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    Silver badge presented to Kapitän zur See Heinz Assmann on display at the Eyewitness Museum in Beek (Netherlands).

    It was recently acquired by the owner of the Museum.
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      The German Order (Deutscher Orden) presented posthumously to General der Infanterie Rudolf Schmundt, on 7.10.1944, after he died from wounds sustained on the the 20 July 1944 assassination attempt on AH.

      He was one of only 11 recipients of the Order.

      The photo correspond to his funeral service. (The General with the Oak Leaves on the right is Generals der Infanterie Erich Jaschke)
      Attached Files

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        Hello friends.
        can be this badge original?
        Attached Files

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          Nope that is a bad fake
          Regards
          Hans N

          Don´t throw away your fake WB´s! Get in touch with me.
          I collect them for reference purposes for the benefit of the hobby (for the right "fake" price of course).

          Comment


            Thank you.
            but whet is not good. Some people says Junker made 100 items of it.
            I read here everything but I didn't get answer

            Comment


              This is a well known modern reproduction of this badge..
              Here it is sold for 25$ https://www.unionmilitaria.com/1944-...lver-p450.html

              Mats

              Comment


                Mats, very thank You.

                I saw in one shop, a story about - this badge is made over necessary, for reserved. Made, but not been awarded any people. But the logic is saying- it's not possible, because everyone who were with Hitler in this building- were awarded. Why need more?
                Now in auction last bid 160$. Process is going

                Comment


                  What are you talking about?

                  Comment


                    Originally posted by Freejack View Post
                    but whet is not good.
                    Basically everyting is wrong with the badge you posted. Wrong hardware (hinge, pin and catch) and the makermark is no way near a original one.
                    Check out Stans badge in post 82 and you will see the differance right away - https://dev.wehrmacht-awards.com/for...37#post6377337
                    Regards
                    Hans N

                    Don´t throw away your fake WB´s! Get in touch with me.
                    I collect them for reference purposes for the benefit of the hobby (for the right "fake" price of course).

                    Comment


                      Looting the Reich: German Wound Badge


                      As the war wound down, Allied soldiers scavenged any Nazi loot they could find, often with dire consequences. A solider named Larry Hirschbach uncovered what is now one of the Museum's most prized possessions.

                      August 17, 2017
                      Most of the items in the artifact collection at The National WWII Museum are graciously donated by WWII veterans or, more commonly in the last few years, their families. I’ve always found it odd that the keepsakes collected and saved by our servicemembers tend to be accoutrements of the enemy. To me, this speaks volumes to one of the favorite pastimes of the WWII GI—souvenir hunting. When the European Campaign ended, homeward-bound servicemen filled their duffel bags with Nazi helmets, flags, belt buckles, daggers, badges, weapons, or anything else they could find adorned with a swastika.

                      “While the Germans fight for world domination and the English for the defense of England, the Americans fight for souvenirs.”

                      John Steinbeck

                      Consequently, Third Reich items make up a large portion of the Museum’s artifact collection. In many cases, GIs risked life and limb to score war trophies from the enemy, and the Germans knew that GIs were more than willing to do it. As the Germans retreated from an area, many attractive souvenirs were left about, booby-trapped with grenades or explosives in the hopes of baiting a wide-eyed GI. Many soldiers paid the ultimate price in their quest for the ultimate war trophy.

                      In my opinion, our most impressive haul of Nazi war loot comes from a soldier named Larry Hirshbach. As members of the occupation force in Berlin in July 1945, he and a fellow soldier explored the bombed-out Reich Chancellery. Hirshbach and his buddy made their way through the rubble and ruins to Hitler’s office, where several Allied soldiers were smashing off pocket-sized chunks of Hitler’s marble desk top with hammers. Hirshbach rooted around the debris-strewn floor, determined to find something better. After sifting through layers of plaster and concrete, he uncovered items previous souvenir hunters had missed. An ink blotter, made of the same highly polished marble as the desk top, and Hitler’s personal stationary. Hirshbach promptly used the paper to write his wife, describing his exploits through the crumbling Chancellery.

                      Hirshbach retrieved an impressive piece of his collection from a charred storage vault in the basement of the Chancellery: a German Wound Badge commemorating the foiled plot to assassinate Hitler in July 1944. Perhaps the rarest of all German WWII military awards, the criteria of eligibility for the award applied to just 24 recipients.

                      • Gift of Drs. James and Beverly Shaver, in Memory of Larry and Genie Hirshbach, 2011.255.008

                      On July 20, 1944, Colonel Count Claus Schenk von Stauffenberg carried a bomb with a time-delayed fuse inside his briefcase to a meeting at the Wolf’s Lair, Hitler’s headquarters in East Prussia. Moments after von Stauffenberg excused himself to make his escape, the bomb in his briefcase exploded. Hitler, von Stauffenberg’s intended target escaped with minor injuries. Four others were killed and 19 were injured.

                      Quickly apprehended, von Stauffenberg and an estimated 5,000 additional conspirators implicated in the plot were executed or forced to commit suicide; Field Marshall Erwin Rommel was the most prominent. To commemorate his survival of the blast, Hitler commissioned a special Wound Badge (the German equivalent to the US Purple Heart Medal) to those who were killed or wounded in the assassination attempt.

                      This special edition of the Wound Badge is immediately recognizable by the date—July 20, 1944, and Hitler’s signature embossed on the front of the award. Considered by collectors to be the “Holy Grail” of German WWII medals, this Wound Badge is often reproduced. The best counterfeit versions are correct down to the weight and maker’s marks on the back of the award, which make it very difficult to tell the difference between an original or a fake. The supporting documentation and objects in the Hirshbach collection establish bullet-proof provenance in verifying the authenticity of this obscure decoration, making it one of the rarest artifacts in The National WWII Museum’s collection.

                      CONTRIBUTORLarry Decuers


                      Larry Decuers joined The National WWII Museum as a Curator in 2008, after serving in the US Army's 101st Airborne Division as an infantryman.

                      Comment


                        Need better pictures than that.

                        Comment


                          What about this one? rbminis provided me with some flaws and helpful insights and cause of that I believe it's well made re-production.


                          YS8XRTI.jpgssxUBRP.jpgANBFMmL.jpgDeMnXl6.jpgEiKrOtV.jpg
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                          Last edited by Deluxo; 08-17-2020, 03:38 AM.

                          Comment


                            Originally posted by Deluxo View Post
                            What about this one? Think it's well made re-production
                            Yes, the same type of replica seen here:
                            https://dev.wehrmacht-awards.com/for...ge#post7314395

                            Best regards,
                            ---Norm
                            Attached Files
                            Last edited by Norm F; 08-16-2020, 05:05 PM.

                            Comment


                              Originally posted by Norm F View Post

                              Yes, the same type of replica seen here:
                              https://dev.wehrmacht-awards.com/for...ge#post7314395

                              Best regards,
                              ---Norm
                              And another one of these replicas was posted here:
                              https://dev.wehrmacht-awards.com/for...dge#post946547

                              Attached Files

                              Comment


                                Originally posted by Deluxo View Post
                                What about this one? Think it's well made re-production
                                No, you thought it was original, you were informed it was fake.
                                Ralph.

                                Comment

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