Thank you so much for the information. A vast amount of further information has been gathered since my last post and I am now the proud owner of a lovely tribute medal. I had to ship it from Cape Town and it is still in its lovely original box from the Welshpool jeweller, A Turner, who presumably had the contract to box the medals for presentation. There is no medal ribbon, but that matters not.
I have learned much about the 88th and the 89th, my G Grandfather Francis Morris having been in the 88th and his brother-in-law Thomas Wight being in the 89th. Thomas returned to Ruabon early due to ill health, but all of the dates given in the latest fascinating post, both going to South Africa and returning, are identical to those of my GGF, Sgt Francis Morris. That being the case, the ship in which they returned was the Braemar Castle. The 88th and 89th went down in the SS Norman, normally a postal ship, and at the time it made headlines for being the fastest passage achieved. On arrival in Cape Town, they boarded a train for Bulawayo and I have located some interesting items about that, one being a letter printed in a newspaper, from one trooper to his mother, describing the journey in detail. My GGF - who departed as a Private, arrived in SA as a Cpl and returned as a Sgt - left my GGM pregnant for the eighth time and she named the baby boy, born in his father's absence, Norman. When I went to Ruabon, in search of further information, I knocked on the door of a cottage I knew the family had lived in in the late 1800's, only to find that the owners were family, the family having retained ownership in it since then! Indeed, it is the cottage where Trooper Thomas Wright of the 89th recuperated on medical return from SA and his G Grandson lives literally 7 doors away! I was able to see the beautiful scroll, QSA and tribute medals for Trooper Wright, all beautifully framed. Sadly, I live in hope of ever finding the actual medals awarded to my GGF.
I am interested in the aforementioned Edwin Lloyd as my G G Grandfather, who joined the Coldstream Guards in 1819, with a service number of 307, returned from Quebec in 1842 with his then wife and baby. He then bigamously (and possibly trigamously!) married a vastly younger serving girl, my G G Grandmother, from an Oswestry pub, going on to have 11 children, the youngest being Francis Morris of the 88th WIY. Elizabeth Lloyd appears to have had a brother called Edwin, but whether or not this is the same one I have yet to find. Sadly, the names involved are all rather common and the patronymic system of naming, much enjoyed by the Welsh, makes research exhausting.
Thank you for the information. I must do more research ahead of the forthcoming Noonan's sale.