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Auction archive: Lot number 948

An outstanding Defence of Mafeking

Estimate
£2,000 - £2,500
ca. US$2,879 - US$3,598
Price realised:
£2,000
ca. US$2,879
Auction archive: Lot number 948

An outstanding Defence of Mafeking

Estimate
£2,000 - £2,500
ca. US$2,879 - US$3,598
Price realised:
£2,000
ca. US$2,879
Beschreibung:

An outstanding Defence of Mafeking family group to Lieutenant-Colonel J. R. More, commanding the Railway Section at Mafeking, his wife Marion More, Nursing Sister at the Mafeking Railway Convalescent Hospital, and their son Lieutenant-Colonel T. V. More, who was born at Mafeking shortly after the lifting of the siege Four: Lieutenant-Colonel J. R. More, General Manager of the South African Railways The Order of St. John of Jerusalem, Officer, frosted silver breast badge; Queen’s South Africa 1899-1902, 1 clasp, Defence of Mafeking (Capt., Mafeking Tn. Gd.); British War Medal (Lt. Col.); Jubilee 1935; together with Cecil Rhodes Funeral Train Medal 1902, silver, in its Spink & Son case of issue, and a Prince of Wales’ Lodge masonic jewel for the Jubilee of 1887, gold and enamels, this last possibly presented to his father Pair: Nursing Sister M. More, Mafeking Railway Convalescent Hospital Queen’s South Africa 1899-1902, no clasp (Nursing Sister); Mafeking Railway Convalescent Hospital Badge, circular gold badge with central red enamelled cross within white enamelled border inscribed ‘Mafeking’, the reverse inscribed ‘Ry. Convalescent Hospital 1900’, 20mm, fitted with gold pin for wearing Five: Lieutenant-Colonel T. V. More, Director of Transport (Railway) 1939-45 Star; Africa Star; War Medal; Africa Service Medal, these four all officially impressed (179995 T. V. More); Coronation 1953, generally extremely fine and a rare group (12) £2000-2500 Footnote John Rhys More was born in 1873, son of Mr T. J. More, who was traffic manager of the Cape Government Railways. His first railway experience was as an assistant on the construction of the Vaal River railway bridge at Fourteen Streams, and he was next employed on the construction of the line from Rosmead to Stormberg. He was engaged in the construction of the line from Vryburg to Mafeking and, in 1894, on the Sterkstroom-Indwe railway. Joining the Cape Government Railways in 1896, he became assistant engineer of the Kimberley-Bloemfontein survey and then of the Rosmead-Graff-Reinet railway construction. In 1899 he was appointed district engineer at Mafeking and, on the outbreak of the siege was appointed Commandant of the Railway Section of the Town Guard with the rank of Lieutenant and later Captain. He was responsible for the construction of the Armoured Train and Ordnance workshop. The first shot fired in the defence of Mafeking was by Railwaymen in the Armoured Train at the 5 mile Cottage, south of Mafeking, on 12 October 1899. At Game Tree on Boxing Day of that year, he commanded the second truck of the Armoured Train: “The enemy’s fire was terrible, 1lb Maxim shells bursting a few yards beyond the truck, accompanied by a perfect hail of bullets. The Railwaymen I am pleased to say behaved very well, and when the enemy were within range, did good work with their Martinis. Sergeant Lowe and myself managed to keep the Maxim pouring in its deadly fire on the enemy, and Corporal Godson kept the Hotchkiss firing in spite of his exposed position in the half armoured truck, which only protected the lower part of his body. The two B.S.A.P. in the truck with him were told to lie down as the fire was too heavy, and both were slightly wounded by portions of shell. “It was a terribly anxious time, 850 Boers of the Marico Commando with Artillery, under General Snyman, were pitted against 16 B.S.A.P. and 28 Railwaymen. A grimly contested fight lasting two hours resulted in the enemy having to evacuate his position and fall back with heavy loss, over the crest of the rise, where he was again successfully engaged by Captain Fitzclarence with 2 squadrons of the Protectorate Regiment.” (Extract from Captain More’s report). After the relief of Mafeking, More returned to his local peace-time duties as District Engineer and was later Resident Engineer for the Vryburg-Bulawayo railway. Upon the death of Cecil Rhodes in 1902, he was in charge of the funeral train which conveyed his body from Cape To

Auction archive: Lot number 948
Auction:
Datum:
4 Dec 2001
Auction house:
Dix Noonan Webb
16 Bolton St, Mayfair
London, W1J 8BQ
United Kingdom
auctions@dnw.co.uk
+44 (0)20 7016 1700
+44 (0)20 7016 1799
Beschreibung:

An outstanding Defence of Mafeking family group to Lieutenant-Colonel J. R. More, commanding the Railway Section at Mafeking, his wife Marion More, Nursing Sister at the Mafeking Railway Convalescent Hospital, and their son Lieutenant-Colonel T. V. More, who was born at Mafeking shortly after the lifting of the siege Four: Lieutenant-Colonel J. R. More, General Manager of the South African Railways The Order of St. John of Jerusalem, Officer, frosted silver breast badge; Queen’s South Africa 1899-1902, 1 clasp, Defence of Mafeking (Capt., Mafeking Tn. Gd.); British War Medal (Lt. Col.); Jubilee 1935; together with Cecil Rhodes Funeral Train Medal 1902, silver, in its Spink & Son case of issue, and a Prince of Wales’ Lodge masonic jewel for the Jubilee of 1887, gold and enamels, this last possibly presented to his father Pair: Nursing Sister M. More, Mafeking Railway Convalescent Hospital Queen’s South Africa 1899-1902, no clasp (Nursing Sister); Mafeking Railway Convalescent Hospital Badge, circular gold badge with central red enamelled cross within white enamelled border inscribed ‘Mafeking’, the reverse inscribed ‘Ry. Convalescent Hospital 1900’, 20mm, fitted with gold pin for wearing Five: Lieutenant-Colonel T. V. More, Director of Transport (Railway) 1939-45 Star; Africa Star; War Medal; Africa Service Medal, these four all officially impressed (179995 T. V. More); Coronation 1953, generally extremely fine and a rare group (12) £2000-2500 Footnote John Rhys More was born in 1873, son of Mr T. J. More, who was traffic manager of the Cape Government Railways. His first railway experience was as an assistant on the construction of the Vaal River railway bridge at Fourteen Streams, and he was next employed on the construction of the line from Rosmead to Stormberg. He was engaged in the construction of the line from Vryburg to Mafeking and, in 1894, on the Sterkstroom-Indwe railway. Joining the Cape Government Railways in 1896, he became assistant engineer of the Kimberley-Bloemfontein survey and then of the Rosmead-Graff-Reinet railway construction. In 1899 he was appointed district engineer at Mafeking and, on the outbreak of the siege was appointed Commandant of the Railway Section of the Town Guard with the rank of Lieutenant and later Captain. He was responsible for the construction of the Armoured Train and Ordnance workshop. The first shot fired in the defence of Mafeking was by Railwaymen in the Armoured Train at the 5 mile Cottage, south of Mafeking, on 12 October 1899. At Game Tree on Boxing Day of that year, he commanded the second truck of the Armoured Train: “The enemy’s fire was terrible, 1lb Maxim shells bursting a few yards beyond the truck, accompanied by a perfect hail of bullets. The Railwaymen I am pleased to say behaved very well, and when the enemy were within range, did good work with their Martinis. Sergeant Lowe and myself managed to keep the Maxim pouring in its deadly fire on the enemy, and Corporal Godson kept the Hotchkiss firing in spite of his exposed position in the half armoured truck, which only protected the lower part of his body. The two B.S.A.P. in the truck with him were told to lie down as the fire was too heavy, and both were slightly wounded by portions of shell. “It was a terribly anxious time, 850 Boers of the Marico Commando with Artillery, under General Snyman, were pitted against 16 B.S.A.P. and 28 Railwaymen. A grimly contested fight lasting two hours resulted in the enemy having to evacuate his position and fall back with heavy loss, over the crest of the rise, where he was again successfully engaged by Captain Fitzclarence with 2 squadrons of the Protectorate Regiment.” (Extract from Captain More’s report). After the relief of Mafeking, More returned to his local peace-time duties as District Engineer and was later Resident Engineer for the Vryburg-Bulawayo railway. Upon the death of Cecil Rhodes in 1902, he was in charge of the funeral train which conveyed his body from Cape To

Auction archive: Lot number 948
Auction:
Datum:
4 Dec 2001
Auction house:
Dix Noonan Webb
16 Bolton St, Mayfair
London, W1J 8BQ
United Kingdom
auctions@dnw.co.uk
+44 (0)20 7016 1700
+44 (0)20 7016 1799
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