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 Wednesday, September 19, 2007
9-11 Book
Posted by fred

Couple of weeks ago we checked out the local Goodwill store on the way home. Over the years I have found some good books and music cd's there.  This being 2007 the memory of the 9-11-01 terrorist attacks  are starting to fade from the public mind and we now have kids in grade school that were born after that date of infamy. In the small book section laying on top of the shelved books was a large white book, 9x11 inches and 568 pages, titled "PORTRAIT 9/11/01 The Collected "Portraits of Grief" From The New York Times" published in 2002,  already in it's tenth printing and I had never heard of it! It is a very moving book featuring photos and short written descriptions of the lives of the nearly 3000 innocent  victims murdered that day. So if you ever find yourself wondering why the US military is stumbling around in Iraq and Afghanistan like a wounded elephant trampling the natives get a copy of this book.



9/19/2007 1:18:35 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Wednesday, September 12, 2007
A Sad Silver Star
Posted by fred

We all know that the Silver Star is one of the United States’ highest awards for valor. Actually the third highest combat only award. To earn one of these a soldier in combat has to be very brave and very lucky. The brave part is understood but one must also be lucky enough to have a witness to the act of bravery who also survives the battle and is able to report the act of valor in such a way that the act is recognized and rewarded with the Silver Star. Silver Stars are very popular with collectors because all the awarded ones are named on the back and therefore researchable. Illustrated below is a very sad example of an early WWII issue Silver Star that has had the original owner’s name filed off! I have seen this sort of thing on British medals but rarely on American medals. Why was this done? I can only guess that the original owner fell on hard times after he left the service and had to sell his medals. He probably filed off his own name out of a sense of shame for having had to sell his precious medals or maybe he feared that some pretender could assume his identity. It is sad that one of our nations heroes had to sell his medals. It is tragic that he destroyed the only historical monument to his own heroism and that now we will never know who he was or what he did to earn this Silver Star.



9/12/2007 12:49:03 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Thursday, September 06, 2007
Good Conduct
Posted by fred

I put this up on Sept 5th and see it is missing!! So here goes again.

 

Life for members of the armed forces is under military law. Military law is strict and punishment can be swift. Screw up or step out of line and there is a whole list of nasty things that happen depending on the type of infraction. Starting with extra KP duty and other punishment details, plus the loss of passes and leaves. Then there is the possibility of reduction in rank and the loss of pay and benefits, fines and jail time. A dishonorable discharge which not only looks bad on a civilian resume but also eliminates any veterans benefits which can really bite later in life and of course if worse comes to worst there is always the death penalty. On the positive side if one follows the rules and makes the effort to be efficient and positive the military usually rewards that with promotions, pay increases and other considerations like choice assignments and medals including the Good Conduct medals. I have often wondered why, with all the aforementioned negatives and positives, is there a need for good conduct medals like these.

 



9/6/2007 9:50:40 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Wednesday, August 29, 2007
For the Birds
Posted by fred

With the high price of gas now I always plan several things to do when ever I have to make a trip. I had a medical appointment in Wausau a few days ago so I took the wife along and we went to the local art museum and had lunch which made her day. No trip to Wausau is complete for me without a visit to Ginny’s, my favorite downtown antique shop. I don’t often find anything there in my line  but once in a while I actually do spend some money in that little shop. This trip was one of those times. In one of her cases was this spectacular silver five arm cross. The cross is 86mm and weighs 50.37 grams. The ring is hallmarked “800” which is the fine silver content of the cross. On the obverse in the center is a medal with a standing woman leaning against a shield and holding a bird nest full of hatchlings. The background is a city view and there is a German legend “MENSCHEN NUTZEN VOGEL SCHUTZEN” which roughly translates, people benefit (when) birds are protected. On the reverse is the inscription “Dem Verdienste” which means that this is a medal of merit. Unfortunately there is no mention of the group that issued this cross or who the recipient was. The only clue would be the city view. If anyone recognizes it please let me know.



8/29/2007 1:36:17 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Thursday, August 23, 2007
Do It Now !
Posted by fred

Early this year I lost one of the best collecting friends anyone could wish for. Leonard and I had been friends for over 30 years and both of us were serious collectors of Wisconsin state and local issue military medals.  Our collections about equal in size and were kind of like the jagged cut coin.  What I was missing he usually had and what he was missing I had.  With out his help and encouragement I might never have published my Wisconsin military medals book. He also collected the medals of other states like I do. Beyond that we went our seperate ways.  He didn't collect Imperial German like I do and I didn't collect US medals like he did. When it came to ebay we found that we wouldn't bid against each other so we both were in a race to find medals and be the  first to bid on them.  At the Iola Military Show Leonard would display his Wisconsin medals and stay at my house for the weekend.  My wife Cathy thought of him as the perfect house guest even though she found very little she could talk with him about.  No one in his family collected medals but they knew about me and eventually I recieved the call to come look at the collection. I was staggered by what I saw.  Leonard's Wisconsin collection was only the tip of the iceberg and what I though would be an afternoon's worth of work suddenly looked like several days worth. Then much to my relief I found the my friend had kept good records!  Note books listing the medals, what he paid for them, when he bought them and even some recent pages with current value estimates and therein lies an important message for us all; please keep good records of your collection. It will make a world of difference to your heirs and who ever will have to appraise and or buy the estate.  It will help insure that your heirs will get a fair price for your collection.  Do It Now!! Please.



8/23/2007 1:22:12 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Wednesday, August 15, 2007
Swiss Franco-Prussian War medal
Posted by fred

 

I was at the ANA convention last week and didn't have time to do my blog. Did you miss me? Probably not, but I did pick up a this really neat Swiss Franco-Prussian War medal. Yes I did mean Swiss! Switzerland as we all know is a traditionally neutral country sharing a border with two larger frequently feuding countries. The Swiss also knew, as Belgium learned in 1914, that simply declaring neutrality is not enough. In 1870 when the Franco-Prussian War broke out General Hans Herzog posted 50,000 troops along Switzerland's western and northern borders to prevent any violation of Swiss neutrality. In Feb. 1871 the Swiss forces disarmed and interned 80,000  French soldiers who crossed the border seeking sanctuary from the German forces and provided them with badly needed medical care and shelter. This very impressive bronze medal was issued to commemorate those events. The obverse portrays General Herzog while  the reverse features a standing Helvetia with sword at the ready. The French legend roughly translates "Swiss Neutrality, Souvenir of the Federal Army's faithful service from 16 July 1870 to 25 March 1871".   I don't know if this medal was awarded to anyone or if it was simply a private purchase item. Does anyone know?



8/15/2007 12:55:57 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Wednesday, August 01, 2007
Advantage Collector
Posted by fred

 

I was in the Chicago area last week doing some family visiting. As good fortune would have it my sister-in-law took us to an antique mall in one of the suburbs and we got there a good half hour before they closed. My wife asked the clerk if any booths had military medals and the nice lady took us to three that had large amounts of military items for sale. The first two had nothing of interest to me but the third made my day. I asked the lady to open a case and let me see what looked like a breast star of the modern version of the old Persian Order of the Lion and Sun, now called the Nischan-el-Homayoun. As soon as I had it in hand I saw that it had a loop and ring for a ribbon suspension and even though it was missing the ribbon it still came with a very hefty price tag. I passed on it saying it was only an incomplete III class and therefore much too expensive for me. There was an instant expression of shock and disbelief on the lady's face. "Well" she said, "this booth belongs to a dealer who is on The Antiques Road Show and he is one of their military experts!" "That's nice" I replied not wanting to alienate her any further, "now can I please see those Soviet Orders?" Out came four beautiful orders including the Red Banner of Labor type 4 with the hydro dam, Labor Glory III Class with the tower and my favorite, the Badge of Honor Type III variety 3 with the two workers, all illustrated below plus the Order of the Red Star and all for less than the Iranian order would have cost me.

Dealers are generalists and as such they usually have an extensive broad based knowledge that can be very impressive but the collector who has done his homework and has more specialized interests will almost always come out on top : advantage collector.



8/1/2007 12:07:54 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Wednesday, July 25, 2007
Sugar Beets and National Security
Posted by fred

Here we have a President's Safety Award badge from the GW (Great Western) SugarCompany. Ok this one isn't military but the guy on the medal is wearing a helmet. GW made sugar from sugar beets like the one the helmeted worker is holding on the medal. Behind him we see the sugar beet processing plant that was in Sterling, Colorado. This was one of many such plants located throughout several western states. The company started up around 1905 and lasted until low priced cane sugar imports drove the beet sugar producers out of business. That's how economics works in real life, if you can't compete you go out of the business and in the long run this leads to innovation and efficency resulting in better and cheaper products for the consumer. Internationally this is called free trade and it works great if governments aren't playing games with subsidies and tariffs.

There is another consideration however that is rarely thought of and that is National Security. National Security is more than just a military consideration, after all it is said that an army moves on it's stomach. Certain commodities like food, water, power sources etc. are vital to national survival. Does it make sense then for a nation to outsource it's capability to raise and process it's own essentials like food for short term economic profitablity? Food for thought.



7/25/2007 12:20:58 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Wednesday, July 18, 2007
Frugal
Posted by fred

Back in 1864 Prussia and Austria finally settled the old Schleswig-Holstein issue by defeating Denmark and removing those provinces from Danish control. Two years later Prussia and Austria fought a war over the spoils from the Danish war. This war was really a German civil war with the Prussians and their Northern allies facing off against the Austrians and their mostly Southern allies to determine which of them was going to be the dominant power within the German states. As in other civil wars the North won and Austria ceased to be one of the German states. Then in 1870 when France declared war on Prussia all the German states got their act together, defeated France and for the first time put Germany on the map as a unified nation. This was a glorious moment for the Germans both at home and abroad. Twenty-five years later on the silver anniversary of the war there were national celebrations with many German cities and towns joining in and issuing medals to honor their hometown veterans. One such city was Duesseldorf and with true Germanic frugality they issued a medal that covered all the veterans of all three of the wars. The obverse shows the Duesseldorfer crowned lion with his anchor above the city name and dates "1870-1895". The reverse inscription translates as: "(to) our veterans of 1864, 1866 and 1870/71 (from) the greatful father city." Three wars covered by only one medal, and no veterans would have felt that they had been forgotten.

Can anyone report any other similar medals?



7/18/2007 12:44:12 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Tuesday, July 10, 2007
Historic and Timely
Posted by fred

The Mexican-USA border has been a problem for over a century. Back in 1916 after a long series of Mexican bandit raids into the US often with the backing of Mexican government officials, President Wilson called up the National Guard to protect our southern border. As usual the federal government was slow to issue the troops service medals to honor their efforts. A fairly common private issue then surfaced and is often assumed to be an official medal which it is not. The obverse looks like the VFW radiant cross with the US arms in the center and the legend "United States National Guard." The reverse is most interesting in that it lists a time line of events leading up to the call up and beyond with an 11 line inscription "RAID / COLUMBUS, N.M. MARCH 9TH / GLEN SPRINGS, TEX. MAY 6TH / SAN YGNACIO, TEX.  JUNE 14 / NATIONAL GUARD CALLED TO THE COLORS JUNE 18TH / AMBUSH AT CARRAZIL, MEX JUNE 21ST." At the bottom the medal is signed "Arthur Killean, Grand Haven Michigan who was one of two makers of this medal, the other being Schwaab of Milwaukee.

Well that same border is still in turmoil today. Drug runners and desperately poor Mexicans are swarming over that border everyday. Historically any country that couldn't control it's borders or was lacking the will power to do so ceased to exist in short order. Therefore in my opinion it is time for an "iron curtain" borrowing Churchill's term, to descend on our border sealing it up so tight that not even a roach could cross without being noticed. At the same time the US should set up offices on the Mexican side of the border to help the millions of honest hard working Mexicans enter the American economy without running the risk of death in the desert or exploitation by unscrupulous employers taking advantage of their illegal status. Sure it would cost a lot of money but then again how much money are we wasting on a war based on a lie?



7/10/2007 3:43:28 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Wednesday, July 04, 2007
No it's not
Posted by fred

This one comes up now and again often with people thinking it could be a rare Nazi Party membership pin variety, but no it's not.

The badge illustrated below was handed to Clifford Mishler by a local with the usual "what is it" question and Cliff then passed the question on to me thereby giving me some blog fodder. The black enameled circle has the lettering,"D.V.G." = Deutsche Volks Gemeinschaft. "Westmark (Lothr.)" = Westmark(Lothringen) which roughly translates: German People's Community of the Westmark(Lorraine). By "community" the Nazis were referring to a co-operative like association of Germans living in the former French province of Lorraine. Their use of the term "mark" digs deep into history when a mark was a buffer state established on your borders and settled by your nationals. Austria was called the Ost (East) mark and the Lorraine became the Westmark. So what we have here is a regional association membership badge instead of a Nazi Party membership badge and a badge that I think is much scarcer than the more common Nazi Party membership badges.



7/4/2007 1:05:18 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Wednesday, June 27, 2007
Lets stray a bit
Posted by fred

Every now and then there is a news story on tv about how poorly our schools are doing which then usually shows people who either can't find their town on a map or do so with great difficulty. Geography isn't one of  America's strong suits. Well, as we all know "there is nothing new under the sun." Even some of our great-grandparents had similar problems. Case in point: in 1906 the Milwaukee suburb of West Allis incorporated itself as a city and had a watch fob made up to comemorate the event. The reverse of the fob proudly features the new city seal which had only one minor problem; the name West Allis was misspelled as one word. What about the obverse? Like most fobs of the era the state seal was called for and the manufacturer picked a really good one with a knight's helmet on top and two bears at the sides. I guess they must have thought that West Allis was really in Missouri. I wonder who had to grin and bear it that time ?



6/27/2007 11:44:18 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]