Article
12 February 2026
The outstanding Second War posthumous ‘London Blitz’ mine disposal George Cross awarded to Chief Petty Officer Reginald Vincent Ellingworth of the Royal Navy, who was the First naval rating to receive a direct award of the George Cross sold for a hammer price of £80,000 in an auction of Orders, Decorations, Medals and Militaria at Noonans Mayfair (16 Bolton Street) today (Wednesday, February 11, 2026). It was being sold, along with seven other medals, by his Great-Grandson and Great-Granddaughter.
Following the sale, Christopher Mellor-Hill, Head of Client Liaison at Noonans said: “A protégé of the pioneering parachute mine disposal specialist Lieutenant-Commander R. J. H. Ryan, G.C., R.N., he helped render safe just such devices, including the "First ‘C’ Type, the whole at a time when preferred expertise and knowledge were at a minimum. Nonetheless, on approaching a challenging parachute mine at Dagenham on 21 September 1940, an eyewitness saw the pair of them ‘upright, striding confidently’ towards the entrance of the building from which it was dangling from the roof. Shortly afterwards, as they commenced work on extracting the fuse, it sprang into action, the resultant explosion causing instantaneous death and destruction.”
He added: “We are delighted that this medal has been purchased by someone who has never bought a George Cross before but said he had always wanted one as he has always admired such bravery which is reflected in this being the highest award given for gallantry on par with the Victoria Cross.”
Reginald Vincent Ellingworth was born in Wolverhampton, Staffordshire on 28 January 1898 and was an apprentice car body-maker at Coventry before joining the Royal Navy as a Boy 2nd Class in July 1913. Having then attended the training ship H.M.S. Impregnable, he joined the battleship H.M.S. Benbow in October 1914, in which he was present at the battle of Jutland and advanced to Able Seaman. In the following year, Ellingworth transferred to the ‘Silent Service’, in which capacity he served in the submarine L.2 from October 1917 to November 1921, followed by further submarine appointments in the Twenties. Awarded his Long Service and Good Conduct Medal in April 1931 and advanced to Chief Petty Officer in November 1936, he was pensioned ashore in January 1938. Vernon’s ‘Rendering Mines Safe’ Party Recalled on the renewal of hostilities, Ellingworth joined the torpedo establishment Vernon, where he volunteered for bomb and mine disposal duties and was drafted to the #edgling ‘Rendering Mines Safe’ Party, a perilous pastime shared with the Admiralty’s Land Incident Section. Enlisted as right hand man to Lieutenant-Commander R. J. H. Ryan, R.N., a noted pioneer in mine disposal, he subsequently shared in many adventures of the hair-raising kind, an early example being the making safe of first magnetic Type ‘C’ mine, which was discovered in the wreckage of downed Heinkel on the sands at Clacton at the end of April 1940. But whilst their gallant work on occasion took them further afield – they dealt with devices in Cardiff, Liverpool and Sheffield – it was to London they were most regularly called, so much so that they took rooms in the Royal Automobile Club in Pall Mall. Aged 42 and described by his widow as ‘the best of dads’, Ellingworth was buried at Milton Cemetery, Portsmouth, where his Commonwealth War Graves Commission headstone bears the following epitaph: ‘In Everlasting Memory of our Beloved, Killed by Enemy Action. Duty Nobly Done.’
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