Featured Finds Thread

Discussion in 'Antique Discussion' started by verybrad, May 25, 2014.

  1. Aquitaine

    Aquitaine Is What It IS! But NEVER BORED!

    I LOVE that Sterling silver Book of Common Prayer Davey!!!! You're getting a GREAT HAUL from this clean out!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!:happy::happy::happy::happy:
     
  2. kristiaan

    kristiaan Well-Known Member

    My (British!)uncle's brother was captured by the Jap's, even a Chinese restaurant was a "no go zone" to him....
     
  3. komokwa

    komokwa The Truth is out there...!

    Where I worked for 10 years there were two guys in the cutting room with tattoos on their arms....& they didn't get them because they were ' toughs ' !!

    The company sent me to Germany to learn at a weaving mill that had been stolen from the owners by the Nazis.
    The manager placed there by the Germans eventually bought the mill after the war...and in time payed off the owners whom he kept in touch with after the war , as they had fled to other countries.
    The displaced Jewish owners, & the Manager became life long friends !

    When I was living in Germany, and met older folks, I always wondered....where were you...what did you do.....but after a few beers I stayed focused on the here and now !
     
  4. kristiaan

    kristiaan Well-Known Member

    Yeah! The idea crossed my mind on different occasions too!
    But you better "don't mention the war"! (cfr Basil!) :)
     
  5. daveydempsey

    daveydempsey Moderator Moderator

    My uncle Harry was captured by the Germans in France in 1939, he was sent to a camp in Austria then into Germany.
    He became a trustee and was sent to work on farms.
    He was bush beating one day while the Germans were having a hunt.
    He was mistaken for a stag and got both barrels of a shot gun.
    He survived and was even put in a propaganda film in hospital visited by Goring or Goebbels, to show how well the Nazis were looking after POW`s
    Harry lived to a ripe old age even though he still had hundreds of pellets still inside his body.
    He said if it had not been for German surgeons he would have died.
    He never went overseas again.

    My mother and her family were bombed out of three homes by the Luftwaffe, losing everything they owned each time.
    She detested Germans, she even went crazy with me when I bought a Mercedes.

    My Dad served in WWII from 39 -45 and witnessed quite a bit but survived unscathed.

    He fought in the Atlantic, visited France, Netherlands, Azores, New York, Halifax Nova Scotia and even captured a U-Boat.

    His biggest regret was not being able to help during the slaughter of hundreds of US marines during Exercise Tiger. (A disaster covered up by the US)
    He also feels guilty that he may have killed many Dutch people whilst using a Bofors cannon to blow up German goods trains and troop carriers on the Netherlands coast.

    He gave me his medals last week to display in my bureau bookcase.

    001.JPG
     
  6. Figtree3

    Figtree3 What would you do if you weren't afraid?

    Beautiful jewelry, Marko!
     
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  7. popsycat

    popsycat Well-Known Member

    My dad was in the merchant navy, on oil tankers on the N. Atlantic run. His ship went down and he inhaled a lot of oil and burnt his arm. He was picked up by a passing American ship. Not many people realised that when an oil tanker went down, no other ship could stop to pick up survivors. They had to keep steaming to the UK wth their precious cargo of oil. He died in 1948, shortly after I was born with lung disease caused by the oil on his lungs. Many times I was asked what my father did in the war and when I replied "he was in the merchant navy" people would often reply "so he did nothing" including my father in law who spent a cushy war in Canada in the RAF as a technician. Quite recently I was asked the same question and the questioner, when answered, said "that sevice does'nt count" That attitude still makes me angry.
     
  8. daveydempsey

    daveydempsey Moderator Moderator

    Yes forgotten heroes, same thing happened with the guys on the Russian convoys.
    My paternal grandfather was a merchant seaman in WWII whilst his son my Dad was in the RN.

    @popsycat , I don`t know if I ever told you this but another uncle (John) cleared Calais harbour of German mines after WWII and met a French girl who worked in a cafe, they dated and married and settled in South Shields where you are from.
    My French auntie was called Jeanette Anderson.
     
  9. popsycat

    popsycat Well-Known Member

    How strange. I was an Anderson. My grandparents were Swedish. My sisters brother in law was on the ship carrying the Russian gold that went down. He was quite young. He said that was the day he stopped believing in god. He had to listen to his young fellow seaman dying. He said none of them shouted to god, but shouted for their mothers.Very very sad story. He was awarded a medal by the Russians,sometime in the 70's I believe, but it was stolen in a robbery from my nephews house when he was burgled.
     
  10. daveydempsey

    daveydempsey Moderator Moderator

    My Dad was born in South Shields his great grandfather on his mothers side was a Swedish naval captain who settled in Amble, his son Jon Jonson became a boat builder there.
    I took my dad back up there last year for a 12 hour day out :D
     
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  11. Messilane

    Messilane Well-Known Member

    I remember you speaking of that.
     
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  12. Aquitaine

    Aquitaine Is What It IS! But NEVER BORED!

    @daveydempsey, did you get to work out that these are the markings on that NEAT SS Book?? Other than the initials, I see an anchor, an animal (lion?) facing left and what looks like a "g"........

    z015a.jpg
     
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  13. kristiaan

    kristiaan Well-Known Member

    Something like that happened to me too.
    I got a Junker Ju 87E Stuka bomber made by Dinky toys.
    My grandfather who lived with us, who did both wars, took it of my hands and made it fly one last time ....against the wall! I was 8 or 9 and couldn't understand ....
     
  14. gregsglass

    gregsglass Well-Known Member

    Hi Marko,
    Really nice jewelry find. Also wanted to say I LOVE your new avatar!!! She looks like my favorite oil portrait of Mrs. Robert Taylor. I had that painting for 15 years until I found the family that it belonged to. It was stolen 10 years before I found it in a flea market. The family was nice in that they gave me a tidy sum for it's recovery. I kinda wished that it was still mine.
    greg
     
  15. LIbraryLady

    LIbraryLady Well-Known Member

    Just spent 1/2 hr learning about "Exercise Tiger."
    Yikes.
     
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  16. daveydempsey

    daveydempsey Moderator Moderator

    Yes British Sterling silver, Birmingham, 1906.
    Don`t know the makers mark though G & C Ltd
     
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  17. cxgirl

    cxgirl Well-Known Member

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  18. Christmasjoy

    Christmasjoy Well-Known Member

    My father joined the Royal Navy at the age of 15yrs, he served during WW2 also. He was on the HMS Ardent and then transfered to another ship .. the Ardent went down shortly thereafter with a tremendous loss of lives. My father said the same thing .. men cried for their Mothers. I went to school in 1947 and we were inundated with war news, we watched old film on huge reels and cheered loudly when a German ship was sunk .. it was quite alright with the teachers that we did so too !. My father NEVER had a kind word to say regarding the enemy .. he died at the age of 91 yrs old and rarely spoke about the war years. Life goes on but one must never forget the past and the tremendous loss of lives .. heartbreaking. ... Joy.
     
  19. komokwa

    komokwa The Truth is out there...!

    My Dad was a sapper, & I was told spent the war years here up in Petawawa, and other than dropping a large outboard engine in the middle of a northern lake, he never talked about his service.
    Still....he was my hero !!
     
  20. terry5732

    terry5732 Well-Known Member

    I was looking for info on the AEI pin. Didn't find any info but I found this pin for sale.
    aei 001.JPG
    Mine was $75 worth of scrap 14K so I bought this one for 16. Turns out it's on a base metal back.
    aei 004.JPG
     
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