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Recent Posts
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By KASTAUFFER · Posted
Thats a great group. That thick numbered Silver Star is actually a US Army 1942 contract medal, its thick, but not Navy. The Navy never numbered Silver Stars, Kurt -
By Gear Fanatic · Posted
Maybe some kind of very localized modification for the early M1 for some kind of soft release with the already in production Kelly liner? I know they had problems early on and during testing figuring out a liner suspension system? Maybe some kind of helmet used during field tests. My .02 -
By Gear Fanatic · Posted
What’s the deal with the bazooka rocket??? Nice group! -
By manayunkman · Posted
The studio portrait isn’t half bad either. -
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By historylives · Posted
this is on Ebay, i would tread very carefully. no doubt the pot is good fixed bale but, painted helmets are a mine field. way to many fakes and that cross although it may be good i personally would be very careful. -
By KurtA · Posted
Great grouping. Really like the arm flag. -
By Uniforms of the Day · Posted
I just acquired this small group from the widow of this man's nephew. The group belonged to Richard L. Bramley. Bramley was born in Clarkeson, Washington. He was a member of the 517th Parachute Infantry Regiment, 82nd Airborne Division, during WWII and participated in a combat jump during the invasion of southern France. His decorations included: Purple Heart, American Theater Service Medal, European Theater Service Medal, Victory Medal, French Croix de Guerre and Belgian Fourragere. The only medal I obtained was his Purple Heart. Unnamed, but numbered "369307". Also here are his jump wings marked "STERLING A.E. CO. UTICA N.Y."; and, best of all, his invasion flag. On the back is written the following: "My prized possession. This was worn on my shoulder in my parachute drop in So. France August 15 1944. What appears to be dirt is camou make up to be less obvious. Dick Bramley". Additionally, there is a 5×7 studio photo of Bramley woth large parachute troops patch, wings, parachute cap badge and jump boots (taken when he was 19 years of age). A smaller photo of Bramley with a 82nd Airborne patch and what I think is an ETO service ribbon with invasion device. Lastly there are a couple paper items that were glued in the frame and a small paper booklet highlighting the 517th's activities. It has se⁰veral names and addresses on the last couple pages. I found one web page "U.S. Airborne" that shows the 5×7 photo in this lot, and states that Bramley was with the 596th Airborne Engineer Company (3rd Platoon). The last photo was captured from the U.S. Airborne website. -
By Jones_Bradock · Posted
I like the cover, it made it look like the battlefields were a tourist destination lol, reminds me of something you would see in Fallout.... -
By Jones_Bradock · Posted
Picked this up today. I find it remarkable that these not only made it through the war years but made it to the barn I found it in 80 years later. These are probably a pretty niche collectable but man if it could speak....
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