Hi everybody
I intended posting yesterday on the 5th, but my one daughter and family arrived much earlier than anticipated and then medals obviously had to take the back seat!
I have not yet been able to pinpoint the spot near Boshoff where the action took place : can any member help out with directions?
The postcard obviously is an imaginary portrayal of the incident.
The cardboard-core medallion of French origin in honour of the "French General"
This group is one of my favourites : not many ABO's were issued to men who served in the "Foreign Legion" on the Boer side
ABO: Burger J. J. H. Geeringh; 1914-15 Star: Pte. J.J.H. Geeringh 4th F. Amb. S.A.M.C.; BWM & AVM(Bil): A/Sgt J.J.H. Geeringh 1st S.A.R.
John James Humphries Geeringh was born in Robertson in the Cape Colony in 1875 and apparently worked in Johannesburg prior to the Boer War. Although of German descent, he joined the Hollander Corps in October 1899 to fight on the Boer side.
After the Battle of Elandslaagte the Hollander Corps was disbanded. Geeringh’s subsequent movements are not known, but he was one of the captured survivors of the “Foreign Legion” under General de Villebois-Mareuil’s after their heroic “last stand” on 5 April 1900 near Boshoff.
The PoW's were recorded in the ZAR Staats Courant (extract below)
He was sent to St Helena (PoW No. 3813) where he eventually was one of a group of volunteers who did duty as male nurses under Dr R L Roe tending fellow PoW’s.
In 1915 Geeringh joined the SA Medical Corps and served in South West Africa with the 4th Field Ambulance. In February 1915 he attested in the 1st SA Rifles for the East African campaign, eventually transferring to the Nyasaland Section of the SA Postal Corps.
He was discharged on medical grounds (malaria) in December 1917 and died in 1918, probably during the “Flu Epidemic”.
His WWI Trio (1920 & 1922) and ABO (1928) were posthumously claimed by his brother on behalf of his mother.
Henk