This is really just to test the new image facility. Often referred to erroneously as The Black & Tan Medal, this is in fact the medal awarded for service in the IRA between 1916 and 1923.
On the left is the very rare combatant version with the 'Cumrac' clasp. Its ribbon and top clasp are missing but it is still a highly desirable item. On the right is the standard medal. Officer's awards generally came engraved while Other Ranks got unengraved medals. The reverse is plain, except for a leafy branch motif.
There was a specific medal for the 1916 Easter Rising which is as rare as unicorn sh1t. For obvious reasons, families hang onto them.
These service medals are also rare but the standard ones without the clasp crop up occasionally. They are not expensive because very few people even know what they actually are, thinking them to be some kind of semi-official commemorative medal, perhaps even of British manufacture, for Black & Tan veterans.
There is a firm making reproductions for sale to families with a rebel in the family tree but they are easily identifiable as copies when compared to the real thing.
Prosper Keating
On the left is the very rare combatant version with the 'Cumrac' clasp. Its ribbon and top clasp are missing but it is still a highly desirable item. On the right is the standard medal. Officer's awards generally came engraved while Other Ranks got unengraved medals. The reverse is plain, except for a leafy branch motif.
There was a specific medal for the 1916 Easter Rising which is as rare as unicorn sh1t. For obvious reasons, families hang onto them.
These service medals are also rare but the standard ones without the clasp crop up occasionally. They are not expensive because very few people even know what they actually are, thinking them to be some kind of semi-official commemorative medal, perhaps even of British manufacture, for Black & Tan veterans.
There is a firm making reproductions for sale to families with a rebel in the family tree but they are easily identifiable as copies when compared to the real thing.
Prosper Keating
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