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ITALIAN MADE USMC Ship Detachment Patch


Eric Queen
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I just picked up this patch (at the bottom) yesterday from an estate seller in New York (via eBay). The name of the estate was Roger P. Elliott.

 

Roger Elliott (S/N 582124) entered the Marine Corps from Boston MA in July of 1945. The OCT 1946 muster roles show him as being on temporary duty on the USS Grand Canyon.

Elliott.jpg

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The USS Grand Canyon left the US in mid SEP 1946 and spent 4.5 months in Naples. She returned to the US in March the following year.

 

After brief shakedown off the coast of Southern California, Grand Canyon departed Port Townsend, Washingtonon 26 June 1946 en route to Newport, Rhode Island via the Panama Canal Zone. She arrived in Newport on 20 July. Assigned the task of keeping United States Navy destroyers in operation, Grand Canyon cleared Newport on 17 September 1946 for her first tour with the 6th Fleet in the Mediterranean Sea. After a visit to Palermo,Sicily, and a 4½-month stay at Naples she returned to the States, arriving back in Norfolk on 1 March 1947.

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Another view. You don't see many marine shoulder patches in bullion to begin with but one made in Italy is pretty cool.

s-l1600 (1).jpg

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Was watching that patch out of curiosity...USMC bullion is scarce, but sold for more than I would have thought. It's a beauty though!

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Thanks for all the comments. Glad that you enjoyed seeing it. I know what you mean Tim but was hard (for me) to put a price on it. I have never seen anything like it and just simply liked it. It has a lot of character and a neat history (to me). It sold for more than some think its worth but sold for a lot less than I bid so, who knows. In the eye of the beholder I guess.

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Thanks for all the comments. Glad that you enjoyed seeing it. I know what you mean Tim but was hard (for me) to put a price on it. I have never seen anything like it and just simply liked it. It has a lot of character and a neat history (to me). It sold for more than some think its worth but sold for a lot less than I bid so, who knows. In the eye of the beholder I guess.

My beautiful bride is always concerned that I paid too much when I buy her nice things. My response is always the same. If it puts a smile on your face, then I didn't pay too much....Beautiful patch, I suspect you're smiling...☺

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It sold for more than some think its worth but sold for a lot less than I bid so, who knows. In the eye of the beholder I guess.

 

Eric-

Not at all. At $288, I think you scored an excellent deal on a very rare patch variation. I think because most of the other variations of this patch typically sell in the $20 to $50 range, many collectors may have used that value range as some sort of misguided frame of reference for estimating the value of your patch.

Kurt

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Eric,

 

If you sew an airborne tab on it, it would be a $2,000 patch. :lol: I was struck by how similar this patch looked to WWII Italian-made 45th Division SSI's.

 

Great score!

 

Allan

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Eric-

Not at all. At $288, I think you scored an excellent deal on a very rare patch variation. I think because most of the other variations of this patch typically sell in the $20 to $50 range, many collectors may have used that value range as some sort of misguided frame of reference for estimating the value of your patch.

Kurt

I agree..

I don't think that price is "way too much" at all.

 

It's in superb condition, and beautifully executed.

The "tinsel" type bullion certainly says Italian made to me.

 

Congrats!

-Brian

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