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Auction archive: Lot number 997

Exceptional Naval and Polar Awards from

Estimate
£12,000 - £15,000
ca. US$19,326 - US$24,157
Price realised:
£21,000
ca. US$33,820
Auction archive: Lot number 997

Exceptional Naval and Polar Awards from

Estimate
£12,000 - £15,000
ca. US$19,326 - US$24,157
Price realised:
£21,000
ca. US$33,820
Beschreibung:

Exceptional Naval and Polar Awards from the Collection of RC Witte The important Great War Q-ship operations D.S.O. and Bar group of five awarded to Captain F. H. Grenfell, Royal Navy, who commanded the ‘The splendid Penshurst’ in several actions and was second only to Gordon Campbell, V.C., in terms of U-boats destroyed Distinguished Service Order, G.V.R., with Second Award Bar, silver-gilt and enamel; 1914 Star (Lieut. F. H. Grenfell, R.N., Transport Staff); British War and Victory Medals (Capt. F. H. Grenfell, R.N.); France, Croix de Guerre 1914-1917, minor enamel damage to wreaths on the first, otherwise good very fine and better (5) £12000-15000 Footnote D.S.O. London Gazette 1 January 1917. Bar to D.S.O. London Gazette 23 March 1917. French Croix de Guerre London Gazette 2 November 1917. Francis Henry Grenfell was in Hampshire in December 1874 and entered the Royal Navy as a cadet in Britannia in January 1889. Advanced to Sub. Lieutenant September 1894 and to Lieutenant in April 1897, he became a physical fitness instructor, but was placed on the Retired List at his own request in December 1905, when he was given the rank of Lieutenant-Commander. Having in the interim been employed as an Inspector of Schools for the Board of Education, he was recalled on the outbreak of hostilities in August 1914 and served as a Transport Officer at Marseilles before being appointed C.O. of the armed merchant cruiser Cedric in November of the same year, in the rank of Commander. Then in December 1915, with his transfer to Cyclops on ‘special service’, he commenced his remarkable career in “Mystery Ships”, namely with his appointment to the command of the Penshurst (a.k.a. Q-7), who, with her three masts, low freeboard and funnel aft, resembled a tank steamer (or oil tanker). Described by Keble Chatterton as ‘a courteous and charming country gentleman whose shy manner concealed an exceptionally gallant spirit’, Grenfell had to endure nearly a year of unrewarded patrols before being able to orchestrated his first “kill”, the interim seeing him and his crew master their new roles off Ireland, Scotland and in the English Channel. And among his officers was Lieutenant Cedric Naylor, R.N.R., who became one of the most decorated Naval Officers of the Great War, winning three D.S.Os and two D.S.Cs, the whole services in Penshurst. 30 November 1916 - destruction of the UB-19 Grenfell first went into action in Penshurst in November 1916, when she sank the UB-19 on the 30th in a textbook Q-ship action, luring her prey to within 250 yards range after sending off her “panic party”. Grenfell takes up the story: ‘I passed the word to the guns that she [the UB-19] was coming round to our starboard quarter, and then slithered across the deck and had another spy-hole cut in the screen in a moment. Then I saw her coming round the stern, and when she was on the quarter and the guns were all bearing on her I leapt for the signal bell and signalled ‘open fire’. Inside ten seconds the 3-pounder got off its first shot, which carried a man clean off the conning tower; the second immediately afterwards went through her engine room. The 6-pounder and the 12-pounder took up the game almost at once, and the shells began to burst all over the sub. We hit her mostly in the conning tower and the after part. Shells burst all along her water line and the 12-pounder Lyddite did grand work. Most of the conning tower was blown clean away, and one shell blew a great sheet of deck plating spinning into the air. We could see the men running on her deck, and falling or diving overboard. A knot gathered at the fore and where the shells were less numerous. It was a grand sight - and I must admit I mafficked [celebrate, as in Mafeking Day] - I had to run down and shake old Naylor, at the 12-pounder - by the hand. All this time the sub was going ahead towards our boars, and we learned afterwards that our second shot, besides preventing her submerging, also prevented them stopping e

Auction archive: Lot number 997
Auction:
Datum:
13 Sep 2012 - 14 Sep 2012
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:

Exceptional Naval and Polar Awards from the Collection of RC Witte The important Great War Q-ship operations D.S.O. and Bar group of five awarded to Captain F. H. Grenfell, Royal Navy, who commanded the ‘The splendid Penshurst’ in several actions and was second only to Gordon Campbell, V.C., in terms of U-boats destroyed Distinguished Service Order, G.V.R., with Second Award Bar, silver-gilt and enamel; 1914 Star (Lieut. F. H. Grenfell, R.N., Transport Staff); British War and Victory Medals (Capt. F. H. Grenfell, R.N.); France, Croix de Guerre 1914-1917, minor enamel damage to wreaths on the first, otherwise good very fine and better (5) £12000-15000 Footnote D.S.O. London Gazette 1 January 1917. Bar to D.S.O. London Gazette 23 March 1917. French Croix de Guerre London Gazette 2 November 1917. Francis Henry Grenfell was in Hampshire in December 1874 and entered the Royal Navy as a cadet in Britannia in January 1889. Advanced to Sub. Lieutenant September 1894 and to Lieutenant in April 1897, he became a physical fitness instructor, but was placed on the Retired List at his own request in December 1905, when he was given the rank of Lieutenant-Commander. Having in the interim been employed as an Inspector of Schools for the Board of Education, he was recalled on the outbreak of hostilities in August 1914 and served as a Transport Officer at Marseilles before being appointed C.O. of the armed merchant cruiser Cedric in November of the same year, in the rank of Commander. Then in December 1915, with his transfer to Cyclops on ‘special service’, he commenced his remarkable career in “Mystery Ships”, namely with his appointment to the command of the Penshurst (a.k.a. Q-7), who, with her three masts, low freeboard and funnel aft, resembled a tank steamer (or oil tanker). Described by Keble Chatterton as ‘a courteous and charming country gentleman whose shy manner concealed an exceptionally gallant spirit’, Grenfell had to endure nearly a year of unrewarded patrols before being able to orchestrated his first “kill”, the interim seeing him and his crew master their new roles off Ireland, Scotland and in the English Channel. And among his officers was Lieutenant Cedric Naylor, R.N.R., who became one of the most decorated Naval Officers of the Great War, winning three D.S.Os and two D.S.Cs, the whole services in Penshurst. 30 November 1916 - destruction of the UB-19 Grenfell first went into action in Penshurst in November 1916, when she sank the UB-19 on the 30th in a textbook Q-ship action, luring her prey to within 250 yards range after sending off her “panic party”. Grenfell takes up the story: ‘I passed the word to the guns that she [the UB-19] was coming round to our starboard quarter, and then slithered across the deck and had another spy-hole cut in the screen in a moment. Then I saw her coming round the stern, and when she was on the quarter and the guns were all bearing on her I leapt for the signal bell and signalled ‘open fire’. Inside ten seconds the 3-pounder got off its first shot, which carried a man clean off the conning tower; the second immediately afterwards went through her engine room. The 6-pounder and the 12-pounder took up the game almost at once, and the shells began to burst all over the sub. We hit her mostly in the conning tower and the after part. Shells burst all along her water line and the 12-pounder Lyddite did grand work. Most of the conning tower was blown clean away, and one shell blew a great sheet of deck plating spinning into the air. We could see the men running on her deck, and falling or diving overboard. A knot gathered at the fore and where the shells were less numerous. It was a grand sight - and I must admit I mafficked [celebrate, as in Mafeking Day] - I had to run down and shake old Naylor, at the 12-pounder - by the hand. All this time the sub was going ahead towards our boars, and we learned afterwards that our second shot, besides preventing her submerging, also prevented them stopping e

Auction archive: Lot number 997
Auction:
Datum:
13 Sep 2012 - 14 Sep 2012
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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