Archive for April, 2012

Beer carrying spitfires of world war ii

BEER CARRYING SPITFIRES OF WORLD WAR II

In lighter moments of World War II, the Spitfire was used in an unorthodox role: bringing beer kegs to the men in Normandy.
During the war, Heneger and Constable brewery donated free beer to the troops. After D-Day, supplying the invasion troops in Normandy with vital supplies was already a challenge. Obviously, there was no room in the logistics chain for such luxuries as beer or other types of refreshments.
Some men, often called sourcers, were able to get wine or other niceties from the land or rather from the locals. RAF Spitfire pilots came up with an even better idea.

The Spitfire Mk IX was an evolved version of the Spitfire, with pylons under the wings for bombs or tanks. It was discovered that the bomb pylons could also be modified to carry beer kegs. According to pictures that can be found, various sizes of kegs were used.
Whether the kegs could be jettisoned in case of emergency is unknown. If the Spitfire flew high enough, the cold air at altitude would even refresh the beer, making it ready for consumption upon arrival.

A variation of this was a long range fuel tank modified to carry beer instead of fuel. The modification even received the official designation Mod. XXX. Propaganda services were quick to pick up on this, which probably explains the official designation.
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A staged shot of the Mod. XXX tank being filled.

As a result, Spitfires equipped with Mod XXX or keg-carrying pylons were often sent back to Great-Britain for maintenance or liaison duties. They would then return to Normandy with full beer kegs fitted under the wings.
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The Spitfire had very little ground clearance with the larger beer kegs.

Typically, the British Revenue of Ministry and Excise stepped in, notifying the brewery that they were in violation of the law by exporting beer without paying the relevant taxes. Leave it to government civilians to figure out a way to harass the fighting troops!!) It seems that Mod. XXX was terminated then, but various squadrons found different ways to refurbish their stocks.
Most often, this was done with the unofficial approval of higher echelons.
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In his book Dancing in the Skies, Tony Jonsson, the only Icelancer pilot in the RAF, recalled beer runs while he was flying with 65 Squadron. Every week a pilot was sent back to the UK to fill some cleaned-up drop tanks with beer and return to the squadron.
Jonsson hated the beer runs as every man on the squadron would be watching you upon arrival. Anyone who made a rough landing and dropped the tanks would be the most hated man on the squadron for an entire week.

German Ersatz Tschako / Shako (not spiked helmet)

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Coastal Artillery Award Badge

Hi all
I have doubts about the Coastal Artillery Badge Award I’ve seen in a web of militaria. The pictures are not good but it may be original?


Thank you very much in advance

Id and price needed!

Hello everyone. Recently i’ve found this while i was out metal detecting. Well i know for sure its not WW2 but maybe someone knows a little bit about it. Take a good look.

From what i think is the front.
Attachment 335055

And possibly the back.
Attachment 335056

Hope somebody can tell me what it is. cool militaria


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Ww ii german military helmet with leather liner. M40

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Marine- Hose in einen guten Zustand.Keine Mottenlöcher.

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Need help! Helmet Identification

The pics aren’t the greatest but seem to show an MKI with a cork type finish. I have not seen this style of liner before. Is it a new replacement/repro or some other variant? Seller says its marked FS 175 on the lid itself.Attachment 335010Attachment 335011


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Question DAK SS. Any opinions?

Here is a DAK SS helmet. This is the pics i have gotten so far. Opinions are most welcome. I have for several reasons doubts about the netting. The rest i will leave to the more knowledgeable on SS helmets.

Thanks for watching and commenting. cool militaria

Attachment 334998 Attachment 334999

Attachment 335000 Attachment 335001

Attachment 335002 Attachment 335003

Attachment 335004


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British Artillery General’s Service Dress

I thought I would show my latest find, and new project. I got this on eBay UK, reasonably cheaply, which does show that interesting items do turn up there, if you know what you are looking for.

Attachment 334982

It’s a British officer’s Service Dress Jacket, dated 1915, with Royal Artillery buttons and general officer’s collar tabs. This has turned out to be Brigadier-General Charles George St Maur Ingham CMG DSO, a long-serving and distinguished gunner, Old Etonian and Old Contemptible.

Attachment 334979
Attachment 334981

Physically, it is a fairly typical WWI jacket, in a heavy ribbed wool fabric with brown lining, long skirts and big lower pockets. Jackets of finer fabric and lighter weight jackets were certainly made, but this is a nice example of the hard-wearing type commonly worn in the field. It doesn’t feature the external waistband often seen on jackets of the period.

Attachment 334984

The label inside the pocket gives the original owner as Major C St Maur Ingham and a date of 14th October 1915. It was made by a very well known and reputable tailor, H Huntsman & Sons (now on Savile Row), who were recently featured in Lez’s thread about a senior ATS officer: http://www.warrelics.eu/forum/collec…-crown-167349/

Attachment 334989

The cuffs are plain, lacking the pointed decoration cuff normally associated with SD jackets. Whether or not this was originally a cuff-rank style jacket, modified to shoulder rank, is hard to tell, particularly as he was only a Major for a very short time after the jacket was made. I suspect it probably was.

I have done some basic research on General Ingham, using Ancestry, the London Gazette online, the Army List and the internet in general. So far I have discovered that he was born in London in 1873, attended Eton College (where he was a noted football goalkeeper), went on the Royal Military Academy at Woolwich, and was commissioned into the Royal Artillery in 1895. He served in the Second Boer War, initially with T Bty, Royal Horse Artillery, seeing action at Kimberley, Paardeberg, Dreifontein, Johannesburg, the battle of Diamond Hill and the Battle of Bergendal. He later transferred to a new 1-Pdr Maxim ‘Pom-Pom’ Gun unit of the Royal Field Artillery. He served throughout the war until its conclusion in 1902.

He also served throughout the Great War, being mentioned in despatches no less than four times. He first saw action in 1914 as a Major in the XL Brigade RFA (3rd Division), and later, as a Lieutenant-Colonel, commanded LXXI Brigade RFA (15th (Scottish) Division). By 1918, he was appointed CRA (Commander Royal Artillery) of 15th Division, and held the rank of temporary Brigadier-General (the jacket being badged for this role). The Army Lists that I have confirm his promotion to Lt-Col in April 1916, and his appointment as temp Brig-Gen in 1918. After the war he commanded V Reserve Brigade, RFA before retiring in 1922. He died in 1936.

Attachment 334987Attachment 334983

The jacket is definitely in need of some gentle restoration. It is missing it’s correct rank insignia (crossed baton/sword), and one of the buttons on the General Officer’s gorget patches is missing. The shoulder straps have holes for the rank insignia for Lieutenant-Colonel and Brigadier-General.

Attachment 334988

The complete gorget patch is a lovely example of the type, with worn gold embroidery and a gilt mounted button.

It is also devoid of the medal ribbons that it must have had, which, to get correct period ribbons will take some time, but will be worth the effort. I have confirmed that he was entitled to the CMG, DSO, QSA, KSA, 1914 Star, BWM, Victory, MID leaf and, at the end of his ‘rack’, the French Legion of Honour, which he was gazetted with in 1919. I have to choose, of course, whether to put on all his ribbons, or just those he would have had at a certain time. I am very tempted to restore it to the period while he was CRA 15th Div, i.e. 1918. Finally, to complete it, I will also need to find a Divisional RA armband, which was a red band with a gun on it.

Attachment 334986Attachment 334980

To see what the final result would look like I have temporarily added an original WWI armband for the CRE (Commander Royal Engineers) of 22nd Division (obviously, it has the RE grenade attached as opposed to a gun), a set of ribbons and a Sam Browne belt.

Hope you all enjoy this item as much I do. I will post some of my research results for this piece next.

Rob


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Original? Oak camo camouflage Elite late war helmet cover

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