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Welcome to Historical Firearms, a site that looks at the history, development and use of firearms, as well as wider military history
How Major Robert Cain won the Victoria Cross during Operation Market Garden Perhaps the most famous actions involving the Projector, Infantry, Anti-Tank (PIAT) during Operation Market Garden are those carried out by Major Robert Cain, of 2nd Bn South...
How Major Robert Cain won the Victoria Cross during Operation Market Garden Perhaps the most famous actions involving the Projector, Infantry, Anti-Tank (PIAT) during Operation Market Garden are those carried out by Major Robert Cain, of 2nd Bn South...

How Major Robert Cain won the Victoria Cross during Operation Market Garden

Perhaps the most famous actions involving the Projector, Infantry, Anti-Tank (PIAT) during Operation Market Garden are those carried out by Major Robert Cain, of 2nd Bn South Staffordshire Regt. Cain and his men had been blocked from reaching Lt.Col. John Frost’s PARA’s at the bridge in Arnhem and had formed a defensive perimeter in nearby Oosterbeek. 

Throughout the battle the British Airborne forces relied heavily on the PIAT and Major Cain put the weapon to good use. At one point during the battle he used a PIAT, in its secondary in-direct mortar role, in an attempt to drop bombs onto a self-propelled gun which was positioned on the other side of a house. Sadly,  Cain wasn’t able to destroy the SPG before his spotter, Lieutenant Meikle, was killed by enemy fire and he was wounded by falling masonry. 

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Projector, Infantry, Anti-Tank - PIAT (source)

On the 21st September he engaged and destroyed an enemy tank with the PIAT. He then moved to take on a second tank but as he fired the bomb prematurely detonated just as it left the weapon - likely due to a faulty fuse or a misaligned bomb. Cain was wounded again being thrown back by the blast and being hit by metal fragments.  

Throughout the fighting Cain displayed massive courage engaging German armoured vehicles at close ranges with the PIAT personally destroying or helping to destroy half a dozen vehicles. By the 25th Sept Cain & his men had run out of ammo for their PIATs and he himself began using a 2in mortar, fired at high angle, to try and hold the enemy off. 

For his gallantry during the battle he was awarded the Victoria Cross, he was the only Arnhem VC recipient to survive the battle.

Here’s Cain’s VC citation in full:

“In Holland on 19th September, 1944, Major Cain was commanding a rifle company of the South Staffordshire Regiment during the Battle of Arnhem when his company was cut off from the rest of the battalion and during the next six days was closely engaged with enemy tanks, self-propelled guns and infantry. The Germans made repeated attempts to break into the company position by infiltration and had they succeeded in doing so the whole situation of the Airborne Troops would have been jeopardised.

Major Cain, by his outstanding devotion to duty and remarkable powers of leadership, was to a large extent personally responsible for saving a vital sector from falling into the hands of the enemy.

On 20th September a Tiger tank approached the area held by his company and Major Cain went out alone to deal with it armed with a Piat. Taking up a position he held his fire until the tank was only 20 yards away when he opened up. The tank immediately halted and turned its guns on him, shooting away a corner of the house near where this officer was lying. Although wounded by machine gun bullets and falling masonry, Major Cain continued firing until he had scored several direct hits, immobilised the tank and supervised the bringing up of a 75 mm. howitzer which completely destroyed it. Only then would he consent to have his wounds dressed.

In the next morning this officer drove off three more tanks by the fearless use of his Piat, on each occasion leaving cover and taking up position in open ground with complete disregard for his personal safety.

During the following days, Major Cain was everywhere where danger threatened, moving amongst his men and encouraging them by his fearless example to hold out. He refused rest and medical attention in spite of the fact that his hearing had been seriously impaired because of a perforated eardrum and he was suffering from multiple wounds.

On 25 September the enemy made a concerted attack on Major Cain’s position, using self-propelled guns, flame throwers and infantry. By this time the last Piat had been put out of action and Major Cain was armed with only a light 2" mortar. However, by a skilful use of this weapon and his daring leadership of the few men still under his command, he completely demoralised the enemy who, after an engagement lasting more than three hours, withdrew in disorder.

Throughout the whole course of the Battle of Arnhem, Major Cain showed superb gallantry. His powers of endurance and leadership were the admiration of all his fellow officers and stories of his valour were being constantly exchanged amongst the troops. His coolness and courage under incessant fire could not be surpassed.”

You can read about more Victoria Cross actions and recipients here.

Sources:

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The London Gazette, 31 October 1944 (source)

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PIAT In Action: How Fusilier Jefferson Won the Victoria Cross

On the 6th May, 1944, Fusilier Francis Arthur Jefferson, of the Lancashire Fusiliers engaged a German counter-attack on his battalion’s position destroying an enemy tank with a PIAT. During the Battle of Monte Cassino the 2nd Battalion, the Lancashire Fusiliers had attacked a section of the Gustav defence line. 

An anti-tank obstacle had held up the Fusiliers’ supporting tanks and the battalion had pushed forward alone and began to establish a defensive position. With no tank support and no anti-tank guns available the Fusiliers were in an exposed position. The enemy made a counter attack with two Mark IV Panzers and supporting infantry, opening fire at close range, killing a PIAT team trying to engage them. 

23 year old Fusilier Jefferson, of Ulverston, Lancashire, grabbed a nearby PIAT and moved forward to engage the advancing Panzers. The citation for his Victoria Cross explains that:

“running forward alone under heavy fire, took up a position behind a hedge; as he could not see properly, he came into the open, and standing up under a hail of bullets, fired at the leading tank which was now only twenty yards away. It burst into flames and all the crew were killed.”

Fusilier Jefferson then reloaded his PIAT and advanced on the second tank but this began to withdraw before Jefferson could get within effective range (within 50m). The citation concludes: 

“By this time our own tanks had arrived and the enemy counter-attack was smashed with heavy casualties. Fusilier Jefferson’s gallant act not merely saved the lives of his Company and caused many casualties to the Germans, but also broke up the enemy counter-attack and had a decisive effect on the subsequent operation. His supreme gallantry and disregard of personal risk contributed very, largely to the success of the action.”

Frank Jefferson remained in the army until 1946, having joined in 1942, demobilising with the rank of lance corporal. He was one of seven recipients of the Victoria Cross, Britain’s highest award for gallantry, for actions involving the PIAT.

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Frank Jefferson with his parents after an being awarded the Victoria Cross by King George VI at Buckingham Palace (source)

His Victoria Cross was sadly stolen from his home in Bolton during a burglary in 1982, this greatly depressed Frank who began drinking heavily. He died in September 1982, at the age of 61, when he was hit by a train. His Victoria Cross has not been recovered. 

Sources:

Photo #1: PIAT Mk1 (source)

Photo #2: Frank Jefferson pictured with PIAT (source)

Photo #3: ‘A PIAT (Projectile Infantry Anti-Tank) in action at a firing range in Tunisia, 19 February 1943′ (IWM Source)

Victoria Cross Citation, London Gazette, 13/07/1944, (source)


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Owen Gun In Action: How Lieutenant Albert Chowne Won the Victoria Cross

In 1945 Lieutenant Albert Chowne of the 2/2nd Australian Infantry won the Victoria Cross for bravery while leading his men in an attack on Japanese positions.  

Chowne was a veteran of the North Africa campaign and was wounded during the Battle of El Alamein, during fighting in Papua New Guinea in 1943 he won the Military Medal and rose through the ranks becoming a lieutenant in 1944. He was killed while leading his platoon in an attack on Japanese positions lining a ridge near Wewak on New Guinea in March 1945. During his fatal charge he fired his Owen Gun from the hip clearing a series of enemy positions. 

On the 6th September 1945, the War Office announced that Lieutenant Chowne would be posthumously awarded the Victoria Cross. Below is the citation for the award published in the London Gazette:

For most conspicuous bravery, brilliant leadership and devotion to duty during an attack on an enemy position on a narrow ridge near Dagua, New Guinea, on 25th March, 1945. After the capture of Dagua, the main enemy force withdrew southwards from the beach to previously prepared positions on the flank of the Division. Further movement towards Wewak was impossible while this threat to the flank existed and the Battalion was ordered to destroy the enemy force.

 'A’ Company, after making contact with the enemy on a narrow ridge, was ordered to attack the position. The leading Platoon in the attack came under heavy fire from concealed enemy machine guns site a on a small rise dominating the approach. In the initial approach one member of this Platoon was killed and nine wounded, including the Platoon Commander, and the enemy continued to inflict casualties on our troops. Without awaiting orders, Lieutenant Chowne, whose Platoon was in reserve, instantly appreciated the plight of the leading Platoon and rushed the enemy’s position. Running up a steep, narrow track, he hurled grenades which knocked out two enemy Light- Machine Guns. 

Then calling on his men to follow him and firing his submachine gun from the hip, he charged the enemy’s position. Although he sustained two serious wounds in the chest, the impetus of his charge carried him 50 yards forward under the most intense machine gun and rifle fire. Lieutenant Chowne accounted for two more Japanese before he was killed standing, over three foxholes occupied by the enemy. The superb heroism and self-sacrifice of this officer, culminating in his death, resulted in the capture of this strongly-held enemy position, ensured the further immediate success of his Company in this area and paved the way directly for the continuance of the Division’s advance to Wewak. 

Sources:

Images: 1 2

The London Gazette (Supplement), 15th August 1944, No. 37253, p.4467,(source)


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The STEN & PIAT in Action: How Company Sergeant Major Stanley Hollis Won the Victoria Cross

During the inland push following the successful Normandy landings Company Sergeant Major Stanley Hollis of the 6th Green Howards won the Victoria Cross for two conspicuous acts of gallantry. By the time he landed on Gold Beach on the 6th June Hollis was a seasoned veteran. He enlisted in the Territorial Army in 1939 and joined up when the war broke out, he first saw action with the the British Expeditionary Force in France in 1940. He fought in North Africa with the Eighth Army and in Sicily in 1943.

The following is taken from Hollis’ Victoria Cross citation recounting his actions: 

“In Normandy on 6 June 1944 Company Sergeant-Major Hollis went with his company commander to investigate two German pill-boxes which had been by-passed as the company moved inland from the beaches. Hollis instantly rushed straight at the pillbox, firing his Sten gun into the first pill-box, He jumped on top of the pillbox, re-charged his magazine, threw a grenade in through the door and fired his Sten gun into it, killing two Germans and taking the remainder prisoners.”

Later the same day Hollis put the PIAT (Projector, Infantry, Anti Tank) to good use against an entrenched German field gun. 

“C.S.M. Hollis pushed right forward to engage the [field] gun with a PIAT from a house at 50 yards range… He later found that two of his men had stayed behind in the house… In full view of, the enemy who were continually firing at him, he went forward alone…distract their attention from the other men. Under cover of his diversion, the two men were able to get back.

Wherever the fighting was heaviest he appeared, displaying the utmost gallantry… It was largely through his heroism and resource that the Company’s objectives were gained and casualties were not heavier, and by his own bravery he saved the lives of many of his men.”

In September Hollis was wounded and invalided back to Britain, in October 1944 he was awarded his Victoria Cross by King George VI. After the war Hollis became an engineer and owned a pub, he died in 1972, aged 59.

Sources:

Images: 1 2 3

The London Gazette (Supplement), 15th August 1944, No. 36658 pp. 3807–3808 (source)


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Our men fell by dozens - horses and men blown into the air - and we ran everyone through we could get at. We had to cut our way through thousands of them. I cannot tell you the horrors we went through. we were driven to desperation, and fought like madmen.
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A light dragoon private recounting his experience of the Charge of the Light Brigade during the Battle of Balaclava, 25th October 1854. 

Of approximately 670 cavalrymen 110 were killed during the charge and another 161 were wounded. Following the creation of the Victoria Cross in 1856, six members of the Light Brigade were awarded the new medal for their gallantry during the charge. For all of those men it was their weapons and skill-at-arms that enabled them to survive the battle. 

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The Charge of the Light Brigade at Balaklava by William Simpson (1855) [source]


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Recent Recap

For once it hasn’t been too long since the last recap, roughly a month, but a lot of ground has been covered from more early breechloaders through to experimental squeezebore ammunition. Other posts include a look at the Colt Model 1971, the Norwegian Krag rifles made for the Nazis during World War Two and a look at the Schwarzlose Model 1898, a pistol years ahead of its time.

Other non-firearms posts have looked at the history and origins of the Victoria Cross, Hardit Malik - the first Indian fighter pilot and lots of quotes of the day.

The Historical Firearms Book Club will be returning this month. With reviews of some of the books I’ve been reading lately and also hopefully reviews from you guys too. I’m hoping to post around 26th February so if you’d like to submit a short review of a book you’ve read recently please do.  More info about that here. 

In other news the Patreon page now has some physical rewards outside of the monthly hi-res desktop backgrounds. There are now bookmarks and keyrings available. More on that here.

Thanks again for following and reading the blog. Thanks for your support, much more to come and some new projects in the offing! if you have any questions, suggestions feel free to send me a message here.  


Firearms:

Historical Trivia:

Miscellaneous History:

Quotes of the Day 


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On the topic of the Victoria cross: what will happen when the metal runs out? Has there been discussions of these eventuality?

Good question. There is a lot of myth surrounding the origin of the bronze used for the medals. Originally it was long held that it was taken from captured Russian guns, which would make sense when you consider the medal was established in the wake of the Crimean War.

However, research found that the current cascabel bronze originates from a pair of Chinese cannon held at the Woolwich arsenal. But it is doubted that every medal ever made has come from this source.  

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The remaining bronze block weighs 10kg (source)

The future source of the bronze may come from similarly captured guns (ones captured during Victoria’s reign to maintain a sort of link) however, this raises the question of damaging museum pieces. I have read that the cannons the cascabels was taken from still exist, perhaps they may be a future source.

The VC is a symbol of bravery and there is an argument for the material to come from something that was ‘captured’ in battle but I feel that the medal would lose none of its significance if it were made from a commercial block of bronze. It is the recipients’ actions which are the true source of their value and significance. 

More on the VC here

Thanks for the question

The Victoria Cross

The Victoria Cross (VC), Britain’s best known military award was established 160 years ago today, the 29th January 1856. It is Britain’s highest military decoration awarded for valour in the face of the enemy.  1,358 medals have been awarded with 1,355 individuals being decorated. Three recipients have won the medal twice, this sees the individual award an additional clasp, this called the VC and Bar. Only three men have won the VC twice: doctors Noel Chavasse and Arthur Martin-Leake and New Zealander Charles Upham.

The VC was created as an award for British servicemen of all ranks following an outcry from the public to recognise the heroism being reported by William Russell newspaper dispatches from the Crimea. Prior to this bravery was often rewarded by promotion, orders of chivalry or gifts - most commonly among officers. However, by this time other countries had instituted awards such as the Legion of Honour introduced by Napoleon in 1802. Following the end of the Crimean War Queen Victoria ordered the War Office to create a new medal for valour in January 1856. One suggestion for the name of the new decoration was The Military Order of Victoria however, this was dropped in favour of the simpler name, Victoria Cross. 

The casting of a simple medal was ordered that would recognise neither birth nor class. The medals were ordered to be cast from the bronze cascabel’s of two Russian cannon captured at Sevastopol. Each medal weighs approximately 50 ounces, one of the original cascabels remains (see image #2). However, there has been some investigation into the true origin of the bronze, with Chinese cannons being found to be the actual source. However, it’s unknown if these were captured from the Russians or had been taken from the Chinese earlier during the Opium Wars. Regardless of the bronze’s source the same metal has been used in the casting of VCs for 160 years.

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Diagram showing a cannon’s cascabel (source)

The remaining block of bronze (see image #2) weighs 358 oz (10 kg) and is stored in a Royal Logistics Corps vault and is only removed under armed guard. An estimated 85 more VCs can be cast from the remaining bronze. The medals have a red ribbon (although until 1919 the VCs awarded to members of the Royal Navy were dark blue) and have the crown of Saint Edward, a lion and the inscription ‘For Valour’ which was chosen by Queen Victoria. The recipient is also paid an additional lifetime pension, which for private soldiers during the 19th century was very rare.

The first medal was awarded to Charles Lucas of the Royal Navy for his heroism in August 1854. Lucas was aboard the HMS Hecla during the bombardment of the Russian fortress of Bomarsund when a shell from the fortress landed on the Hecla’s deck before it could explode Lucas picked up the shell and threw it over to the ship’s side. Lucas was promoted and upon the recommendation of Admiral Charles Napier he was retroactively awarded the first VC. 110 other VCs were awarded for heroic actions during the Crimean War.

The VC is awarded to those who have carried out an act of “ …most conspicuous bravery, or some daring or pre-eminent act of valour or self-sacrifice, or extreme devotion to duty in the presence of the enemy.” 111 medals were issued for the Crimean War, 182 for the Indian Mutiny, 23 for the Zulu War, 78 during the Boer War, 181 during the Second World War and a staggering 628 during World War One. However, for various reasons eight medals have been forfeited since 1861, for reasons varying from theft to bigamy. No recipient has had their VC forfeited since the 1920s. 

The VC was initially awarded to all British subjects but since the formation of the Commonwealth member nations have moved to award their own decoration. Australia, Canada and New Zealand all award their own versions of the VC. The most recent British VC issued was awarded to Lance Corporal Joshua Leakey of the Parachute Regiment for gallantry while fighting in Afghanistan. Leakey was awarded his VC in February 2015 for organising medical evacuations, re-siting machine guns and engaging the enemy under heavy fire.

Sources:

Image One Source

Image Two Source

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Recent Recap:

The last month or so has been pretty hectic and I haven’t been able to post as much as I’d have liked.  I managed to post something almost every day and there have been posts on everything from the FG-42 to the Browning SA-22.  I wrote a piece about the weapons I handled during a recent visit to the UK’s National Firearms Centre and there have also been posts on the fall of the Berlin Wall and the first Muslim to win the Victoria Cross

Thanks to everyone who recently followed Historical Firearms on twitter, now approaching 100 followers over there which is great.  Take a look at the Twitter page here. In the last couple of days there have also been an influx of new subscribers to the mailing list which is fantastic.

Thanks again for following and reading, if you have any questions, suggestions feel free to send me a message here.    

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Firearms:

FG-42

National Firearms Centre Visit (mostly rare firearms)

Lancaster Howdah Pistol

Browning SA-22

W.W.Greener .22 Martini-Henry Conversion

Colt CMG-1 & CMG-2

Historical Trivia:

Cartridge Paper

Miscellaneous History:

French Colonial Troops (WWI)

First Indian to Win the Victoria Cross: Khudadad Khan

Dickey Chapelle: 25 Years a War Correspondent

Aviation Firsts: First Take-Off from a Warship

Rise & Fall of the Berlin Wall

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As always If you have any requests for firearms you like to see on the page then please feel free to let me know!

First Indian to Win the Victoria Cross: Khudadad Khan

During the First Battle of Ypres on the 31st October 1914, Khudadad Khan became both the first Indian and the first Muslim to win the Victoria Cross, Britain’s highest decoration for gallantry.  Khan was a sepoy (private) of the 129th Duke of Connaught's Own Baluchis a regiment of the British Indian Army raised in the Punjab Province of British India, present-day Pakistan. 

A photograph of the still recovering Khudadad Khan in a January 1915 edition of the Daily Mirror (source)

Khan was part of the first Indian Force to reach Europe in autumn 1914, on the 31st October his battalion was in action near the Belgian village of Hollebeke, just south of Ypres.  His medal citation describes Khan’s act of bravery in the face of a dogged German attack:

“On 31 October 1914, at Hollebeke in Belgium, the British officer in charge of the detachment having been wounded and the other [Vickers] gun put out of action by a shell, Sepoy Khudadad, though himself wounded, remained at his gun until all the other men of the gun detachment had been killed”

Hal Bevan Petman’s painting of Subedar Khudadad Khan VC, c.1935 (source)

Each Indian battalion, like its British counterparts, had two Vickers Machine Guns, it was one of these which Khan manned throughout the battle.  With the other Vickers knocked out and the rest of his own gun’s crew killed as the German infantry approached Khan continued to work the gun although badly wounded until he too was incapacitated.  His actions and those of the other men manning the Vickers guns bought time for reinforcements to be brought up to halt the German breakthrough.

Khudadad Khan was awarded his Victoria Cross by King George V on one of his visits to France.  The 129th Baluchis went on to fight a number of engagements in Belgium and Northern France in 1914 before joining the campaign in German East Africa.  Khan remained in the Indian Army after the war rising to the rank of Subedar by 1935.  He died in 1971.

Sources:

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Major Charles Allix Lavington Yate VC

Major Charles Yate, of the 2nd King’s Own Yorkshire Light Infantry, was awarded the Victoria Cross for his actions at the Battle of Le Cateau on 26th August 1914 when the company he was commanding failed to receive the order to retire.   The British had been in heavy contact with the advancing German infantry all day, allied forces had been pulling back to form a defensive line along the Marne but the British turned at Le Cateau to slow the enemy pursuit. 

Yate was a career officer who had joined the British Army in 1892 and had come 9th in his class at the Royal Military Academy, Sandhurst.  He had seen action on the North West Frontier of India, he also served in the Boer War and was then attached the Japanese forces during the Russo-Japanese War as an observer. He was fluent in half a dozen languages including Hindustani, French and German.  By the time of the Great War Yate was a senior officer of the 2nd Battalion of the King’s Own Yorkshire Light Infantry.

At the Battle of Le CateauMajor Yate and two companies of the King’s Own Yorkshire Light Infantry were one of several British elements who did not receive the order to retire in time and were subsequently enveloped and destroyed by the advancing Germans. Yate’s company held their position until there was just 19 men left unwounded.  After several more hours fighting, when he and his men had run out of ammunition, Yate led the survivors in a bayonet charge against the attacking German infantry.  

Major Yate was captured, along with his surviving men, and interned as a prisoner of war (photograph two was taken shortly after his capture). He escaped a month later on the 19th of September.  However, he was cornered and questioned by suspicious German civilians and instead of allowing himself to be returned to prison he took his own life with a razorblade.  
There has been much speculation over why Yate did this, with some suggesting he had been interviewed by German intelligence while a prisoner and Yate believed them to suspect him of being a peacetime spy in Germany.  While others believe that his time spent in Japan had influenced him to take on the belief that surrender was worse than death for a soldier.  Regardless of his reasoning Yate was awarded the Victoria Cross for his actions at the Battle of Le Cateau.  He was one of the first men to receive the VC during the First World War.

Sources:

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Victoria Cross & Bar 

Since the creation of the Victoria Cross, Britain’s highest military honour, in January 1856, 1,357 medals have been awarded for conspicuous acts of gallantry.

The criteria for winning the medal is such that only three men have been awarded it more than once.  When the Victoria Cross is awarded for a second time the recipient is entitled to add a ‘bar’ to their medals’ ribbon. Bars or clasps are commonly added when a medal is won more than once or for individual battles or campaigns if a medal is commemorating a particular war. For instance the Crimea Medal had a number of bars available to men who served and fought in different battles during the Crimean War.

Lieutenant Colonel Arthur Martin-Leake, before being awarded his second VC

Lieutenant Colonel Arthur Martin-Leake of the Imperial Yeomanry became the first man to win the Victoria Cross twice when he won his second in 1914.  Martin-Leake was awarded his first VC during the Boer War when in 1902, he went to the aid of several wounded men during an action at Vlakfontein.  During his attempts to aid a wounded officer he was shot three times refusing aid until others around him had been attended to.  Martin-Leake was invalided back to Britain where he continued his medical studies.  In 1914, at the age of 40, he joined the Royal Army Medical Corps as a Lieutenant and during fighting in the Belgian town of Zonnebeke he rescued a number wounded soldiers under enemy fire.  For his gallantry he was awarded a clasp/bar for his Victoria Cross, becoming the first man to be awarded the Victoria Cross twice.  Lieutenant Colonel Martin-Leake survived the war and died in 1953.

Captain Noel Chavasse, RAMC

In 1917, Captain Noel Godfrey Chavasse, also of the Royal Army Medical Corps, became the second man to win the Victoria Cross twice. Both of Chavasse’s acts of bravery involved rescuing wounded men under heavy enemy fire.  He was first awarded the VC in August 1916, when he saved 20 badly wounded men from enemy fire in No Mans Land near Guillemont, France, carrying several wounded men 500 yards under fire.  A year later in July 1917, Chavasse once again put the lives of others ahead of his own during an action at Wieltje, Belgium.  He himself was wounded during the action but continued to treat wounded men and also search No Mans Land for wounded troops under fire.  He worked until exhausted by his wounds, he died in August 1917.  Captain Chavasse was the only Victoria Cross recipient to win the award twice for actions during World War One.  

 

Captain Charles Upham, 20th Infantry Battalion (New Zealand)

Captain Charles Hazlitt Upham of the 20th Battalion (New Zealand) is the most recent recipient of the Victoria Cross and Bar.  His first Victoria Cross was won for actions between 22nd and 30th May 1941, during the German Invasion of Crete where he led a platoon against German machine gun positions - destroying three of them personally with grenades.  Later when the battalion fell back on new positions a company became separated and Upham and a corporal were sent to guide then back, in the process Upham killed two enemy soldiers.  
On the 25th May Upham was wounded by shrapnel but remained with his men, fighting off an attacking German force, killing some 40 enemy infantry.  When his platoon was ordered to fall back he remained behind to warn other platoons they were falling back, in doing so he was isolated from his unit, when attacked by two Germans he played dead before surprising and killing both at close quarters with a rifle using only one hand, the other wounded.
Despite his wounds and a lingering case of dysentery Upham remained with his men before he was again wounded and had to be evacuated to Egypt.   

His second VC was issued for actions during the First Battle of El Alamein, during which he commanded a company of the 20th Battalion. During the night of the 14th-15th July 1942, Upham and his men attacked positions on El Ruweisat Ridge when a German force attacked, Upham was once again wounded twice but remained with his men attacking enemy strong points.  During the action Captain Upham destroyed an enemy tank and several vehicles with grenades before he was shot through the elbow by an enemy machine gun.  However, he remained with his men directing defenses against a German counter-attack before he became too weak and was taken to an aid station.   Once his wound had been dressed he again returned to his men defending the ridge, throughout the 15th July Upham and his company were heavily shelled before the depleted company, down to just six men according to Upham’s VC citation, was overrun by the enemy - the exhausted and badly wounded Upham was unable to move and was captured by the enemy. 

Upham spent the rest of the war as a prisoner of war, making numerous escape attempts before being interned in the infamous Colditz Castle.  When Colditz was liberated by the Allies in early 1945, Upham was eager to see action again however, the war ended before he had the opportunity.  He was given the bar to his earlier Victoria Cross by King George VI on 11th May 1945.  After the war he became a successful farmer and passed away in 1994 at the age of 86.  Upham remained the only New Zealander to have won the Victoria Cross twice and the only combatant, Martin-Leake and Chavasse both being doctors, to have won the Victoria Cross.

Lt.Col. Martin-Leake’s VC & Bar (Source)

Capt. Chavasse’s Medals (Source)

Capt. Upham’s Medals (Source)

Account of their actions based on their medal citations

Recent Recap

This week’s recap looks at posts over the last two weeks.  Some particularly interesting posts have covered the evolution of the Springfield M1903, the Tube magazine in military rifles and also at the only three men to be awarded Britain’s medal for valour, the Victoria Cross - twice.

Other posts have looked at a number of fascinating pistols including the Russian OTs-38 silent pistol, the Colt M1902 and the Adam’s revolver.  There have also been some interesting historical trivia posts looking at the first Royal Navy ship sank by the Japanese during WWII and to commemorate the 60th anniversary of Winston Churchill’s death a look at some photographs of the great man handling various firearms.   

Thanks again for following and reading, if you have any questions, suggestions feel free to send me a message here.

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Firearms:

Pistols:

Colt Model 1902

Adams ‘Dragoon’ Revolver

Russia’s Silent Revolver: The OTs-38

JO-LO-AR - One Handed Pistol

Rifles:

Military Rifles with Tubular Magazines

The Springfield 1903’s False Start

Franklin Roosevelt with a Springfield M1903

Submachine Guns:

BSA Thompson 1926

Quote of the Day:

Holocaust Survivor, academic and activist Elie Wiesel on the importance of continuing remembrance

President Theodore Roosevelt personally intervening in the matter of the Springfield M1903’s first inadequate bayonet

British General John Burgoyne commenting on the military situation he found upon arriving in North America at the outbreak of the American Revolution

Mikhail Kalashnikov’s last letter to Russia’s Orthodox Church about his regrets about building his infamous rifle

Lord Milner, leader of a diplomatic mission to Russia in March 1917, fatefully inaccurate memorandum

President Theodore Roosevelt’s praise for Lt. John Henry Parker’s use of Gatling Guns at the Battle of San Juan Hill

George Parker, a boy soldier aged just 15 who lied about his age to join up, describes leaving his family to join his regiment at the front during World War One

Field Marshall Bernard Montgomery on the vital importance of infantry

Miscellaneous History:

Rare World War One Colour Photographs by Hans Hildenbrand

Victoria Cross & Bar

Flogging & Field Punishment No.1

Major Charles Allix Lavington Yate VC

British Grenadiers attack up Breed’s Hill at the Battle of Bunker Hill

Winston Churchill and Firearms

Historical Trivia:

Snipe, Sniper, Sniping

HMS Petrel, First Royal Navy Vessel to be Sunk by the Japanese Navy during World War Two

HMS Duke of Kent, The Royal Navy’s Largest Ship of the Line, That Never Was

First to the Glock

Master Posts:

Winston Churchill

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If you have any requests for firearms you like to see on the page then please feel free to let me know!

Recent Recap

This week’s recap looks at posts over the last two weeks.  Some particularly interesting posts have covered the evolution of the Springfield M1903, the Tube magazine in military rifles and also at the only three men to be awarded Britain’s medal for valour, the Victoria Cross - twice.

Other posts have looked at a number of fascinating pistols including the Russian OTs-38 silent pistol, the Colt M1902 and the Adam’s revolver.  There have also been some interesting historical trivia posts looking at the first Royal Navy ship sank by the Japanese during WWII and to commemorate the 60th anniversary of Winston Churchill's death a look at some photographs of the great man handling various firearms.   

Thanks again for following and reading, if you have any questions, suggestions feel free to send me a message here.

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Firearms:

Pistols:

Colt Model 1902

Adams ‘Dragoon’ Revolver

Russia’s Silent Revolver: The OTs-38

JO-LO-AR - One Handed Pistol

Rifles:

Military Rifles with Tubular Magazines

The Springfield 1903’s False Start

Franklin Roosevelt with a Springfield M1903

Submachine Guns:

BSA Thompson 1926

Quote of the Day:

Holocaust Survivor, academic and activist Elie Wiesel on the importance of continuing remembrance

President Theodore Roosevelt personally intervening in the matter of the Springfield M1903’s first inadequate bayonet

British General John Burgoyne commenting on the military situation he found upon arriving in North America at the outbreak of the American Revolution

Mikhail Kalashnikov’s last letter to Russia’s Orthodox Church about his regrets about building his infamous rifle

Lord Milner, leader of a diplomatic mission to Russia in March 1917, fatefully inaccurate memorandum

President Theodore Roosevelt’s praise for Lt. John Henry Parker’s use of Gatling Guns at the Battle of San Juan Hill

George Parker, a boy soldier aged just 15 who lied about his age to join up, describes leaving his family to join his regiment at the front during World War One

Field Marshall Bernard Montgomery on the vital importance of infantry

Miscellaneous History:

Rare World War One Colour Photographs by Hans Hildenbrand

Victoria Cross & Bar

Flogging & Field Punishment No.1

Major Charles Allix Lavington Yate VC

British Grenadiers attack up Breed’s Hill at the Battle of Bunker Hill

Winston Churchill and Firearms

Historical Trivia:

Snipe, Sniper, Sniping

HMS Petrel, First Royal Navy Vessel to be Sunk by the Japanese Navy during World War Two

HMS Duke of Kent, The Royal Navy’s Largest Ship of the Line, That Never Was

First to the Glock

Master Posts:

Winston Churchill

____________________________________________

If you have any requests for firearms you like to see on the page then please feel free to let me know!

Major Charles Allix Lavington Yate VC

Major Charles Yate, of the 2nd King’s Own Yorkshire Light Infantry, was awarded the Victoria Cross for his actions at the Battle of Le Cateau on 26th August 1914 when the company he was commanding failed to receive the order to retire.   The British had been in heavy contact with the advancing German infantry all day, allied forces had been pulling back to form a defensive line along the Marne but the British turned at Le Cateau to slow the enemy pursuit. 

Yate was a career officer who had joined the British Army in 1892 and had come 9th in his class at the Royal Military Academy, Sandhurst.  He had seen action on the North West Frontier of India, he also served in the Boer War and was then attached the Japanese forces during the Russo-Japanese War as an observer. He was also fluent in half a dozen languages including Hindustani, French and German.  By the time of the Great War Yate was a senior officer of the 2nd Battalion of the King’s Own Yorkshire Light Infantry.

At the Battle of Le CateauMajor Yate and two companies of the King’s Own Yorkshire Light Infantry were one of several British elements not ordered to retire in time which were subsequently enveloped and destroyed by the advancing Germans. Yate’s company held their position until there was just 19 men left unwounded.  After several hours fighting Yate and his men had run out of ammunition and he lead the survivors in a bayonet charge against the attacking German infantry.  

Major Yate was captured, along with his surviving men, and interned as a prisoner of war (photograph #2 was taken shortly after his capture) but escaped a month later on the 19th of September. However, he was cornered and questioned by suspicious German civilians and instead of allowing himself to be returned to prison he took his own life with a razorblade.  There has been much speculation over why Yate did this, with some suggesting he had been interviewed by German intelligence while a prisoner and Yate believed them to suspect him of being a peacetime spy in Germany.  While others believe that his time spent in Japan had influenced him to take on the belief that surrender was worse than death for a soldier.  Regardless of his reasoning Yate was awarded the Victoria Cross, one of the first men to receive it during the First World War.

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