Military medals
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The BPMA has a large
collection of nearly 200 military medals awarded to Post Office employees from
the Crimean War of 1853–1856 up to the Second World War. Many of these were awarded to members of the
Post Office Rifles, the Post Office’s own volunteer corps.
The Post Office Rifles were first formed as a
permanent volunteer regiment recruiting only Post Office employees in 1868
under Colonel Du Plat Taylor. They were
named the 49th Middlesex Rifles Volunteers but this later changed to
the 24th Middlesex Rifles Volunteers and the 8th
Battalion, City of London Regiment.
The Post Office Rifles saw active service in Egypt in 1882, South
Africa in 1899 and played an important part in the First
World War, serving in France
and Flanders.
After the First World War, the battalion was amalgamated with various
other battalions and so this saw the end of the Post Office Rifles as it was.
The collection contains standard medals issued
in the First and Second World Wars but also includes a rarer Victoria Cross,
the highest British Decoration for gallantry. The medals tell the story of the heroic acts of individuals who worked
for the Post Office during wartime.
Khedives Star, 1882, accession number: OB1997.142/22
This medal is one of the
oldest in our collection. It was awarded
to Private Hayes, along with a Queen’s Egypt medal for services rendered
in the Egyptian Campaign in 1882. Private
Hayes was one of the 100 men of the 24th Middlesex Rifles who volunteered for
active service under Colonel Du Plat Taylor in the newly formed Army Post Office
Corps.
The BPMA also hold Private Hayes’ Queen’s Egypt medal in the collection.
Queen’s South Africa Medal, 1899 – 1902, accession number: 2000-0002
This medal was awarded to
Sir Somerset French during the 2nd Boer War.
Among other important appointments, Somerset French was:
- Postmaster General of Cape Colony in 1892
- Postmaster
General of British Bechuanaland in 1893
- Manager of the
Rhodesian Telegraph Service and of the African Trans-Continental Telegraph Company between 1893 and 1897.
French was largely responsible for the introduction of the Imperial Penny Postage Scheme. He was knighted in 1901 for his services in supervising the Military and Postal Telegraph Services in Cape Colony during the South African War. After the South African War he became Agent-General for Cape Colony in London until 1910 and died on 11 May 1929.
This is the third version
of the Queen’s South Africa
medal as the first version had the dates 1899 - 1900 above Britannia's arm.
This was because originally it was thought that the war would be over by 1900.
When it was apparent that the war would drag on longer the dates were erased
from the dies but still remained very faintly on the second version. The die
was then completely re-cut for the third version. The rim of the medal has ‘SIR S. FRENCH.
K.C.M.G. G.P.O STAFF' engraved on it.
The
medal was purchased by the BPMA at auction in 2000.
Victoria Cross Medal, 1918, accession number: OB1997.211/1
The BPMA is very lucky to
hold this Victoria Cross awarded to Sergeant A J Knight of
the Post Office Rifles.
Knight joined
the Post Office Rifles in October 1914 but the unit did not move to France
until May 1917. He was awarded the
Victoria Cross for ‘most conspicuous
bravery and devotion to duty during the operation against the enemy positions’ at
the battle for Wurst Farm Ridge, Ypres on 20
September 1917 (reported in the London Gazette, November 1917).
Knight charged the enemy position and
captured it single-handedly, showing no regard for his personal safety. The 2nd/ 8th Battalion, of which
Knight was part, lost half of its fighting strength at this battle alone.
Knight was decorated with the Victoria Cross
at Buckingham Palace on January 3rd 1918 and was the
only Post Office Rifleman to achieve this honour.
He returned to his Post Office career after
the war and was later awarded an MBE (civil) in June 1951. He died in Birmingham
on 4 December 1960.
Distinguished Service Order, 1918, accession number: OB1997.212/1
This medal was awarded to
Captain Home Peel of the 1st/ 8th Battalion (Post Office
Rifles).
Peel joined the Regiment as
Second Lieutenant in 1914 and later became Lieutenant and Captain. The battalion saw active service from March
1915 but sadly Peel was killed in action near Longueval on 24 March
1918 during the retreat from Cambria.
This medal is a
Distinguished Service Order, instituted in 1886 for individual instances of
meritorious or distinguished service in war, typically in actual combat. Recipients of the Distinguished Service Order
were entitled to use the letters DSO after their name.
Peel was recommended for a Distinguished
Service Order for his part in the battle of the Somme
in 1916 but at this time he was only mentioned in the despatches. His bravery was later rewarded however when
in 1918 he was finally awarded a Distinguished Service Order.
Peel was also awarded a Military Cross medal
for leading an attack on German trenches at Festubert in 1915. The BPMA also holds this in the collection as
well as other medals of Peel’s, all of which were purchased at auction in 1991.
The medals are
accompanied by nearly 60 documents and photographs relating to the career and
wartime service of Home Peel, including certificates, coronation invitations,
letters, newspaper cuttings, recommendations, dedications and much more.
Perhaps the most moving of these documents is
a letter sent to Mrs Peel from the German Soldier who found her husband’s body. He writes; 'Although enemy and sometimes
deeply hurt by the ridiculous tone of your home press, I feel it as a human
duty to communicate you these sad news.
Capt. Peel was killed in action near Longueval and died, as it seems by
the wounds received, without suffering.'
This shows that even in the bloodiest of battles and in the face of the
enemy, humanity and compassion still existed.
