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  • WWII US Army - Lt General Ben Lear - Three Star Generals Helmet - Deputy Commander of European Theater of Operations - Former: 2nd Army Commander - Rangers Large Presentation Photo Album - Ultra Rare (Sold)

    WWII US Army – Lt General Ben Lear – Three Star Generals Helmet – Deputy Commander of European Theater of Operations – Former: 2nd Army Commander – Rangers Large Presentation Photo Album – Ultra Rare (Sold)

    Ben Lear was born in Hamilton, Ontario on May 12, 1879. His military service began in 1898, when he enlisted with the 1st Colorado Infantry, USV, for the Spanish-American War as a First Sergeant. He was promoted to second lieutenant during the Philippine-American War in the 1st Colorado and later in the 36th Infantry, USV, but joined the regular army as a sergeant at the end of the war. He subsequently served in World War I. He was promoted to Brigadier General in May 1936 and Major General in October 1938. He commanded the 1st Cavalry Division from 1936 to 1938, and the Pacific Sector of the Panama Canal Zone from 1938 to 1940. He was commanding general of the U.S. Second Army from October 20, 1940 to April 25, 1943 and was promoted to temporary lieutenant general in October 1940. As such, he was responsible for training a large number of U.S. soldiers during World War II.   He became known as a strict disciplinarian. During the Louisiana Manoeuvres, Lear led his U.S. Second Army against the U.S. Third Army under Lieutenant General Walter Krueger. In these manoeuvres, Lear judged the control and discipline of the 35th Division to be unsatisfactory and relieved Truman of his command.   Lear Commanded the US Second Army from 1940 till 1943. Responsible for training around 1 million US Soldiers for active combat duty.  The Second Army earned distinction as a training army during World War II, preparing nearly one million men to fight. The U.S. Army activated a new Second Army in October 1933, with headquarters at Chicago, Illinois, as one of four field armies that would help mobilise forces in the event of a national emergency. In December 1940, the Army moved Second Army’s headquarters to Memphis, Tennessee, and designated it as a training army, which conducted training in 24 states. In June 1944, the Army reconstituted the World War I Second Army, AEF, and consolidated it with the existing Second Army in order to perpetuate the lineage and honours of the World War I unit. During World War II, Second Army trained 11 corps, 55 divisions, and 2,000 smaller units of all arms and services, totaling almost a million men, for employment in all theatres of operation. Lear did retire in May 1943, but was immediately recalled to active duty to serve on the Personnel Board of the Secretary of War, and promoted to Lieutenant General and later became Commanding General of Army Ground Forces. After the German counter-attack in the Ardennes, caused a manpower crisis, he was appointed Deputy Commander of European Theater of Operations, US Army, responsible for Theater Manpower. As such, he overhauled the replacement system, but the war against Germany ended before the full benefits of his reforms could be realised.   He retired again in July 1945, but was promoted to General on July 19, 1954 by special Act of Congress (Public Law 83-508).  He died on November 2, 1966. His Medals include the Distinguished Service Medal (2) and the Silver Star. Grave Photo: https://www.arlingtoncemetery.net/blear.htm The incident when Lear sparked Public outcry when he disciplined Soldiers for shouting and whistling at ladies, which he witnessed in civilian clothes. https://www.nytimes.com/1966/11/02/archives/gen-ben-lear-who-disciplined-troops-yoohooing-girls-dies-he-aroused.html His Nickname It was in the lead-up to these maneuvers that Lear acquired the nickname “Yoo-Hoo”. Lear was playing golf at the country club in Memphis, Tennessee, in civilian clothes on July 6, 1941, when a convoy of 80 U.S. Army trucks carrying men of the 110th Quartermaster Regiment, 35th Division rolled past. The troops in the passing trucks subjected a group of women in shorts to a series of whistles and “lewd and obscene” catcalls. Lear had the convoy stopped, and told the officers that this conduct was unacceptable and they had disgraced the Army. Lear’s punishment was to make every one of the 350 men in the convoy march 15 miles (24 km) of the 45-mile (72 km) trip back to Camp Joseph T. Robinson, Arkansas in three 5-mile sections. This they did in the 97 °F (36 °C) heat. Many men straggled and a number collapsed. There was storm of public criticism of Lear’s action from people who felt that the soldiers had been harshly and collectively punished when many had done nothing wrong. The commander of the 35th Division, Major General Ralph E. Truman, was well-connected politically, his cousin being Senator Harry S. Truman, and some congressmen called for Lear to be retired. However, to Army eyes this was not a case of sexual harassment but of indiscipline, and no action was taken against Lear. The derogatory nickname “Yoo-Hoo” stuck. The Helmet – It is clear that Lear was not keen on wearing  his steel pot, applying his three stars on his M1 Helmet Liner for wear. A Westinghouse M1 Liner Named: “Lt Gen Ben Lear” with Three General Stars neatly added. Any General’s Helmet is extremely rare to find, and this one would add to any advanced M1 Helmet collection.  Photo Album – Rangers School  – Second US Army  The album (128 Pictures – 1 Certificate and Newspaper Cover)  has a hand made cover titled Ranger School 2 Army – Lieut. Gen Ben Lear.  On page one, an empty certificate that General Lear would have signed for those that passed the Ranger School of the Second Army.  The unique photo album depicts what is listed on the certificate, each photo is described neatly. The album was likely a gift to the General from the Ranger School.  The Album is broke down in the following way:  Physical Conditioning Group 2  The Log Exercise  Hand to Hand Combat Group 3  Instructors of the Ranger School demonstrate how to push off a bayonet charge.  Individual Camouflage Group 4  Great photos showing men in all sorts of rarer or early camos and camo helmets.  Construction & Passing of Wire Entanglers  Group 5  Photos depicting various methods of getting over or under wire traps Booby Traps & Demolitions Group 6  Many photos of traps and various…

  • WWII German Army Soldbuch - Wehrmacht Uffz Munz - Panzerjäger Abt 243 - Super Normandy 243 ID - Kampfgruppe Gneisenau - Fought 82nd Airborne - Cherbourg France -  Iron Cross & Assault Badge - Lucky Soldier - Super Rare (Reserved)

    WWII German Army Soldbuch – Wehrmacht Uffz Munz – Panzerjäger Abt 243 – Super Normandy 243 ID – Kampfgruppe Gneisenau – Fought 82nd Airborne – Cherbourg France – Iron Cross & Assault Badge – Lucky Soldier – Super Rare (Reserved)

    Very hard to find such a good Normandy related Soldbuch to this division, which came into action right on D-Day! Listing took from original sale is very well done and I have added to it below: Soldbuch to Unteroffizier Franz Münz. First issue from April 1940. Münz was trained as a Heeresflak soldier and then served with the 1. Kompanie of Fla-Bataillon 59, which fought with the 29.ID in the Western campaign. He took a bullet in his left lung in France during the Summer of 1940. His hospitals include Bourges and Orléans, and he was released from hospital in January 1941. The wound might have been considered an accident first, but January 1943, Münz was treated for this same wound again and he finally received a Verwundetenabzeichen. After a long time with reserve units and Landesschützen-Bataillon 604 in Frankfurt am Main, Münz returned to the front with Fla-Bataillon (mot.) 607, and then the 3. (Fla) Kompanie of Panzerjäger-Abteilung 243 in 1944. His Kompanie was armed with 2 cm Flak guns, but other weaponry of the Pz.Jg.Abt.243 included fourteen Marder 38 and ten StuG III. With the 243.ID, Münz experienced D-Day on the Cotentin peninsula in Normandy and very soon began fighting against the Allied paratroopers near Saint-Mère-Église alongside the 91. Luftlande division. The divisional commander was already killed on D-Day +1. After less than two weeks of intense fighting, the 243.ID was pushed back by the 9th US ID and the 82nd Aiborne and cut off from the main German force, retreating to Cherbourg and destroyed there by the end of June. On 27th of June, Münz earned the Allgemeines Sturmabzeichen for the fighting in Normandy. He then avoided capture or worse and was among the smaller parts of the division who escaped from the Cotentin encirclement through the south. He fought with the remains of the 243.ID combined with the 77.ID at Saint-Lô, and received a promotion to Unteroffizier on 1st of August and also the EKII on the same date for his actions in Normandy. Panzerjäger-Abteilung 243 (Pz.Jg.Abt.243) : Kdr : Oberleutnant Franz Fallnich HQ/Gefechtsstand : La Commanderie Stab – La Commanderie (6 kilometers east of Les Pieux) (13 May) The Panzerjäger Abteilung had 14 Marder 38 and 10 StuG III.7 They had been sent to the division in March 1944.8 Also the battalion had a company with twelve 2 cm Flak guns.9 One of these was on tracked chassis, while two were motorized. Panzerjäger-Abteilung 243 : (Oberleutnant Franz Fallnich – CP: La Commanderie) 1. Kp (CP: Aux-Petits) 2. Kp (CP: Le-Pont-aux-Moines) 243. Infanterie-Division formed as a Bodenständige-Division in 1941. (Strength on 1st May 1944 11,529 + at least 442 HiWis) Commanded by Generalleutnant Heinz Hellmich, on 1st May 1944 the Division’s strength was listed as 11,529 + at least 442 HiWis. Their heavy equipment, such as artillery pieces and anti-tank guns, tended to be obsolete models or captured Czech, French, and Russian weapons of varied effectiveness. Despite all the disadvantages listed, however, the Division had one thing on their side: many of the officers and non-commissioned officers were battle-hardened veterans from the Eastern Front, and their leadership would later prove worthy of the task set out before them. The division was formed in July 1943 in Döllersheim, Germany, and sent to Normandy in the autumn. Originally it was a static division, but it had been gradually upgrading its mobility and in May 1944 it had comparatively good mobility for a German infantry division in the west. By 23 July however, the division had only four depleted infantry battalions, eight heavy AT guns, three StuG and nine artillery batteries left was rated to have “Kampfwert V” which was the lowest assignable. It was decided 10 August that the 243. Division should be rebuilt using the 182. Reserve Division, but this was never carried out and the division was disbanded 12 September. Lucky Man As the 243.ID was officially dissolved, Münz joined his last Heeresflak unit, the Fla-Kompanie of Kampfgruppe 2/XIII that same autumn. This unit was also nicknamed “Kampfgruppe Gneisenau” and fought in northeast France, until it was absorbed by the newly erected 16. Volksgrenadier-Division in the Vosges mountains. Münz was wounded again on 5th of February 1945; these were critical days for the 16.VGD as they were nearly surrounded in the Vosges just west of Colmar, but they managed to escape east and cross the Rhine at Neuenburg. Münz was evacuated to hospital in Tirol and would not see action again; he was sent home on 1st of May and might have even avoided capture at the end of the war. The Soldbuch is in a very used (with loose pages) but still complete condition, including the portrait photo and an extra front cover. It really shows the wear of five years in his pocket, and is packed with entries, also including P.38 pistols, Czech rifles and a Tarnnetz in the equipment section. Münz received a total of four awards, also including a Schutzwall-Ehrenzeichen in 1941: all were related to the Western Front. More links: https://www.dday-overlord.com/en/battle-of-normandy/forces/germany/243-infanterie-division https://www.flamesofwar.com/hobby.aspx?art_id=678

  • WWII German Army Rifle K98 Cleaning Kit - RG34 - Maker G. Appel 1938 - Original Period Item

    WWII German Army Rifle K98 Cleaning Kit – RG34 – Maker G. Appel 1938 – Original Period Item

    

  • WWII German Sword Maker Catalogue - F.W Höller Solingen - Original Period Print in VGC - Over 30 Pages - Rare

    WWII German Sword Maker Catalogue – F.W Höller Solingen – Original Period Print in VGC – Over 30 Pages – Rare

    A very hard to find original F.W Höller catalogue displaying the various models available for purchase. Something for the serious edged weapons TR collector.

  • WWI US Army Hate Belt - Imperial German Army Insignia - Super Rare

    WWI US Army Hate Belt – Imperial German Army Insignia – Super Rare

    A so called hate belt, with many Imperial German Army Buttons and includes one US Army Services Button too…. Interesting belt brought back as trophy of the Great War.  

  • WWII German Nazi Period Made Large Flag - Podium Flag - Original GI Bring Back (sold)

    WWII German Nazi Period Made Large Flag – Podium Flag – Original GI Bring Back (sold)

    Original Nazi Flag brought back by a US Service Personell from WWII as a trophy of their victory. Sold for historical/collectible purposes only.

  • WWII German Nazi Period Made Patriotic Display Flags - Original (sold)

    WWII German Nazi Period Made Patriotic Display Flags – Original (sold)

    US Army GI Bring Back Trophy Items Sold as collectible/historical item only.  

  • WWII German Waffen SS - Frost Protection Lip Cream - Unopened

    WWII German Waffen SS – Frost Protection Lip Cream – Unopened

    A lot of speculation about these, but we believe this is a period made item, given the fact many archaeological digs on former battlefields have shown such SS packaging to be in fact real and are usually medical or pharma related items. Various searches reveal that these have been sold by dealers worldwide also as period originals. Came from an Estate in the USA.

  • WWII German Third Reich 10 Nestor Lord Cigarettes and Somali Rolling Papers - German Tax Stamp and Label - Pocket Litter - Original Rare

    WWII German Third Reich 10 Nestor Lord Cigarettes and Somali Rolling Papers – German Tax Stamp and Label – Pocket Litter – Original Rare

    For those that take the finest details to their displays and impressions, period pocket litter like this is essential to raising the bar on your collection. 10 Nestor Lord Cigs in unopened – Not recommended to try any of these former consumables these are sold as display items only. Interesting period marketing, they state that a Dr has tested these and they hardly have any nicotine “if you smoke them slowly”. Free World Wide Tracked Shipping – See your local laws for buying such items. We do not assume responsibility for items removed by foreign customs agencies. Item(s) located in the USA.

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