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 Wednesday, January 30, 2008
Gold Star Mothers Group
Posted by Fred

Collectors of military medals usually find themselves thinking of soldiers enduring great hardships, accomplishing heroic feats and sometimes dying in battle. Rarely do they think about the dead soldier’s next of kin. In the US the mothers of soldiers who died in war are known as Gold Star Mothers. After WWI there was an organization for Gold Star Mothers and in the late 1920’s and early 1930’s this group made several pilgrimages to visit the graves of fallen American soldiers in European cemeteries. A medal was issued for participating in these trips and illustrated below is such a medal as part of a privately assembled group of medals all belonging to a Gold Star Mother. Not knowing anything more about these medals I can only guess that the original owner of these medals was from Wisconsin and that she was a good shot who was willing to travel to Florida to compete or relocated there. The gold star pin above the group was established by Congress in 1947 and is not part of the illustrated group of medals.



1/30/2008 11:58:41 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Wednesday, January 23, 2008
Advice for New Collectors and the Rest of Us
Posted by Fred

Advice to New (and old) Collectors

A lot of collector sites have advice for the new collector. The tried and true wisdom that we have all heard before like, buy the book first and always buy the highest quality you can afford. To that sage advice I would add two things; first after you buy the book be sure to read the introductions which usually contain a gold mine of basic information.

Second and you will not read this anywhere else that I know of: Don't run with the herd.

Find a field or specialty that isn't being collected by everyone else. If possible find something that interests you but isn't popular and blaze your own trail. Within a few years you will develop a reputation and people will be coming to you as the expert. Instead of paying the inflated prices of the highly collected areas you will be on the ground level finding all sorts of interesting bargains. For example I started collecting US state and local issue war service medals and German states medals in the mid 1960's. Everyone else that I knew was into nazi stuff. I was asked once 'why do you keep beating yourself to death with that junk?" Well they are still in the nazi stuff and I hope they are happy with it. When I look at all that I have collected I know I have made the right choice. The current prices in my collecting specialties have validated my choice financially. My personal satisfaction is immeasurable and all at a fraction of the cost that the nazi stuff would have cost me over the years. Follow your heart over the long haul and you will never regret it. Fred



1/23/2008 12:45:48 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Wednesday, January 16, 2008
German Military Veterans in America
Posted by Fred

 

I have been collecting medals and badges of the German veterans groups in America for many years. The field is huge, uncataloged and the German terminology and use of abbreviations can be a challenge even to someone who can read the German. Here is an example using the scan below. The cross on the left is black enamel on silver. The inscription “DEUTSCHER KRIEGER VEREIN S.F.” translates as German Soldiers (war veterans) Association San Francisco. The key word here is Verein which usually but not always implies a local group.

The next item is a similar cross inscribed “DEUTSHER KRIEGER BUND N.A.” which translates as German Soldiers League (or union) of North America. The word Bund used here usually but not always indicates an organization on a state or national level. This cross is suspended from a brooch of crossed cannons and two shields, one American and the other German. The front cannon is inscribed with the initials “D.M.V.E.” which probably means “DEUTSCHER MILITAER VEREIN E….” German Military (including peace time veterans) Association “ and the letter “E” which is an abbreviation for a place name that begins with that letter. In this case probably another place in California since the enameling on both crosses looks like the work of one manufacturer.



1/16/2008 1:10:31 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Thursday, January 10, 2008
The Extermination of History
Posted by Fred

The Death of Gold Medals

With the current boom in the price of gold almost at 900.00 per ounce what is going to happen to the many gold medals out there, many of them military? The last time gold boomed almost thirty years ago there was mass destruction of gold medals and I can see no reason that this isn’t happening again. I have seen items listed on eBay stating that if some one doesn’t buy the item it will be melted. Then there are other items like this Kansas City school group begging for some one to save it from the melting pot. Sadly I fear that this group along with many other historic gold items will be lost to us forever

PS Just as I predicted, even with the small decline in gold prices, not one collector out there thought this group was worth saving so take a look at this picture;  it is the last time this group was ever seen !



1/10/2008 1:08:29 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Wednesday, January 09, 2008
Dueppel Cross
Posted by Fred

Dueppel Cross

I love to take my wife shopping for two reasons. First of all she is a good shopper and demands quality at a good price. If the quality isn’t there or the price is too high she won’t buy at all. Second when I drop her off at the shopping mall I am free to hit the local antique malls. Last week just after New Years, which is a good time to see what new dealers have moved into your local mall, had one of those days for me. I got lucky after I dropped off the wife and found a Duepple Cross at a bargain price which was very unusual considering that the dealer’s other items were all very high or over priced in my opinion. The Prussian Duppel (the letter u has an umlaut on the medal) Cross was given to the troops who participated in the storming and capture of the Danish fortress of Dueppel in 1864. The Prussians numbered 16,000 which is a small number as far as campaign medals go.

This type of military medal is called a campaign medal which to my way of thinking is the best kind of military medal to collect. Campaign medals are historic mile stones and were given to every soldier that took part in the war, battle or campaign for which it was issued. For the most part the issuing of campaign medals to all, even the lowest ranking soldiers started during the Napoleonic wars.



1/9/2008 1:44:48 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Tuesday, January 01, 2008
Collecting and Budgets
Posted by Fred

 Happy New Year to you all. As we know New Years is when many people make resolutions and plans for the coming year. Most collectors are married to non-collecting spouses and these spouses usually worry about how the money is being spent when they don‘t do the spending. That means the first thing a collector must do is to teach the spouse that buying collectibles is an investment just like stocks and bonds only a lot more fun to own, and that collectibles unlike adult toys i.e. snowmobiles, fishing boats, sporting equipment and jewelry, will probably be sold at a profit someday instead of depreciating down to almost nothing. Once this has been accomplished the collector will find that he is probably collecting on a budget. The thing to remember here is that a budget just divides up an income into smaller dedicated funds on a continual basis. Therefore from every pay check, even if you don’t buy any collectibles during that pay period, set aside the money budgeted for collectibles and just let the collectibles fund grow until you find something you need to buy. When you sell an unwanted item the money from that sale should also go into the same collectibles fund. Then when something good comes along you can buy it outright and feel just like a hunter with a license and plenty of ammunition.



1/1/2008 1:01:51 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0]