19 April 2016

Medals found and returned

War History Online has an article about a lucky find:

Two people picking up litter found a cash box along the River Loddon in Berkshire, England. They found something that usually belongs in a museum or are among a families prized possessions.
Martin Moore and Russ Hatchett discovered the cash box on 19 March 2016. Moore said: “We took it back to the village hall to check that there wasn’t anything interesting in there, and lo and behold, there was something interesting in there.”
When they opened the box they were astounded. They did not find cash, but some things in their own way that are even more valuable. The box was filled with medals from World War One and World War Two.
Using the inscriptions on the medals, the members of i were able to track down the descendants of the medal recipients, using an ancestry website. The medals were given for valor by two men who had made the ultimate sacrifice during two World Wars.
The medals for bravery were awarded to Petty Officer Oliver Reed, who fought on the HMS Noble in 1916. His destroyer was sunk in an action involving German battleships. The medals from World War Two were posthumously awarded to Reed’s son Alfred, who went down with the HMS Cornwall when it was sunk by a Japanese dive bomber in the Indian Ocean in 1942. It is truly remarkable that a father and son both died in serving their country and both were decorated war heroes.
This is what makes it all so confusing. These medals have such a great history and story that they should be kept in a museum.  Yet they were just discarded and could have been lost forever.
The elder Reed’s great-great-nephew Oliver Dunn-Hipp was “absolutely shocked” when he received the email about the medals. He added: “I was close to deleting the email because I thought it might be junk, but thankfully I didn’t. It’s unbelievable, and I’m still shocked by it.”
Dunn-Hipp has no idea how the medals ended up on the river bank, but he hopes to learn more. This is a mystery that he wants to solve. There are several possible theories, including theft, and that they had been hidden by a thief and simply forgotten.
The medals were returned to Dunn-Hipp in a ceremony at the Swallowfield Village Hall.  All who attended were pleased to see the medals return to where they belonged, with the family of those who gave their lives for their country.
Rico says some people are nice; the thief would've sold them...

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