 3 months 2 weeks ago #99489

  • djb
  • djb's Avatar Topic Author
  • Offline
  • Administrator
  • Administrator
  • Posts: 33298
  • Thank you received: 5130

Picture courtesy of the London Medal Company

BSACM Rhodesia 1896 (1) loose on ribbon, Mashonaland 1897 (3762. PTE. J.A. MILLER. 7TH: HUSS.);
QSA (5) Cape Colony, Orange Free State, Transvaal, South Africa 1901, South Africa 1902; (3762 PTE. J.A. MILLER. 7TH. HUSSARS)

Described as:

Together with the following original documents and ephemera:

Queen Victoria crown collar badge for the 7th Hussars,

Double faced fob photograph of the recipient and his wife, and another believed to be of his son.

11 x original photographs, all relating to his military service, one showing him wearing both medal ribbons, one when boxing, and another being a superb image that shows him clearly wearing his British South Africa Company Medal 1890-1897 without clasp.

Certified copy of his Birth Certificate, as issued at Fulham, dated 24 March 1903.

Remnants of the original certified copy of his Marriage Certificate, dating from 5 December 1899, when he is shown as working as a horsekeeper.

Certified copy of his Death Certificate, as issued at South Battersea, dated 12 June 1953.

John Arthur Miller was born on 23 February 1874 in Walham Green, London, the son of Job Miller, a baker, and his wife, Emily Westlake, who resided at 23 Farm Lane in Fulham. Having worked as a carman he then attested for short service with the British Army at London on 25 April 1892, joining as a Private (No.3762) the 7th (Queen’s Own) Hussars at Canterbury. Miller saw service out in India from 4 February 1893 and then in South Africa from 23 October 1895.

As such Miller was present on active operations in support of the British South Africa Company during the Second Matabele War when present in Rhodesia in the period which lasted from 24th March to 31st December 1896, and in Mashonaland in the period from 24th March 1896 to 31st October 1897. Some 228 officers and men from his regiment gain the medal with the Rhodesia 1896 reverse, and 201 were present for Mashonaland 1897. In all some 1170 medals with the additional clasp were awarded.

Miller who was appointed to Lance Corporal on 19 March 1898, but reverted to Private again on 25 May 1898, was posted home from 30 November 1898, and was transferred to the Army Reserve on 24 April 1899, going to work as a horse keeper. He married Eliza Alma Hoare at St Paul’s Church in Clapham on 23 December 1899, having by then been recalled to the army owing to the Boer War, and he then saw service in South Africa from 28 December 1899, and as such was present on operations in the Cape Colony, Orange Free State and the Transvaal. Posted home again on 12 July 1902, he transferred back to the Army Reserve on 26 December 1902, and re-engaged for further reserve service on 25 April 1904, being finally discharged on 24 April 1908.

Miller latterly worked as a horse carman to the Borough Council in Battersea, where he lived up until his death on 11 June 1953. Medal and clasp entitlement confirmed, though it would appear that Miller claimed the Mashonaland 1897 clasp slightly later as it was not issued with his medal.

£1,550
Dr David Biggins
Attachments:

Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.

QSA with the British South Africa Company Medal 2 months 6 days ago #100062

  • djb
  • djb's Avatar Topic Author
  • Offline
  • Administrator
  • Administrator
  • Posts: 33298
  • Thank you received: 5130
The unusual KCVO, KB, CBE group to Sir C B Levita, Royal Horse Artillery, is here.
Dr David Biggins

Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.

QSA with the British South Africa Company Medal 6 days 20 hours ago #100880

  • djb
  • djb's Avatar Topic Author
  • Offline
  • Administrator
  • Administrator
  • Posts: 33298
  • Thank you received: 5130

Picture courtesy of Morton and Eden

BSACM Rhodesia 1896 (0) (Troopr T. H. Micklem. B.S.A. Police.), engraved in upright capitals;
QSA (3) Rhodesia, Relief of Mafeking, Transvaal (82 Tpr: T. N. Micklem. S. Rhod: Vols:), this officially re-impressed;
British War and Victory Medals with MID (Major. T. N. Micklem.)

Thomas Nathaniel Micklem (1875-1925) was born c.1875 in Waltham St. Lawrence, Berkshire, the son of Leonard and Dora Micklem, and worked as a Civil Servant in Rhodesia prior to military service. He is confirmed as having served with the British South Africa Police during the operations in Rhodesia of 1896 (roll confirms), and during the Second Anglo-Boer War, although the QSA medal roll only appears to confirm his first two clasps (the latter clasp is thus unconfirmed) say M&E. The roll states that Trooper Micklem served with ‘B’ Troop, Western Division, Southern Rhodesian Volunteers, later transferring as No. 614 ‘A’ Squadron, Rhodesia Regiment. Recruiting for both the Southern Rhodesian Volunteers and The Rhodesia Regiment commenced on 10 August 1899, the regiment saw action and suffered casualties in the Relief of Mafeking. The Rhodesians were also present at the famous Battle of Elands River in the Western Transvaal (4th-15th August, 1900).

Serving later during the Great War, he was commissioned as a Second Lieutenant with the 4th South African Infantry (SA Scottish) on 11 September 1915. Promoted to Lieutenant (temp.) on 12 May 1916, and to Captain (temp.) on 17 November 1917, when he joined the newly formed Tank Corps, rising to the rank of Major, and receiving a mention in despatches. The brother of Lieutenant-Colonel John Micklem, DSO MC, he served alongside his brother on attachment with the 10th Battalion, Tank Corps, and was wounded in action during heavy shelling on 21 March 1918, as recorded in the battalion’s war diaries: ‘21 March, 1918: The whole Battalion was in reserve in Haplincourt Wood. The camp was heavily shelled, about 7am the mess hut was hit and entirely gutted; this wounded the Battalion’s OIC, Lt Col J Micklem, 2IC, Major GJGG Cummie, Reconnaissance Officer Captain TN Micklem, and Acting Adjutant, 2 Lt S H Newton. Major Cummie remained on duty, the others were evacuated.’Surviving the rest of the war, Thomas Micklem relinquished his rank of Acting Major on 30 January 1919, and returned to Sikalozia Farm, Marabuka, Northern Rhodesia.

He assisted the Rhodesia Museum in the study of the mole rat (or ‘Fukomys Micklemi’) by donating his collection of scientific specimens – gathered on the Upper Zambezi River- to that museum. He died in Mazabuka, Northern Rhodesia, in 1925.
Dr David Biggins
Attachments:

Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.

Moderators: djb
Time to create page: 0.445 seconds
Powered by Kunena Forum