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 Thursday, March 20, 2008
Credit Card Number Stolen from ePier
Posted by Fred

 

On Feb. 23, 2008 I opened a store front on the ePier internet auction site and used my credit card number to do so as required by ePier. Within 24 hours on Feb. 24, 2008 fraudulent charges started appearing on my credit card account! I cancelled the site 3 days later but ePier still had the gall to post the charge! Need I say more?



3/20/2008 1:40:34 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Wednesday, March 19, 2008
Veterans Ladder Badges
Posted by Fred

 

Veterans ladder badges come in various configurations not all of which look like ladders. All are private purchase pieces engraved with the veteran’s name , unit and usually a date or dates. The first of these appeared during the Civil War and were sold to soldiers who wanted some sort of unit insignia. Civil War era badges don’t carry the dates 1861-65. Badges with those dates are post war issues and strictly veterans items. Similar badges like these continued to be made and worn until the First World War and are mostly linked to the various state national guard units. What makes these so collectible is that they are so researchable. Illustrated below for example is one from Wisconsin. The top bar has “CO. D” which means the original owner was a member of Company D. The second bar from the top, “1st REG. “ tells us that Company D was part of the First Regiment. The third bar “DARLINGTON” tells us the name of Company D’s home town. On the pendent we find “WIS.” above two crossed rifles and “N.G” which tells us Co. D and the 1st regt. are part of the Wisconsin National Guard. The crossed rifles indicate that this was an infantry unit. The 1897 date is the year this badge was purchased probably by a young guardsman attending his first training camp. The guardsman’s name “W. A. Campbell” is at the bottom. Checking my old Wisconsin Blue Books I found that this unit was first organized July 8, 1884 as the Darlington Rifles and was designated Company K at the time. Campbell was not an officer so tracking down his history will be much harder if I ever get that ambitious.



3/19/2008 5:20:44 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Friday, March 14, 2008
Bastogne Plaques
Posted by Fred

 

To commemorate the siege of Bastogne during the famous Battle of the Bulge some brass plaques were made by a foundry in Couvin, Belgium. The basic design features two giant military figure towering above a Bastogne city view. The figure on the right is a German soldier offering surrender terms to American General McAuliffe depicted as a typical American with his hands in his pockets. McAulliffe as we all know eventually replied “Nuts” to the puzzled Germans. That famous word “Nuts” is displayed between the two figures below the

 “Screaming Eagle” patch of the 101st Airborne division. The parachutes in the

background are purely symbolic since the American troops got to Bastogne in trucks. The type I version illustrated below is what I call the unfinished version because that is what it looks like to me. The type II version has a much more finished look stippled fields and an engraved border. The type III version is much more refined and octagonal in shape.

Just who made these plaques remains a mystery. Reportedly they were made by casting the brass from the old shell casings left over from the battle. Some veterans claim that these plaques were awarded to them for their service in the battle. If so these plaques were presented by grateful village officials or civilians to any random GI’s that were available at the moment. I can say this because my

 father was with the 101st throughout the entire battle and then continued on into

 Germany with the rest of his unit. He never saw any of these plaques until I gave him this one in the early 1970’s.

Considering the number of these plaques that I have seen over the years at shows and on the internet I know that they are not rare. They are also not an official award of any kind. They are neat pieces of history and if the high bids they are getting on the main internet auction sight continue brass could become the next precious metal!

Scan problem was solved with the help of Kevin Beyer of the U.S. Militaria Forum, Thanks Kevin



3/14/2008 12:24:28 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [2]
 Wednesday, March 05, 2008
Collectors Sharing Information
Posted by Fred

Collectors are the mother-lode of specialized information and most collectors are eager to share the information which they have spent a life time accumulating for the good of the hobby, and they do it for free! Just look at the history of Krause Publications which has spent the last 50 years collecting all this free information from collectors of coins, cars etc. and then repackaging all that information into a concentrated, convenient and portable format which they then sell back into the collecting market. Collectors of military medals are the same. All one needs do is to look at the many forums on the internet. Even on eBay where it is least expected this generous collector sharing occurs. Last week for example I listed the US Maritime Commission Merit Award illustrated below on eBay as silver in one of my not so brilliant moments. Within a few days a fellow eBayer specializing in these awards emailed me a correction. This good Samaritan collector also has a web-site which is so fantastic that I just have to share it with you all http://www.geocities.com/ssgtedusmc/ this site is a keeper! If this is what just one dedicated collector can do the future sure looks promising.



3/5/2008 12:07:07 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Wednesday, February 27, 2008
Issue Date?
Posted by Fred

 

I recently bought this Wisconsin National Guard Long Service Medal on eBay (my favorite hunting ground for medals and badges.) What makes this medal noteworthy is that the normally blank backside is fully engraved as follows;

“Lieutenant // Harry R. Lee // Sec. Reg. Inf. // W.N.G. // Feb. 17th // 1890” in

 six lines. The seller listed the medal as an 1890 Named Wisconsin National Guard Medal and it is easy to understand why. It is named, it is WNG and it is dated 1890. It also has an added bonus in that it lists the man’s unit and rank making this medal very researchable. So do you think this medal was or even could have been issued in 1890?

If you check my book on Wisconsin Military and Civil Medals you would find that this medal could not have been issued before 1903 and that this medal was awarded for 15 years service. Therefore if we take the 1890 date and add 15 years we come up with a 1905 date. It just so happens that I have the Wisconsin Adjutant General’s reports for that year and it confirms that 1st Leut. Lee did get this medal in 1905. In closing I should also mention that I have seen this use of the enlistment or starting dates on other dated long service medals both military and civil.

So there you have it, another little bit of inside knowledge that you won’t get in college.



2/27/2008 3:41:20 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Wednesday, February 20, 2008
eBay Boycott
Posted by Fred

eBay Boycott

Are you one of the people boycotting eBay this week? If so now would be a good time to take the items that you would have put on eBay and list them on one of several great hobby related forums that let members post items for sale or trade. In our area of collecting please check out U.S. Militaria Forums, Wehrmacht Awards and the OMSA site. Some memberships to these are actually free!!



2/20/2008 12:00:06 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Tuesday, February 19, 2008
Bill und Fritz
Posted by Fred

Bill and Fritz

As collectors of military medals we all eventually will see some interesting picture postcards. When I look at my collection of post cards I start seeing some historic parallels with our times. For example below we have two pictures, Kaiser Wilhelm II whom I will call Bill and an unknown German soldier of the First World War whom I shall name Fritz.

Bill thought of himself as a great military leader and was bedecked with lots of glorious orders and medals which he earned for his great war time leadership while entrenched in his palaces and yachts; yes yachts, Bill was an Admiral too. After Bill had led his country to defeat and ruin he took his golden parachute and jumped across the border to a comfortable retirement in the Netherlands.

Fritz on the other hand survived four years in the trenches enduring untold hardships and misery. For his services Fritz was lucky if he got any medals at all, perhaps an Iron Cross II Class if he was really lucky. When Fritz came home he found his family sick and near death from starvation and disease. His economy was ruined, he had no job, no pension and no golden parachute.

Tell me do you see it too? Bill was the CEO of the bankrupt corporation German Empire Inc. Bill was also indicted but was safely beyond the reach of justice while Fritz, his former employee, was rewarded for his loyal and honorable service with a place of honor in the unemployment line. No golden parachute for Fritz, just a bleak future built with false promises.

As history repeats itself, only the names change.



2/19/2008 6:39:35 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Wednesday, February 13, 2008
Monaca's Gold Medal
Posted by Fred

 

If you are a military medal collector life can be full of surprises. For example, for most of the world the First World War started in 1914 but the US didn’t jump in until 1917. Those were the good old days when we didn’t rush into things like we do in today’s fast paced world. Anyway because of this when I see a military service medal with the war dates 1914-1918 I assume it is a foreign medal. When I saw this medal on eBay with the war dates 1914-18 my first thought was that it was Canadian. The listing said it was from Monaca PA so what could PA be…Province of Alberta? No it’s not. Surprise, Monaca is a city in Pennsylvania. One look at the military emblems on the front of this medal and I knew it was American. The town is not listed in the Small and Planck WWI medals books which really got my interest going, but it is listed in a later supplement to the Planck book which was another minor negative surprise. I was not alone in my desire to own this undoubtedly rare medal which was no surprise so I had to snipe it to make it mine. I fired off my check and waited. Service from the seller was fast and the package arrived shortly. When I opened the package I got a surprise of heart stopping proportions. Out came a nice little gold jewelers box containing a key chain fob advertising some bank in Aliquippa, PA! A phone call to the seller and I quickly found out to my surprise that the name Monaca is not pronounced like the girls name. Once they figured out what I was talking about I was transferred to their eBay auction person. That nice lady was so surprised that she spent the better part of her Sunday trying to solve the medal mystery and much to my surprise on Monday I got the call that the medal had been found and was really on it’s way. One hears a lot of horror stories about eBay but to my surprise this is definitely not one of them.



2/13/2008 12:40:54 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Tuesday, February 05, 2008
Paypal ?
Posted by Fred

I have been thinking about opening a Paypal account so I read their legal agreement terms. I ran across some very frightening terms and not being a lawyer was wondering if I might not be understanding the terms correctly. Some questions about the Paypal legal agreement terms that I have are: if a problem like a complaint against me comes up I know they can limit my access to my Paypal account but can they also limit my access to my own bank accounts and credit cards which they refer to as “funding sources”?

Paypal can require at their option that I maintain a cash reserve and they Do Not have to pay interest on that amount?

Paypal can fine an account 2500.00 for unacceptable transactions involving porn, drugs, gambling or tobacco. Paypal rules and definitions are the same as eBay rules so I assume they could possibly also fine an account for any other forbidden transactions. I do not deal in porn, drugs, gambling or tobacco but what about a law enforcement badge or a nazi medal with a swastika on it? I have been known to buy and sell these from time to time. I have heard from others who have been accused of violating eBay rules that they were condemned without due process which is fine when limited to a privately owned internet site. But I will not subject my personal finances to such arbitrary dictates. I am simply too much of a control freak to permit that.

I have asked Paypal these questions and some polite guy with a name that sounds like he might be from India simply sent me links to the Paypal terms and agreements, I guess he didn’t understand that I had already read their terms and that is why I had these questions. What do you think?



2/5/2008 4:21:03 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Wednesday, January 30, 2008
Gold Star Mothers Group
Posted by Fred

Collectors of military medals usually find themselves thinking of soldiers enduring great hardships, accomplishing heroic feats and sometimes dying in battle. Rarely do they think about the dead soldier’s next of kin. In the US the mothers of soldiers who died in war are known as Gold Star Mothers. After WWI there was an organization for Gold Star Mothers and in the late 1920’s and early 1930’s this group made several pilgrimages to visit the graves of fallen American soldiers in European cemeteries. A medal was issued for participating in these trips and illustrated below is such a medal as part of a privately assembled group of medals all belonging to a Gold Star Mother. Not knowing anything more about these medals I can only guess that the original owner of these medals was from Wisconsin and that she was a good shot who was willing to travel to Florida to compete or relocated there. The gold star pin above the group was established by Congress in 1947 and is not part of the illustrated group of medals.



1/30/2008 11:58:41 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Wednesday, January 23, 2008
Advice for New Collectors and the Rest of Us
Posted by Fred

Advice to New (and old) Collectors

A lot of collector sites have advice for the new collector. The tried and true wisdom that we have all heard before like, buy the book first and always buy the highest quality you can afford. To that sage advice I would add two things; first after you buy the book be sure to read the introductions which usually contain a gold mine of basic information.

Second and you will not read this anywhere else that I know of: Don't run with the herd.

Find a field or specialty that isn't being collected by everyone else. If possible find something that interests you but isn't popular and blaze your own trail. Within a few years you will develop a reputation and people will be coming to you as the expert. Instead of paying the inflated prices of the highly collected areas you will be on the ground level finding all sorts of interesting bargains. For example I started collecting US state and local issue war service medals and German states medals in the mid 1960's. Everyone else that I knew was into nazi stuff. I was asked once 'why do you keep beating yourself to death with that junk?" Well they are still in the nazi stuff and I hope they are happy with it. When I look at all that I have collected I know I have made the right choice. The current prices in my collecting specialties have validated my choice financially. My personal satisfaction is immeasurable and all at a fraction of the cost that the nazi stuff would have cost me over the years. Follow your heart over the long haul and you will never regret it. Fred



1/23/2008 12:45:48 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Wednesday, January 16, 2008
German Military Veterans in America
Posted by Fred

 

I have been collecting medals and badges of the German veterans groups in America for many years. The field is huge, uncataloged and the German terminology and use of abbreviations can be a challenge even to someone who can read the German. Here is an example using the scan below. The cross on the left is black enamel on silver. The inscription “DEUTSCHER KRIEGER VEREIN S.F.” translates as German Soldiers (war veterans) Association San Francisco. The key word here is Verein which usually but not always implies a local group.

The next item is a similar cross inscribed “DEUTSHER KRIEGER BUND N.A.” which translates as German Soldiers League (or union) of North America. The word Bund used here usually but not always indicates an organization on a state or national level. This cross is suspended from a brooch of crossed cannons and two shields, one American and the other German. The front cannon is inscribed with the initials “D.M.V.E.” which probably means “DEUTSCHER MILITAER VEREIN E….” German Military (including peace time veterans) Association “ and the letter “E” which is an abbreviation for a place name that begins with that letter. In this case probably another place in California since the enameling on both crosses looks like the work of one manufacturer.



1/16/2008 1:10:31 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0]