The Issue of British
Crimea War Medals 1854-56 (continued)
By John Hayward
Further to
last month's notes on the issue of the British Crimea War
Medal and my few thoughts upon the whereabouts of the vast
quantities of unnamed issues, I thought a little fine tuning
to these areas may be of some interest. I wrote that something
over 300,000 Crimea War Medals were struck although that figure
considerably exceeded previous published estimates. In fact,
Royal Mint records have revealed that up to the end of March
1860 a total of 379,908 were struck for issue to the soldiers
and sailors of Great Britain and her Allies. Military activity
during the years 1854-60 greatly increased the medallic workload
at the Mint which, apart from the awards for Arctic Discoveries
included those for South Africa 1834-53 Campaigns (10,415)
together with the Baltic Campaign (61,109), and it was due
to this pressure that the Mint contracted the striking of
50,000 Crimea Medals to Messrs R. Heaton and Sons of Birmingham,
who also mounted them and subsequently supplied them, but
unnamed and without clasps. The balance of 330,000, all struck
at the Mint, were mounted almost entirely by Hunt and Roskill,
who were also responsible for manufacturing all the Crimea
clasps. Some clasps were attached by them to unnamed medals
and many other clasps were sent to the Crimea in bulk, loose.
Three reasons
are apparent for the majority of the Crimean issuance being
unnamed.
Firstly, 'Her Majesty has been pleased specially to command
that every exertion should be used to complete these decorations
as speedily as possible...'. This Royal insistence was made
to the Secretary of State for War on 6.1.1855 well before
the end of the Crimean conflict.
Secondly, over unnamed 235,000 Medals were delivered to the
Foreign Office for transmission to our French, Sardinian and
Turkish Allies.
Thirdly, if there was any real intent to officially name at
least all the British Medals, the incoming Secretary of State
for War, Lord Panmure and the inability of the Mint to name
the medals quickly, assured the Crimea Medal specialist of
today of an on-going problem (March Newsletter refers).
An interesting
and unpublished piece of information found in the Mint archive
relates to approximately 8,500 Medals already issued to Regiments
but which were sent in for naming after the return of the
Army from the Crimea. Some 1,700 of this quantity relate to
Cavalry Regiments.
PS: If you
own what you feel is a contemporarily engraved Crimea Medal
- and I can assure you after a careful and thoughtful examination
it will talk to you - then you will have the pleasure and
satisfaction of owning a medal that was worn and was handled
by the man who won it.
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