• WWI Imperial German Baden-Württemberg Honor Badge Voluntary Fire Brigade 25 Year

    WWI Era Imperial German Baden-Württemberg Honor Badge for Voluntary Fire Brigade Service 25 Years in the Jewelry Box ‘Ludwig Bertsch Hof-Juwelier Karlsruhe 1/B.  

  • WWI German Medal Bar – Bavarian Medal Bar EKII Military Merit Cross & Long Service III Class

    Original WWI German Bavarian Medal Bar Iron Cross 2nd Class (EKII) Needs added!, Bavarian Military Merit Cross & Long Service III Class War-Time  

  • WWII German Soldbuch Cover – Nice not seen one (Sold)

    A nice Soldbuch cover, it seems they had a patent pending for this cover and made these under the company called Koriko.

  • WWII American Air Force Medal Bar – Brigader General Martin F Scanlon – Incredibly Rare Medal Set – Mega Career – Attache to UK during the Battle of Britain

    $5,950.00

    Martin Francis Scanlon (11 August 1889 – 26 January 1980) was a general officer in the United States Air Force during World War II. After joining the United States Army in 1912, Scanlon served on the Mexican border, and participated in the United States occupation of Veracruz. He joined the Aviation Section, U.S. Signal Corps, and during World War I served with the American Expeditionary Force on the Western Front as a pilot with the 91st Aero Squadron. Between the wars he was an assistant military attaché in Rome and London, and was the military attaché in London from 1939 to 1941, during the first part of World War II. He was an Assistant Chief of the Air Staff from July 1941 to March 1942 at Headquarters, United States Army Air Forces, and then went to Australia as commanding general, Air Command No. 2, based at Townsville, Queensland. As such he was in charge of the air forces in New Guinea during the Kokoda Track campaign. In September 1942, he returned to the United States where he commanded the 38th Flying Training Wing and the 36th Flying Training Wing. He retired from the United States Air Force in 1948, and was director of export and vice president of Republic Aviation until 1957. Early life Martin Francis Scanlon was born in Scranton, Pennsylvania, on 11 August 1889. He attended the University of Pennsylvania from 1908 to 1909, and Cornell University from 1910 to 1911, before being commissioned in the United States Army as a second lieutenant in the Infantry on 24 April 1912.[1] He initially served with the 7th Infantry Regiment, but transferred to the 19th Infantry Regiment. This regiment patrolled the border with Mexico from Fort Crockett, Texas. He participated in the United States occupation of Veracruz from May to October 1914, when the 19th Infantry returned to Galveston, Texas.[2] World War I Scanlon was at San Antonio, Texas, from September 1915 to March 1916, at which point he was assigned to the Aviation Section, U.S. Signal Corps.[2] He was promoted to first lieutenant in the infantry on 1 July 1916, and in the Aviation Section on 28 October 1916,[1] when he received his wings as a junior aviator in San Diego, California.[2] Scanlon assumed command of the 2d Aero Squadron, which was then flying seaplanes from Fort Mills on Corregidor Island in the Philippines. He was promoted to captain on 15 May 1917. He returned to the United States in November 1917, and was posted to Kelly Field and then Fort Worth, Texas for additional training.[2] He went to England, where he trained with the Royal Flying Corps from February to August 1918, with the rank of major from 7 June 1918. He joined the American Expeditionary Force on the Western Front in France, and was a pilot with the 91st Aero Squadron until September 1918, when he assumed command of Colombey-les-Belles aerodrome during the Meuse-Argonne Offensive. He was then air service commander of V Corps until March 1919. He was a student officer at the Army Artillery School at Trier, and was at the headquarters of the air service of the Third United States Army at Coblenz during the Occupation of the Rhineland.[2] Between the wars On returning to the United States in July 1919, he became commanding officer of Bolling Field, DC.[2] He reverted to the rank of captain on 27 August 1919, but was transferred to the United States Army Air Service with the rank on major on 1 July 1920.[1] In 1923, he attended the Air Corps Engineering School at McCook Field, Ohio. On graduation in August 1923, he was assigned to the National Guard Bureau in Washington, D.C., from 1 December 1923 to 1 May 1924.[2] Scanlon was the assistant military attaché for air at the United States Embassy in Rome from May 1924 until August 1927, when he returned to the United States to attend the Air Corps Tactical School at Langley Field, Virginia, from which he graduated in 1928, and then the United States Army Command and General Staff College, from which he graduated in 1929. He was then assistant military attaché for air at the United States Embassy in London.[1] After a four-year tour, he returned to the United States to become commander of the 15th Observation Squadron in 1933. He was the base commander of Bolling Field from January 1935 to January 1936, when he went back to England as the military attaché for air.[2] He was promoted to the temporary rank of lieutenant colonel on 20 April 1935. This became substantive on 1 August 1935. On 26 August 1936, he was promoted to the temporary rank of colonel.[1] He was special assistant to the United States Ambassador to the United Kingdom from April to September 1939, when he became the military attaché. He was promoted to brigadier general in the wartime Army of the United States on 1 October 1940.[2] World War II Scanlon was assigned to Headquarters, United States Army Air Forces as an Assistant Chief of the Air Staff from July 1941 to March 1942. He was then sent to Australia as commanding general, Air Command No. 2, based at Townsville, Queensland.[1] As such he was in charge of the air forces in New Guinea during the Kokoda Track campaign. When Major General George Kenney took over as commander, Allied Forces in the South West Pacific Area from Lieutenant General George Brett in August 1942, he formed an unfavourable impression. He later recalled: I had known Mike ever since 1918 and liked him immensely, but he was miscast in this job. He had been an air attaché in Rome and London for the best part of the last ten years, with a tour as intelligence officer in Washington, I don’t know why they sent him up to New Guinea; he was not an operator and everyone from the kids on up knew it.[3] Kenney replaced Scanlon with Brigadier General Ennis Whitehead.[4] Scanlon returned to the United…

  • WWI German Soldbuch / Wehrpass WWII – Photos – Uffz Ledermann – 15 Landwehr Division – Fort Vaux – Crimea Ukraine – Iron Cross – Wounds Badge (Sold)

    Eduard Ledermann Lived in Russian Czarist Empire – issued a Czarist ID Booklet. Incredible: Piotrków Governorate (Russian: Петроковская губерния; Polish: Gubernia piotrkowska) was one of the administrative divisions (guberniya; gubernia) in the Kingdom of Poland, established in 1867 by splitting some areas of the Radom and Warsaw Governorates. Its capital was in Petrokov (Russian: Петроко́в) in modern day Piotrków Trybunalski. Joined Landwehr Infanterie Regiment 53 – 15 Landwehr Division Iron Cross and Wounded by grenade splinters in Verdun 1916.  Nice photos of Ledermann in uniform in WW1.  The association was originally assembled as the Borries Division on January 9, 1915 on the Western Front and was statised on July 13, 1915 as the 15th Landwehr Division. She fought in the west until mid-March 1917 and was then transferred to the eastern front. After the armistice there, the division took part in the fighting in support of the Ukraine and did not return home until mid-March 1919 after the end of the war. Der Verband wurde ursprünglich als Division Borries am 9. Januar 1915 an der Westfront zusammengestellt und am 13. Juli 1915 als 15. Landwehr-Division etatisiert. Bis Mitte März 1917 kämpfte sie im Westen und wurde dann an die Ostfront verlegt. Nach dem dortigen Waffenstillstand war die Division an den Kämpfen zur Unterstützung der Ukraine beteiligt und kehrte nach Kriegsende erst bis Mitte März 1919 in die Heimat zurück. 1915 9. Januar bis 16. Oktober — Stellungskämpfe westlich Roye-Noyon ab 21. Oktober — Stellungskämpfe westlich Roye-Noyon 1916 Stellungskämpfe westlich Roye-Noyon 28. Januar bis 17. Februar — Kämpfe von Frise 1917 bis 15. März — Stellungskämpfe westlich Roye-Noyon 16. bis 19. März — Kämpfe vor der Siegfriedfront 20. bis 31. März — Transport nach dem Osten 1. April bis 7. Dezember — Stellungskrieg westlich Brody 7. bis 17. Dezember — Waffenruhe ab 17. Dezember — Waffenstillstand 1918 bis 18. Februar — Waffenstillstand 18. Februar bis 21. Juni — Kämpfe zur Unterstützung der Ukraine 16. bis 20. März — Gefechte bei Snawjonka 18. März — Gefecht bei Nowo-Ukrainka 31. März bis 6. April — Gefechte bei Kriwoj-Rog 24. bis 25. April — Gefecht bei Kolaj 30. April bis 1. Mai — Einnahme von Sewastopol 22. Juni. bis 15. November — Besetzung der Ukraine ab 16. November — Räumung der Ukraine 1919 bis 16. März — Räumung der Ukraine  

  • WWI German Soldbuch & Militärpass – Uffz Josef Bläser – Infanterie Regiment Nr 25 -Wounded in Lodz Poland – Somme – Iron Cross (Sold)

    A nice set with photos to Bläser,  Fighting with the following units:  Inf Reg Nr 25  – 1914 – Wounded in Lodz, Poland  1916 – Inf Reg No 68, 1917 , Inf Reg 161 – Fighting on the Western Front, Somme and Ypren.  Promoted to NCO, awarded the Iron Cross 1917  Photos: Small Portrait, 7 x larger photos.  Really nice set here, not often seen like this anymore. 

  • WWI German Soldiers Ring – Iron Cross – Silver Marked

    Nice original ring, silver marked 

  • WW1 German Miliärpass – Gefreiter Wilhelm Kühne – Infanterie-Regiment Prinz Friedrich der Niederlande (2. Westfälisches) Nr. 15 – Iron Cross – Wounds Badge – Verdun

    $65.00

    Gefreiter Wilhelm Kühne Medals: Iron Cross Second Class 30.4.1918 (Western Front), Wounds Badge . 14.5.1918 Born in Prussia, joined in 1913 a replacement unit, before being posted to:  Infanterie-Regiment Prinz Friedrich der Niederlande (2. Westfälisches) Nr. 15 Wounded Once with the above unit in Niewka (Eastern Poland) in 1914.  After his recovery in hospitals across Germany, he was posted to: Reserve Infanterie Regiment 218 and a short switch to Niederrheinisches Füsilier-Regiment Nr. 39 Wounded with a bullet to the head in Lapole.  The 47th Reserve Division initially fought on the Western Front, entering the line in October between the Meuse and Moselle and remaining there until late November, when it was transported to the Eastern Front. It fought in the Limanowa-Lapanow in December 1914 suffering heavy casualties and Gorlice-Tarnów Offensive in 1915. In May 1917, it returned to the Western Front, and occupied the line near Verdun. In 1918, the division fought in the German spring offensive, breaking through at St.Quentin–La Fère and fighting on to the Montdidier-Noyon region. It later saw action in the Second Battle of the Marne. The division was in Lorraine when it was disbanded on August 2, 1918. In 1917, Allied intelligence rated the division as a mediocre division. In 1918 it was rated second class, and it was noted that its strength had been allowed to diminish without replenishment, leading to its dissolution. He was discharged from the Army in late 1919. 

  • WW1 German Solders ID Tag and “Battle-damaged” Pocket Watch – Karl Bernhardt – Ers.Batl Fuss. Gar. Batt Nr 5112 –

    $695.00

      Incredible little group. The battle damage likely deflected shrapnel or a bullet. The German Dog Tag is marked with: Karl Bernhardt Born: 12.1.1897 Unit: Ersatz Batl Fuss Gar Batt Nr 5112 Research shows that Karl Bernhardt survived the war and died in his hometown of Moers in 1966 of ill health. Watch: Incased old watch, was hit and opened, his name and date of birth matching the tag are engraved inside the watch. When we took this apart to show you the internal system of the watch it began to move. We have a video of it and will be given to the next owner…