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Unusual medal combinations that include a QSA 11 years 5 months ago #6673

  • Brett Hendey
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Munroe

Thank you for showing those exceptional groups.

I was particularly interested to see the Spanish-American War Medal with a QSA. I have a QSA to a Canadian who claimed to have served in the Spanish-American War, but it seems more likely that he was working on a road through the Rockies in western Canada at the time.

The group with the German and French medals must surely be unique.

You are very fortunate to have these groups in your collection and I hope we will be seeing more like them.

Regards
Brett

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Unusual medal combinations that include a QSA 11 years 5 months ago #6690

  • djb
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Munroe and Brett - Many thanks for those excellent pictures. I really enjoy seeing the QSA in unusual combinations.

Munroe - I have rotated the image of the group containing the 1953 Coronation Medal.

Justin - I have started a new thread on Alexander von Stosch and added some more information.

Kind regards
David
Dr David Biggins

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Unusual medal combinations that include a QSA 11 years 5 months ago #6692

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The group to Lt Norton-Taylor, ILH. He had served in the American Army gaining the Spanish War Service Medal in 1898. He later served during the Boer War and through the Great War.

Dr David Biggins
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Unusual medal combinations that include a QSA 11 years 5 months ago #6693

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Boer War CMG group to Civil Surgeon A Ricketts, containing the Spainish Order of Isabella the Catholic, Knight’s breast badge.

Dr David Biggins
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Unusual medal combinations that include a QSA 11 years 5 months ago #6699

  • Brett Hendey
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David

Thanks for adding those spectacular groups to this thread. It is great seeing what other people have in their collections.

You might have guessed that I particularly like the Norton-Taylor group.

Regards
Brett

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Unusual medal combinations that include a QSA 11 years 5 months ago #6704

  • djb
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Brett,

As I was preparing the picture, I was thinking that the clasps and unit would be attractive to you.

The group has sold twice in the last decade at DNW.

Here is the description of an amazing life:

Seymour Norton-Taylor, who was born at Bovey Tracey, Devon in November 1878, first saw active service as a Private in ‘C’ Company, 1st Regiment of Florida Infantry in the Spanish War of 1898, having enlisted in that corps at Tampa, Florida that May.

Discharged at Tallahassee at the end of the same year, he next travelled to South Africa, where he enlisted in the 1/Imperial Light Horse and was present at Elandslaagte and the defence of Ladysmith, and participated in later operations after being commissioned in the 2nd Battalion.

Having then made his way to Canada where he worked as a rancher, Norton-Taylor volunteered for the Overseas Expeditionary Force at Valcartier, Quebec in August 1914 and was quickly commissioned as a Lieutenant in the 10th Battalion Canadian Infantry. Embarked for England in the following month, and thence for France, he was wounded by shrapnel in his right hand on 13 March 1915, and evacuated to the U.K.

Rejoining his unit in the Field as a Temporary Captain a month or two later, he was seriously wounded by an explosion in his dugout at Ploegsteert on 23 October 1915:

‘During the month of October 1915, Private Clutterbuck found a nose-cap of a shell. He took it into the dugout, where he accidentally dropped it. An explosion followed with the result that Captain Norton-Taylor, who was in the dugout, was severely wounded in the legs and Private Clutterbuck was also severely wounded - he afterwards died as a result of his injuries’ (an official witness statement refers).

Rushed to a Casualty Clearing Station at Bailleul, and thence to the Red Cross Hospital at Le Touquet, both of Norton-Taylor’s legs were amputated below the knee, but, after gangrene set in, it was necessary to amputate the right leg above the knee. Yet the latter still caused problems by the time he was strong enough to be transferred to a hospital in the U.K., and a further ‘shortening operation’ took place in December 1916. Indeed Norton-Taylor did not return to duty until May 1917, having by then mastered the use of his artificial limbs, and was seconded to the Adjutant-General’s Branch as, appropriately enough, a Hospital Representative.

He was honourably discharged as a Major in October 1919, and, given his terrible wounds, lived to a ripe old age, dying at Westgate, Kent in December 1963.
Dr David Biggins

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