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Numismatic Notes Part 6By John Hayward I have compiled this month's notes from just a small part of the extensive
research carried out for some years by Major Charles Townsend TD primarily
at the Royal Mint but also from other unpublished sources. By coincidence an article on South Africa Medals has just been published in the August 2001 issue of Medal News. The information on the 1877-79 Medal and the related clasps that appears therein can be read in conjunction with the notes that follow. We welcome any feedback. ********** The Rare Clasps to the South Africa Medal 1877-79 It is usually recorded that there are five clasps to the South Africa Medal 1877-79: '1877-8', '1877-8-9', '1878', '1878-9' and '1879'. In fact there are two others, which many writers have considered either spurious or of colonial origin, these are '1877' and '1877-9'. Struck from dies held at the Royal Mint, the two were issued in very small quantities. The doubted validity of the two clasps arises mainly from the misinterpretation of General Order 103 of 1880, which far from authorising five clasps only, in fact authorises only one clasp per medal and details the services that would qualify for each. This confusion arose from the attitude of the War Office and its several
changes of mind as witnessed by the three Royal Warrants it received before
the General Order was issued. The General Order which followed promulgated the issue of the medal with one clasp, to be awarded to officers and men of the Regular and Colonial forces and laid down the various combinations of clasp dates to be awarded for the six specified campaigns. The War Office were not clear in their thinking on at least two points.
The first point was addressed in amending Order 134 in October 1880 after a complaint by Colonel H. Rowlands VC, who had led the 1878 expedition against Sekukuni. The Colonial Office raised questions around the second issue, pointing out that some of its forces, without assistance from the Regulars, had been engaged in Griqualand West in 1877. Here the War Office agreed that in cases where Colonial forces only had been engaged some of the qualifying dates in the General Order could be modified to suit the circumstances, but that it would not be necessary to issue an amending Order as no Regular troops were involved. Despite the weeding of official papers, Major Townsend's exhaustive research
among Royal Mint, Colonial Office and War Office papers and Registers
of Correspondence has made it possible to determine figures for the issue
of these rare clasps. The order for medals placed with the Mint by the War Office in November
1881 included a request for 8 medals with the '1877' clasp and 23 with
the '1877-9' clasp. There was some delay in executing this special order
as new clasp dies were needed at what was a busy time for the Mint, then
much occupied with the production of the Egypt and Afghanistan medals.
The following analysis by Major Townsend of South Africa Medals struck
will be of considerable interest:
Most loose clasps '1877-8', '1877-8-9' and '1878-9' were issued in exchange
for others that had been claimed prior to General Order 134 of 1880, which
allowed service against Sekukuni 1878 to count. A few were issued to holders
of the South Africa Medal 1853, who had also served in 1877-1879. A HAYWARDISM!
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