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Queen Alexandra presentation pipes 1902 1 year 5 months ago #90533

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QUEEN ALEXANDRA’S PIPE

Gildea 1902, For King and Country, p.119

Her Majesty Queen Alexandra having completed her work of the previous two years in connection with The Princess of Wales’ Hospital Ship, and with the thought ever uppermost in her mind of doing some kind act, more frequently unknown than known, determined in the winter of 1901 to send what, to the sailor or soldier is always his best and most valued friend – his pipe. 5,500 of these with the Queen’s monogram engraved, packed in five cases and addressed, “A present from Queen Alexandra to Lord Kitchener, Commanding the Troops in South Africa,” were despatched with a request that Lord Kitchener would distribute the same at his discretion. The pipes were given to the Warrant Officers, Staff-Sergeants, or to specially distinguished soldiers in the following proportions:-

Regular Cavalry (15 per Regiment)285
Royal Artillery305
Royal Engineers146
Regular Infantry (22 per Battalion)1,848
Militia Infantry (18 per Battalion)540
Imperial Yeomanry399
Colonials (Oversea and South African)633
Army Service Corps278
Royal Army Medical Corps144
Army Ordnance Corps54
Army Pay Corps70
Post Office Corps42
Remount Department24
Headquarters Staff Clerks24
Army Veterinary Department17
Military Police6
Signalling Staff4
Headquarters Office1


The balance was, at the time that the above return was rendered, being distributed.

Numerous letters of humble and grateful thanks have been received from the Officers in Command of the various Corps, stating how much Her Majesty’s thought had been appreciated, and how highly the gift was valued.

One of the recipients, a private in the Grenadier Guards, a West Newton boy, and a grandson of the old kennelman at Sandringham, especially wrote asking that his thanks may be conveyed to the Queen.

A separate case was also addressed to Lord Kitchener from Princess Charles of Denmark for sick and wounded soldiers in South Africa.








One of the 5,500 tobacco pipes distributed to troops in South Africa by Queen Alexandra during the winter of 1901 - 2.
Silver band engraved with the double "A" monogram of Queen Alexandra. Also with Birmingham hallmarks for 1901 and maker's mark "AO" (for Adolphe Oppenheimer & Co). The bowl and mouthpiece stamped "GBD" (for Ganneval Bondier and Donninger, Paris). 129mm long. Unsmoked.

Silver shield to front of bowl engraved: "Presented By / QUEEN ALEXANDRA / To Cr. Sergt. C.R. Knight / PER STAFF / 3rd Btn Scottish Rifles / SOUTH AFRICA / 1902".

Sold in June 2011 with a second unsmoked pipe, with silver band engraved: "26|71 RD CORONATION 1902”. The latter example with Glasgow hallmarks for 1901 and maker’s mark "MF" (for Montague Friedlander). The two pipes became separated but were reunited in February 2012, when the Coronation example resurfaced on eBay.

2263 Colour Sergeant C.R. Knight served with the 3rd Battalion Scottish Rifles, receiving the QSA with clasps for Cape Colony, Orange Free State, South Africa 1901 and South Africa 1902. Note in remarks column of QSA medal roll reads: "Permanent Staff".
"26|71 R.D." on the second pipe stands for 26th/71st Regimental District. Hamilton Barracks, South Lanarkshire, the depot for the Scottish Rifles, was the 26th/71st Regimental District Base. The Scottish Rifles QSA medal roll was compiled at Hamilton Barracks (dated 17/03/1903).



John E. Price 1992, Southern Cross Scots

H. M. Queen Alexandra decided to award pipes to senior non-commissioned officers, serving in South Africa, and, on 27th January 1902, the following conditions regarding the distribution of the pipes were issued from the Assistant Adjutant General’s Office, Pretoria:

‘The pipes should be given to Warrant Officers, Staff Sergeants, and Sergeants as far as possible in order of seniority, or to specially selected soldiers who have performed distinguished service in the field. You will please forward to me at your earliest convenience a list of names, in duplicate, of those to whom you propose to present the pipes, giving regimental number, rank and full name……the reasons for the selection should be briefly stated against each name. Upon receipt of this list……the pipes will be forwarded to the Depot of your regiment where they will be issued to the recipient under Regimental arrangement. The signature of the recipient being taken in each case. The recipient’s receipts will be forwarded to this office.’



Royal Archives, 2008 ( Great War Forum )

"Apparently, in the winter of 1901, Queen Alexandra sent 5,500 pipes, each with a silver band round the stem with Queen Alexandra's monogram on it, to be given to representative of the soldiers and sailors serving in South Africa.
Those for distribution to the Army were sent to Lord Kitchener, and were given first to Warrant Officers, Staff Sergeants, Sergeants, and specially distinguished soldiers. The remainder were distributed on a proportional basis, 15 to each Cavalry regiment, 22 to each Infantry battalion, and 18 to each Militia Infantry battalion. Unfortunately, it seems no central record was kept of those to whom the pipes were given."




The Digest of Service of the 2nd Battalion, The Queen’s Royal West Surrey Regiment, 1857-1919, gives an idea of how the Queen Alexandra pipes were distributed within each battalion.


QUEEN’S PIPES: Twenty two pipes were received from Her Majesty The Queen Alexandra and were distributed as follows:

CompanyRegimental NumberRankName
----
-839Staff Sergeant MajorROBINSON, Thomas
-4318Staff Sergeant Master CookWESTON,George
A2902Colour SergeantHAWKES, Joseph E.
A5635PrivateCRABB, George
B1950Colour SergeantDAVIES, John
B4197SergeantPENNY, Hubert
C4282SergeantSMITH, Willis
C5225SergeantSTEMP, Arthur
D4038SergeantTHORN, Ernest
D3086PrivateROBERTS, Henry
E2326Colour SergeantBARRETT, Cornelius M.
E3741PrivateKING, Frederick E.
F5073SergeantBARNES, Albert
F5145PrivateBINFIELD, Alfred
G787Colour SergeantEWER, William
G4025SergeantOSBORNE, Thomas Ambrose
H911Colour SergeantROUTLEY, Robert
H1152PrivateDENYER, Levi
K7541SergeantCROKER, Ernest Edward
Volunteer Service Company [from K Co.]3632Colour SergeantBALCHIN, J.
Mounted Infantry5543CorporalSMITH, William
Mounted Infantry4646PrivateBUCKMASTER, Edward Walter




The bowls of three attributed examples. From left to right: 9816 Colour Sergeant Frank C. Lomas,1st Bn. Scots Guards; 2402 Colour-Sergeant Samuel Cameron Simm, 3rd Bn. Scottish Rifles; 2263 Colour Sergeant C.R. Knight, 3rd Bn. Scottish Rifles.




_____________________________________________________________





Below is a selection of articles that appeared in the press at the time. Most mistakenly state that the pipes were exclusively for men serving in regiments directly associated with Queen Alexandra.


Taunton Courier, 6th November 1901

QUEEN ALEXANDRA AND THE TROOPS AT THE FRONT.

A HANDSOME PRESENT.

Queen Alexandra proposes making a Christmas present to a number of soldiers now serving at the front in South Africa. Her Majesty has ordered some thousands of good briar pipes, silver mounted, and upon the mount of each one is stamped a Crown and the Queen’s monogram. It is understood that the makers will be required to deliver the consignment in good time to allow of their reaching South Africa before Christmas. The pipes, which will number about 6,000, are not intended for general distribution, but for presentation to the men of the regiments with which Queen Alexandra is directly connected.


The Times, 12th November 1901

A portion of the consignment of pipes intended by the Queen as a gift to the men of the regiments in South African with which she is directly connected has been delivered to her Majesty. There are two varieties of shape, the other edge of the bowl being practically straight in the case of one and somewhat
rounded in the other. Each pipe is fitted with a substantial straight mouthpiece of black vulcanite, and each has a broad and fairly heavy silver band, upon the upper side of which is stamped a crown with the Queen’s monogram immediately beneath it. The pipes are of British fi tting, but, as it was desired to get the highest quality of briar, the bowls are of French wood.


Manchester Courier, 13th November 1901

THE QUEEN’S PIPES.

It would no doubt have been preferable that the pipes which Queen Alexandra is so thoughtfully sending to the troops should have been of British manufacture, but it seems that the order cannot be entirely executed at home. The highest quality of briar is not obtainable in this country, and it is for this reason that the resources of France have been drawn upon. French wood will therefore be used, but that is all. When the pipes have been turned, they will be sent to London to be finished with British fittings. Each pipe will have a substantial straight mouthpiece of black vulcanite, joined to the stem with a broad silver band, upon the upper side of which is stamped a crown, with the Queen’s monogram – two A’s crossed – immediately beneath it. That these gifts will be treasured highly by the soldiers goes without saying. Indeed, there is a fear – as in the case of the late Queen’s chocolate boxes – that many of them will never be used. They have a value higher than their intrinsic cost, and on one will be quicker to recognise this fact than Tommy Atkins. It may be that before many months are over some of them will find their way into the auction room, and although the disposal of them is to be regretted it is, I fear, unavoidable in the circumstances.


Grantham Journal, 16th November 1901

It has already been announced that the Queen’s pipes are to be sent only to the soldiers belonging to regiments at the front with which her Majesty is connected. This description includes the corps which belonged to her Majesty as Princess of Wales, or belonging to her now as Queen. Of these there are six regiments of Cavalry and four of Infantry, each of the latter having two battalions. Of these, three of the Cavalry regiments and three Battalions of the Foot are now at the front. That will make up a total of about six thousand men to whom the pipes are to be given. The Foot regiments, one battalion each of which is at the front, are the Queen’s Own Cameron Highlanders, or 79th Foot, Queen’s Royal West Surrey Regiment, or 2nd Foot, Princess of Wales’s Own Yorkshire Regiment, or 19th Foot, and the Queen’s Royal West Kent Regiment, or 97th Foot. The Cavalry regiments are the 9th Queen’s Royal Lancers, the 16th or Queen’s Lancers, and 19th Princess of Wales’s Own Hussars. Her Majesty’s other regiments are the 4th and 7th Queen’s Own Hussars, and the 21st or Empress of India’s Lancers. The 4th and 7th Hussars, the former from India and the latter from Aldershot, have both been ordered to the front, and will be there by Christmas.
Those who know how briar-root pipes are made (says a London correspondent) are surprised at the petty outcry against the pipes being supplied from Paris. As a matter of fact, it is not quite true. The so-called briar bowls are obtained from Paris, but the vulcanite mouthpiece and the silver mountings are attached in England. If you want the real briar, which by the way, is not briar at all, you must go to France for it. The real briar is or shrub called bruyere, which only grows in France. The French pronunciation of bruyere has been Anglicised to briar as a familiar association of sound and hence it has come to pass that most people believe that briar pipes are made of briar.


Coventry Telegraph, 28th November 1901

QUEEN ALEXANDRA’S GIFTS TO TROOPS.

The Queen’s Christmas present of 5,500 silver-mounted briar pipes for certain of the troops in South Africa left Southampton on Wednesday by the Transport Canada, which is taking out four companies of mounted infantry. These were not the only Christmas presents shipped on the same vessel. Thousands of small parcels were taken on board, having been sent from all parts of the country. It was thought the Braemar Castle, which sailed last Saturday, had broken the record in the matter of Christmas presents for the troops at the front, but it is believed the Canada has taken a larger number. Far more presents have been sent out to the troops for this the third Christmas of the war than were forwarded a year ago. The greatest number, however, went out in the first Christmas, when Queen Victoria’s gift of chocolate no doubt influenced a large number of other givers.



See Susie White's article Presentation pipes, with particular reference to the Queen Alexandra pipe published in the Journal of the Academie Internationale de la Pipe, Vol 4


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Queen Alexandra presentation pipes 1902 1 year 5 months ago #90555

  • djb
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That is fantastic research, well supported by excellent images, Neville. Many thanks.
Dr David Biggins

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