English Channel Handbooks, Carentan, Cherbourg, Isigny
€475.00
Tax included
Genuine WWII British Army grouping, which belonged to some John William Garwood, made up of various official and personal documents -- technical manuals, photographs, diaries...
Homogeneous lot, in quite good overall condition.
John William Garwood was born on October 29, 1926 in Surrey. He joined the British Army on October 16, 1944 (service number 14877105) and went on to serve with the Royal East Kent Regiment prior to transferring to the General Service Corps.
Genuine WWII British Army grouping, which belonged to some John William Garwood, made up of various official and personal documents -- technical manuals, photographs, diaries...
Homogeneous lot, in quite good overall condition.
John William Garwood was born on October 29, 1926 in Surrey. He joined the British Army on October 16, 1944 (service number 14877105) and went on to serve with the Royal East Kent Regiment prior to transferring to the General Service Corps.
date_end inferior to now
The historical artifacts for sale at PARATROOPER’s are intended for collectors, history enthusiasts, historians and museum curators. These items do not glorify or promote any of the political, ideological or racial opinions related to the global conflicts that bathed the 20th century in blood.
Besides, we remind you that Article R.645-1 of the French Penal Code establishes fines applicable to fifth class contraventions (except in the specific cases of a filming, show or exhibition which refer to historical events) for any individual who wears a uniform, insignia or symbol reminiscent of those worn by members of the various organizations declared criminal in application of Article 9 of the Charter of the International Military Tribunal annexed to the London Agreement of August 8, 1945 – SS, SD, Gestapo, Nazi leaders (the Führer, the Reichsleitung, the Gauleiters and their main collaborators, the Ortsgruppenleiter, the Zellenleiter and the Blockleiter), or reminiscent of those worn by any person found guilty, by a French or International Jurisdiction, of one or several crimes against humanity established by Articles 211-1 to 212-3 or mentioned in Law No. 64-1326 of December 26, 1964.
The Code provides additional penalties, including the confiscation of the items used or intended for committing the offence.