Auction Catalogue

4 & 5 March 2020

Starting at 10:00 AM

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Orders, Decorations, Medals and Militaria

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Lot

№ 1162 x

.

5 March 2020

Hammer Price:
£750

Royal National Institute for the Preservation of Life from Shipwreck, G.IV.R., silver (Mr. T. Thorp. Voted 13 Sep: 1839) with eyelet and ring suspension, edge bruising and contact marks, nearly very fine £500-£600

R.N.L.I.P.S. Silver Medal voted to Mr T. Thorp 13 September 1839:
‘At 11pm on 12 March 1839 the ship
Progress, bound from London to Newcastle, drove towards shore at Tynemouth, Northumberland, and struck on sand a long way from shore. Mr. Thorp, the Rocket Storekeeper, and five sailors set up the Dennett's rocket apparatus, but the ship's crew was unable to find the first two lines. The third shot being successful, Thorp and the others bent on a warp and succeeded in landing four men from the wreck. The Master and six other men reached shore using the warp after the tide had fallen materially.’

The rescue is briefly mentioned in the
Newcastle Courant (Friday 15 March 1839) thus:
‘On Monday night last, the brig
Progress, of this port, in attempting to take the harbour at Shields, struck upon the bar, and the wind blowing heavy from the south east, she was driven upon the rocks at the foot of the Spanish Battery. It was near 11 o'clock, the night was dark, cold, and storm, and the sea very high. The alarm was given, the apparatus for saving life from shipwreck was immediately carried down, and Mr. Cunningham, one of the committee of the Shipwreck Society, who resides at Tynemouth, was speedily on the spot. By his judicious direction, three rockets were fired, each of which carried the line over the ship in a most beautiful manner; but such was the darkness, only the last one was found by those on board. A communication was then opened with the shore, and 4 men landed, the rest of the crew, confident of the strength of the ship, remaining until day-light. The vessel, although still holding together, is expected to break up'.

Thomas Thorp, the probable recipient, was born between 1793 and 1796. He married Martha Scott in Tynemouth on 5 May 1819. By 1841 they were still living in Tynemouth, the family then consisting of Thorp, Martha (54) and a young Thomas Thorp (18); he was noted as age 45 and 'Army H.P.' (1841 census).

This would seem to indicate that Thorp was at that time an ex-soldier and 'hospital pensioner'; the National Archives on-line catalogue notes several men of this name (or similar) with previous Napoleonic service, at least one of whom was a Waterloo veteran: Private Thomas Thorp, 2nd Battalion, Coldstream Guards.

Thomas Thorp appears to have died in 1868 aged 75 (Tynemouth Register District, Jan-March 1868, vol. 10b, p. 100 refers).