Auction Catalogue

19 September 2003

Starting at 11:00 AM

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Orders, Decorations, Medals and Militaria. To coincide with the OMRS Convention

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

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Lot

№ 73

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19 September 2003

Hammer Price:
£2,600

The Great War K.B.E. group awarded to Sir Percival Phillips, Senior War Correspondent on the Western Front during the War, and probably the best known special correspondent writing for the British Press in the first half of the 20th century

The Most Excellent Order of the British Empire, K.B.E. (Civil) Knight Commander’s 1st type set of insignia, comprising neck badge and breast star, silver, silver-gilt and enamels; 1914-15 Star (P. Phillips); British War and Victory Medals (P. Phillips); Delhi Durbar 1911; Legion of Honour, Chevalier, silver, gilt and enamels, the last five on original court mounting, nearly extremely fine (7) £1200-1500

This lot was sold as part of a special collection, Awards to Civilians from the Collection of John Tamplin.

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Collection

Percival Phillips was born in Brownsville, Pennsylvania, on 2 July 1877, eldest son of Hibbard Samuel Phillips, M.D., of Canonsburgh, Washington County, Pennsylvania. He was educated at Pittsburgh High School, and was associated continuously with daily newspapers in America from 1895 to 1901. He was with the Greek Army in the war against Turkey in 1897, and in the Spanish-American war of 1898.

In 1901 Phillips joined the staff of the
Daily Express, with which newspaper he remained until 1922. He was in the Russo-Japanese war of 1904, was present at the Jamaica earthquake in 1907, in the Balkans in 1909, and in the same year at the revolution in Catalonia. In 1910 he was in Portugal during the revolution there, in 1911 at the Champagne riots in Northern France, and later that year with the Italian expedition to Tripoli.

In 1911-12 Phillips was in India at the Coronation Durbar at Delhi, and also on the Imperial tour through India. For these services he received the Delhi Durbar medal of 1911. In 1912 he was present at the funeral of King Frederick of Denmark, and later that year and during 1913 he was with the Bulgarian General Staff in the first Balkan campaign. Phillips was in Belgium on the declaration of war by Germany in 1914, and with the Belgian Field Army until the fall of Antwerp later that year.

Phillips was one of the first five accredited correspondents with the British Armies on the Western Front in May 1915, and he served in this capacity representing the
Daily Express, the Morning Post and the Daily Graphic until the Armistice in 1918. He accompanied the British troops into Germany, and was attached to the Army of the Rhine until the conclusion of the peace in 1919.





Phillips was also in Dublin in 1916 as an accredited correspondent of the War Office during the troubles in that year. After the Great War, he accompanied the Prince of Wales on his Canadian tour in 1919. He was in Egypt, Syria and Turkey in 1919-20, during the Arab rising, and in Constantinople until the signing of peace with Turkey.

He was appointed a K.B.E. (Civil Division) ‘for services in connection with the War’, on 30 March 1920, the
London Gazette of that date describing him as ‘Senior War Correspondent on the Western Front’. He was also granted permission, on 14 October 1921, to wear the Cross of a Chevalier of the Legion of Honour conferred by the President of France in recognition of valuable services rendered during the war.

He was in Greece in 1920-21, and again accompanied the Prince of Wales on his tour to India and the Far East in 1921-22. Phillips left the
Daily Express in 1922, and then became a special correspondent for the Dailt Mail until 1934. In 1922 he investigated the British administration in Mesopotamia, and the fascist movement in Italy. He was with the French army in the Ruhr in 1923-24, and was a delegate to the Imperial Press Conference at Melbourne in 1925. In 1925-26 he witnessed the communist rising in China, and in 1926 accompanied the Daily Mail Trade Union Mission to the U.S.A.

Phillips was in China again in 1926-27 during the revolution there, and in 1927 he investigated the Bolshevik movement in Java. He accompanied the King and Queen of Afghanistan from India to Europe in 1928, and in the same year investigated the suppression of the Mafia in Sicily. He accompanied the Prince of Wales to East Africa in 1928, he visited Turkey and Asia Minor in 1929, and afterwards went to Spain, and later in the same year was in Manchuria during the Sino-Russian railway dispute.

Sir Percival went from Cape Town to Cairo in 1930 during the second visit of the Prince of Wales to South and East Africa, and was present at the coronation of Haile Selassie as Emperor of Ethiopia in November of that year. He was present at the inauguration of New Delhi in 1931, and spent 16 months in India during 1931-32. He was in Mesopotamia and Southern Persia in 1932, and made an extensive tour of the U.S.A. in 1933. In 1933-34 he was in India, Siam and the Far East.

In 1934 Phillips left the
Daily Mail, and then became a special correspondent for the Daily Telegraph with which newspaper he remained until his death in 1937. He was in Greece in 1935 during the revolution there, and in Abyssinia, and British and French Somaliland in 1935-36. He was ‘special correspondent at Addis Ababa, and elsewhere, during the greater part of the Abyssinian war, and his despatches were generally recognized as containing the most authoritative information on its progress.’ He aroused the attention of the whole world when he gave the first detailed account of the famous agreement between the Emperor of Abyssinia and Mr F. W. Rickett, representing the African Exploitation and Development Corporation, a contract which caused widespread international repercussions. Finally, in 1935 he visited Spain during the crises and civil war there, and afterwards was in the U.S.A. and Canada.

He gave daily dispatches from the
Queen Mary during her maiden voyage, he reported on two Presidential Conventions in the United States, and on the Canadian Pacific Railway’s Jubilee at Vancouver. Phillips was the author of many short stories and magazine articles, and also of Far Vistas, published by Methuen in 1933. He was also a Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society.

Sir Percival Phillips died in a London nursing home on 29 January 1937, aged 59. He had been taken ill in Tangier and returned to England in the P & O liner
Ranchi. When the ship arrived at Tilbury, he was transferred to a waiting ambulance and taken to the nursing home where he died of acute nephritis. Sold with full research.