It is wonderful to see the collection shown. These are the pieces that Eric Campion bought after he bought the Combined Pilots badge with diamonds. The story is simple, a British officer had the task of disposing of the items, took the Combiened Pilots badge to a Jewler in Hatton Garden, the Jewler alerted Campion, who bought the piece, then "Toured" the dealer in London ending his search with Spinks who he bought the pieces from. He sold the badge to me in 1982, and offered me the other pieces but unfortunatly I was not in a position to purchase them. He kept them and donated them to Hendon. A rather poted version of the history.
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Originally posted by WARLORDIt is wonderful to see the collection shown. These are the pieces that Eric Campion bought after he bought the Combined Pilots badge with diamonds. The story is simple, a British officer had the task of disposing of the items, took the Combiened Pilots badge to a Jewler in Hatton Garden, the Jewler alerted Campion, who bought the piece, then "Toured" the dealer in London ending his search with Spinks who he bought the pieces from. He sold the badge to me in 1982, and offered me the other pieces but unfortunatly I was not in a position to purchase them. He kept them and donated them to Hendon. A rather poted version of the history.Attached Files
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Warlord,
A lovely and truely historical piece. I remember first seeing Eric's photos and fell in love with that badge. Congratulations and I am glad it now resides in your fine collection, where it is fully appreciated. Thank you for sharing the photo.
Bob HritzIn the land of the blind, the one eyed man is king.
Duct tape can't fix stupid, but it can muffle the sound.
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I got the impression that only the awards in the little display case were from the Campion collection. The mannequin struck me as a mock up.
I was particularly interested by the medal bar and ribbon bar. The portrait of Goering at lower left shows him wearing what appears to be the two-line ribbon bar included in the display. It is dated January 1939 which would fit with the awards on the ribbon bar, especially the fact that the EKII Spange and Westwall Medal hadn't been added yet. The ribbon bar also incudes the Olympic Games Award and Red Cross Award, both of which I suppose Goering had as 1st Class neck decorations.
The medal bar is interesting for the many regulations it breaks: LW Long Service Awards 1st and 2nd Class together; all three Flower Campaign Medals worn together on an Armed Forces uniform; and the Westwall Medal with all three Flower Campaign Medals. The EKII "Prinzen" Spange, small Prague Castle Bar and 1st Class Luftschutz are all especially interesting. The photo bottom right in the display (from Autumn 1939) shows Goering wearing a a similar-looking medal bar, but even close up its impossible to make out the detail.
It's certainly worth a visit if you're ever anywhere near.
Otherwise, the Imperial War Museum has a white summer tunic of Goering's with very impressive shoulder boards, and the Museum of the Armed Forces in Moscow has a pair of breeches from one of his forestry outfits. They are very big.
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Originally posted by W. C. Stump View PostGoring had a number of rings with him at the time of his surrender. One ring that I recall was a large signet ring that Goring used to place a wax seal to documents. The doctor at Nuremberg who took the suicide capsule container also had the ring. At one time, in the 60's he would make a wax seal from Goring's ring and charged $5.00 for it. Roger Steele, the pioneer relic deal and fake monger, took one of the was seals and had 14K gold rings made from the seal and sold them. He also had silver rings of the same type made. Where the original ring is today is not known to me.
DOES anyone out there have any information as to the where abouts of this ring today. Anything about its origins, history or manufacture, I would be appreciated in knowing. Or if any German images of the ring are still available. Thank you.
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Originally posted by Mike Coleman View PostAt the time of Goring's surrender he wore two rings: his wedding band which he wore on the ring finger of his right hand as is the German custom and a gold ring with a large ruby on the ring finger of his left hand. That ring is now in the possession of a businessman and aquaintance of my father's in Cincinnati. He is not a collector and keeps it as a curiosity and historical artifact. He has no intention of it leaving his family.
Is there any way a person could get a photo of this ring for research on a book? Thank you for your time.
Johnny R.
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Originally posted by Ron Westerduin View PostHi all,
Does anybody know what happend to Görings medals after the war, and where they are now? also....is there a list of all the rewards he got and can someone help me with pictures of the awards?...i need them for a website i´m building.
Cheers,
Ron
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