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#1 |
Member
Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: Poole England
Posts: 443
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My Grandfather had a German Saw-back Mauser bayonet brought back by his elder brother on his last leave. ( He died in 1916 from either typhoid or cholera )
I always wanted it and Grandad promised it to me for my 16th birthday. This became my 18th and then 21st. I think I was about 30 when he finally let me have it. It is the only bayonet in my collection and along with a photo of my Great Uncle will remain in the family. Roy |
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#2 |
Member
Join Date: Apr 2014
Location: Louisiana
Posts: 363
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My family went to my grandparents house to get something from some footlockers my father put there when he came home from Europe after WWII. As a very young kid I had no idea what this meant.
I was sitting on the kitchen table (I was four, maybe five years old) and in he comes back in wearing an M35 Normandy camouflage helmet and carrying a Mauser K98 with the bayonet still attached. Scared the hell out of me! We would regularly watch B&W war movies, so I instantly knew what it was! Over the next few years more stuff came out, to be used as toys when all the neighborhood boys played soldier. Fortunately I was careful to keep it all together, sometime risking fights! A War Merit Cross went to kindergarden with me for show and tell, and a "big kid" attempted to strong arm it away from me when the teacher wasn't looking. Since I couldn't win this battle straight up, I grabbed a small chair and used it to convince him to let go. Let us say several valuable lessons were learned that day.... I was doomed.... |
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#3 |
Member
Join Date: Jul 2011
Location: Nashville
Posts: 317
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drac2k, do you have any pictures of the mantioned sword?
Mine was what I now think to have been a shashka leaning the the corner of one of the rooms of house I grew up in. It was said to have belonged to my grandmother's family brought with them from Samarqand. I still wonder what happened to it. |
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#4 |
Member
Join Date: Jun 2013
Posts: 1,270
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I'm glad you mentioned the sword ; I went upstairs at 11:25 PM and I was able to find it after only 20 minutes of searching.I will post pictures tomorrow after my wife has had her first cup of coffee.
I have really enjoyed all of the stories from the forum members ! |
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#5 |
Member
Join Date: Jun 2013
Posts: 1,270
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Here are pictures of that first sword.My wife has corrected me(she knows my family history better than I do) ; the house where the sword was found was on 50 Lenriet st.,in Rochester N.Y.
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#6 |
Member
Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 7,048
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Two things:-
visit to my mother's aunt's house when I was about 5 and handling keris and other artifacts sent to her by her son who lived in Malaya for a number of years after release from Changi at end of WWII. at age 12 my grandfather gave me his small collection knives and daggers that he had collected in the period 1918 to about 1930. |
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#7 |
Member
Join Date: Jun 2013
Posts: 1,270
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Very cool (yes, I speak the language of dinosaurs ); If a parent acted in a similar manner that our mothers, fathers and relatives did then, introducing artifacts to children, they would be in jail and their children taken away by
Social Services . |
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