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Canada. Five Canadian Scottish Regiment (Princess Mary's) Badges
Canada. Five Canadian Scottish Regiment (Princess Mary's) Badges
SKU: ITEM: C6490
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Shipping Details
eMedals offers rapid domestic and international shipping. Orders received prior to 12:00pm (EST) will be shipped on the same business day.* Orders placed on Canadian Federal holidays will be dispatched the subsequent business day. Courier tracking numbers are provided for all shipments. All items purchased from eMedals can be returned for a full monetary refund or merchandise credit, providing the criteria presented in our Terms & Conditions are met. *Please note that the addition of a COA may impact dispatch time.
Description
Description
Glengarry Badge (in white metal, voided, unmarked, measuring 51.3 mm (w) x 57 mm (h), both lugs and pin intact); Glengarry Badge (in silvered bronze, voided, unmarked, measuring 53.2 mm (w) x 57.2 mm (h), both lugs intact); two Shoulder Oak Leaf and Acorn Badges (in bronze gilt, voided, unmarked, measuring 48 mm (w) x 34.3 mm (h) each, both with intact lugs, one of pair of which are pinched); and Shoulder Title (in bronze gilt, voided, unmarked, measuring 44 mm (w) x 20.5 mm (h), both lugs intact). Ranging from fine to better than very fine.
Footnote: The Canadian Scottish Regiment (Princess Mary's) is a Primary Reserve infantry regiment of the Canadian Army based on Vancouver Island in British Columbia. The regiment originated on September 3, 1912 when the 88th Regiment, Victoria Fusiliers, was authorized. When the 16th (Canadian Scottish) Battalion, CEF, was created in 1914, it drew on soldiers from four separate regiments – the 50th Regiment (Gordon Highlanders of Canada) in Victoria, the 72nd Seaforth Highlanders of Canada in Vancouver, the 79th Regiment (Cameron Highlanders of Canada) in Winnipeg, and the 91st Canadian Highlanders (Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders) in Hamilton. The desire was to not perpetuate specific regimental identities and so the new battalion was simply referred to as "Canadian Scottish". The 16th Battalion served in the 3rd Brigade of the 1st Canadian Division. Since its early beginnings, the battalion had a high standard of conduct on the battlefield and was commanded by outstanding leaders. One such was Lieutenant General Sir Arthur Currie who rose to command the Canadian Corps during the First World War. Currie was a master tactician whose skills led the Canadians to victory at the Vimy Ridge, the Amiens, and the intense last Hundred Days campaign which ended the Great War. Four members of the 16th Battalion were awarded the Victoria Cross. After the war, the battalion disbanded, and in the 1920 re-organization of the Militia, in the wake of the work of the Otter Commission, a new regiment was created amalgamating the 50th Regiment and the 88th Regiment Victoria Fusiliers, and named "The Canadian Scottish Regiment". The title "(Princess Mary's)" was appended in 1948 by permission of King George VI and Mary, Princess Royal and Countess of Harewood, who had consented to become colonel-in-chief of the regiment in 1930, being also colonel-in-chief of the Royal Scots (The Royal Regiment) since 1927, and to whom the Canadian Scottish had been allied in 1927. The Canadian Scottish were unusual in 1939 in having two battalions on the strength of the Canadian Militia. The 1st Battalion was mobilized for overseas service in 1940 and trained in Debert, Nova Scotia, until August 1941, from where it moved to the United Kingdom as part of the 3rd Canadian Infantry Division. On June 6, 1944 C Company was in the first wave ashore in Normandy on Juno Beach, the rest of the battalion following in the second wave. The battalion proceeded to advance a total of six miles inland – farther than any other assault brigade of the British Second Army that day. The regiment went on to earn seventeen battle honours, including one for the liberation of Wagenborgen, a Dutch village; this last honour was not awarded until the 1990s. Members of The Canadian Scottish Regiment have also been involved in peacekeeping missions; notably in Egypt, Golan Heights, Cyprus, Croatia, Bosnia, and Sierra Leone, along with serving on combat operations with the Canadian Expeditionary Force in Afghanistan.
Glengarry Badge (in white metal, voided, unmarked, measuring 51.3 mm (w) x 57 mm (h), both lugs and pin intact); Glengarry Badge (in silvered bronze, voided, unmarked, measuring 53.2 mm (w) x 57.2 mm (h), both lugs intact); two Shoulder Oak Leaf and Acorn Badges (in bronze gilt, voided, unmarked, measuring 48 mm (w) x 34.3 mm (h) each, both with intact lugs, one of pair of which are pinched); and Shoulder Title (in bronze gilt, voided, unmarked, measuring 44 mm (w) x 20.5 mm (h), both lugs intact). Ranging from fine to better than very fine.
Footnote: The Canadian Scottish Regiment (Princess Mary's) is a Primary Reserve infantry regiment of the Canadian Army based on Vancouver Island in British Columbia. The regiment originated on September 3, 1912 when the 88th Regiment, Victoria Fusiliers, was authorized. When the 16th (Canadian Scottish) Battalion, CEF, was created in 1914, it drew on soldiers from four separate regiments – the 50th Regiment (Gordon Highlanders of Canada) in Victoria, the 72nd Seaforth Highlanders of Canada in Vancouver, the 79th Regiment (Cameron Highlanders of Canada) in Winnipeg, and the 91st Canadian Highlanders (Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders) in Hamilton. The desire was to not perpetuate specific regimental identities and so the new battalion was simply referred to as "Canadian Scottish". The 16th Battalion served in the 3rd Brigade of the 1st Canadian Division. Since its early beginnings, the battalion had a high standard of conduct on the battlefield and was commanded by outstanding leaders. One such was Lieutenant General Sir Arthur Currie who rose to command the Canadian Corps during the First World War. Currie was a master tactician whose skills led the Canadians to victory at the Vimy Ridge, the Amiens, and the intense last Hundred Days campaign which ended the Great War. Four members of the 16th Battalion were awarded the Victoria Cross. After the war, the battalion disbanded, and in the 1920 re-organization of the Militia, in the wake of the work of the Otter Commission, a new regiment was created amalgamating the 50th Regiment and the 88th Regiment Victoria Fusiliers, and named "The Canadian Scottish Regiment". The title "(Princess Mary's)" was appended in 1948 by permission of King George VI and Mary, Princess Royal and Countess of Harewood, who had consented to become colonel-in-chief of the regiment in 1930, being also colonel-in-chief of the Royal Scots (The Royal Regiment) since 1927, and to whom the Canadian Scottish had been allied in 1927. The Canadian Scottish were unusual in 1939 in having two battalions on the strength of the Canadian Militia. The 1st Battalion was mobilized for overseas service in 1940 and trained in Debert, Nova Scotia, until August 1941, from where it moved to the United Kingdom as part of the 3rd Canadian Infantry Division. On June 6, 1944 C Company was in the first wave ashore in Normandy on Juno Beach, the rest of the battalion following in the second wave. The battalion proceeded to advance a total of six miles inland – farther than any other assault brigade of the British Second Army that day. The regiment went on to earn seventeen battle honours, including one for the liberation of Wagenborgen, a Dutch village; this last honour was not awarded until the 1990s. Members of The Canadian Scottish Regiment have also been involved in peacekeeping missions; notably in Egypt, Golan Heights, Cyprus, Croatia, Bosnia, and Sierra Leone, along with serving on combat operations with the Canadian Expeditionary Force in Afghanistan.
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Item : C6490
Canada. Five Canadian Scottish Regiment (Princess Mary's) Badges
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