Auction Catalogue

27 June 2002

Starting at 10:00 AM

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Orders, Decorations, Medals and Militaria including the collection to Naval Artificers formed by JH Deacon

Grand Connaught Rooms  61 - 65 Great Queen St  London  WC2B 5DA

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Lot

№ 1134

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27 June 2002

Hammer Price:
£190

Pair: Second Lieutenant C. L. Mackenzie, Highland Light Infantry, killed in action on 20 September 1914

1914 Star (2/Lieut., High. L.I.); British War Medal (2. Lieut.) the star with damage to one point and showing signs of corrosion, otherwise generally nearly very fine or better (2) £100-150

Colin Landseer Mackenzie was born at Malvern on 4 May 1892 and educated at the Naval School, Stubbington, and at Cheltenham College, ‘joining the O.T.C. at so early an age as to be unable to carry his rifle on a march.’ After passing the Army Competetive examination he was gazetted to the Highland Light Infantry as 2nd Lieutenant in May 1913.

Second Lieutenant Mackenzie was killed in action on 20 September 1914, shot in the head by a German sniper in an advanced trench near Verneuil, north of the River Aisne, and is buried in Vendresse British Cemetery, Aisne, France.

The following account of his death was communicated by an officer in Mackenzie’s company, and published in
The Bond of Sacrifice, Volume I: ‘He was in the trenches at the time, defending a position, and was watching a charge of our men on his left front, and had turned round to tell his men to cease fire in case they hit any of their own side, when he was shot in the head, death being instantaneous...’

The following letter written by Mackenzie to his sister on 29 August 1914 is published in The British Roll of Honour, Empires Heroes, from which the following is extracted: ‘... About six miles from Mons we watched the Germans shelling the town, and houses burning, that was the first thing to make me realise for a moment that we were not on manoeuvres. The second thing that brought the war home to me was the night we left Genly, we marched through a village where the Royal Scots Fusiliers were billetted, and the men were lying all about. The village reeked of iodoform, one wondered who was dead and who was only wounded..’

A note with the lot states: ‘The medals were found ten years ago buried under a tree by a man walking his dog.’