Originally posted by Stijn David
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I have noted and taken on board what you have stated about your sample of glider pilots who you interviewed and basically you have done the best with who you could get to talk to. What else could be expected that long after the war and on a topic so sensitive to some for range of reasons.
At the end of the day it is still only a sample of convenience however and it has all the limitations of such a sample. The biggest one being that you may have missed the pilots who got the ball hinge glider because you did not have a cross-section of the population. I do agree however that your sample was wide and as complete as possible based on what you now tell me.
The point is that you say "I believe" in these badges like it is some item I got from a dealer. You say the veteran I got the badge from was in "fantasy" about it coming from the war.
This is what I am taking exception too, I do not believe in these badges like I am talking myself into a fake, I got one from a veteran who was a POW taken on Crete. He was in no fantasy that he got it from an LW base in 1945 as he left Germany after having a hell of a time there. This is a fact not an opinion or a belief.
I do not expect you to rewrite your book unless you see the need and I probably will not write one myself about this. All I have tried to do, is too share with you some important information that I got one of these ball hinge glider from an allied soldier who got it on or before May 1945. Personally I thought you would find this to be of real interest and even a concern seeing as before I shared this, you were stating that the ball hinge was probably post war based solely on the basis that none of the glider pilots who you interviewed from a sample of convenience with no reported standard deviation of error had one.
Your finding is of great interest and puzzlement to me so surely my evidence must be of real interest to you. Yet initially you brushed this to one side and even put it down as something I believe in but not something that any serious glider badge collector would put much weight on. This is why I have come on strongly, if my evidence can be so easily dispelled then lets focus more on the limitations of your research and start to realise that both of us have more work to do before we come to conclusion on this.
The last statement you make sums it up nicely, "that NO glider badges were awarded after september 1944" and I agree with on that but you are extending this to an assumption that no glider badges were produced after September 1944. That is not correct, the badge was still in production and still being stocked in LW outlets. I mean why would it not be, many believed and were being told that Germany would win the war. Contracts were still in existance and still being made plus Germany was in the full swing of its war-time production. In fact their economic growth actually increased that year and it was one of the few years that they reached full capacity. Just because they had stopped training the glider pilots does not mean they had stopped making the badge although I do agree the need to re-stock would have slowed. May-be this explains why the ball hinge is a good example of mid-war production but we do not really ever see late war examples.
The fact that I and others have a veteran brought back example of this badge is something for us all to take seriously in the study of this badge. It is not something for us to just brush aside as a confused opinion or some form of post-war production trick. Let the search continue because we now have three veteran found examples and that is a 300% increase from when you first stated that in your opinion they were post war.
Again with all due respect for a great bit of research on your part and a true concern to try and find out more about this,
Chris
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