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# Thursday, September 24, 2009
Study before you Buy
Posted by John

Greetings,
Recently, I was hired to examine, describe and evaluate about 300 British campaign medals ranging from the War of 1812 to the 1970s.  I must confess, before this gig, I knew nothing—and cared even less—about British medals.

With little base knowledge, I had to immerse myself into the expansion and maintenance of the British Empire during the 19th and 20th centuries. I have always said that either a person is an Anglophile or they are not—there isn’t any middle ground. Regardless, I started to teach myself about things like the First Anglo-Sikh War, North-West Frontier and Pink’s War, I experienced a rising interest in all things British.

Working for several different militaria dealers, I have learned to control my impulses as I delve into a collecting arena that is new to me. A few months ago, I had to immerse myself into WWII Japanese uniforms. For about three weeks, I desperately wanted to begin collecting Type 45 caps, summer weight tunics and combat helmets. I knew I had to resist the urges while I wrapped up the job. Moving onto the next project, my interest in Japanese relics subsided. I had avoided spending a couple thousand dollars on a passing interest, but at least I had the base knowledge in WWII Japanese relics to show for the effort!

The same thing happened when I was asked to describe and evaluate a box of pre-WWII chevrons for another dealer. By the end of the project, I was convinced I wanted to begin collecting 1902 pattern chevrons. A few weeks went by and, although I looked at many chevrons on eBay, I had placed no bids. The mood had passed before a financial commitment was made.
    
Boer War or Just Bored?
I have spent a lot of effort, time and money on building what I believe to be a respectable WWI AEF Tank Corps collection. I have thoroughly enjoyed researching the careers of two officers of the 301st Heavy Tank Bn., both of whose uniforms I own. When I run into a block in that research, I can turn to a 344th Tank Bn. officer who won the Distinguished Service Cross. His uniform is just a few feet from me as I type this blog. The rest of my office is decorated with other identified uniforms, helmets and accouterments from the first few years of Tank Corps history.
   
So why have I recently immersed myself in reading about Canada’s involvement in the Boer War ?
   
I know that being able to get excited and being able to figure out the nuances of any aspect of collecting militaria is a blessing, but it can also be a curse. Being able to switch to the “Tank Corps” section of my brain and open up another section helps me pay the bills. When various dealers get a big batch of stuff that is outside of their immediate expertise, they have figured out it is more efficient to hire someone to describe and assign values than do it themselves. It’s a relationship that is good for them and good for me.
   
The danger for me, however, is not unlike the perils that face the fat boy who is hired to work at a candy factory.
   
While I worked on the big pile of medals during the past couple of weeks, I read Our Little Army in the Field: The Canadians in South Africa 1899-1902, spent countless late nights searching Boer War records on the Internet and made lengthy lists of medals I would like to buy. Without spending a dime, I decided I was going to be a “Boer War collector”, though only a month earlier, I couldn’t have told you the difference between the Defense of Mafeking and an attack on Burger King.
   
Eventually, the description job was done and the dealer began the process of selling them. In some way that I still don’t quite understand, my interest began to wane. Soon, I realized, the Boer War isn’t a part of my “collector DNA”. I don’t have any personal connection to it; no ancestors who participated in it, no interest in it since before kindergarten, no family stories, nothing. It was just something that caught my fancy, I studied it and can easily move on—or rather, move back to those things that have been a constant in my life: the Mexican War, Belgians in WWI and the birth of the Tank Corps.

What did I learn?
Unlike life in the pre-Internet days, it is easy to spend a ton of money on a passing interest. While I was jonesing on the Boer War, it was not difficult to find any number of medals, relics or souvenirs via the Internet. It would not have taken more than an evening of keyboard clicks to rocket from casual interest to deeply invested collector.
   
While I was studying the medals and writing descriptions for them, I discovered many nuances that a novice would not know if they just wandered into a show and decided at that moment they were going to begin collecting medals. I know most advance collectors advise, “study before you buy”. But the need for instant gratification coupled with the speed of buying over the Internet stands between that good advice and a lot of our impulses.
   
What do I have to show for my passing interest in the Boer War? Well, I am gratified to report that I limited myself to purchasing a few books and a couple of pretty cool original photographs of Canadians who participated. I did achieve an understanding of a military conflict about which I had previously known next to nothing. But I did it without diverting thousands of dollars from my core collecting interests to satisfy my new curiosity.
   
But of course, the urges are still there.

Control the disease, enjoy the symptoms,  
John Adams-Graf
Editor, Military Trader and Military Vehicles Magazine
 



Thursday, September 24, 2009 4:25:35 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [1]
# Wednesday, September 09, 2009
It takes a village
Posted by John

Greetings,

My high school best friend’s dad died a few weeks ago. Mr. Briggs was a stoic fellow but had a sharp cutting sense of humor. During ninth and tenth grades, my buddy Barry and I would stop in at Mr. Briggs’ auto parts store to sit and talk for a few minutes before crossing the street to the school. Sitting at the counter, we could talk to him about most anything ranging from cars and girls to school gossip or working after school to earn some extra spending money.

    Thinking about the role Mr. Briggs played in my high school years brought to mind a statement a former First Woman made popular, “It takes a village to raise a child.” When I visited Mr. Briggs’ grave this past week, the truth of this statement in my life became apparent. Please permit me to introduce you to some of those from my “village”.

Leave it to Beaver
    Remember how the Beaver would wander through his idyllic town visiting various adults, like Gus the fireman or the fellow who owned the grocery store? I am not exaggerating when I say the town in which I grew up was similar. There were only 1,200 people in Caledonia. My folks owned one of three grocery stores, and my mom was a career math teacher. We lived right across the street from the Irish Catholic church and three blocks from the German Catholic church. This combination led me to knowing lots of folks and, even more, knowing who I was. I was free to wander around town and talk to whomever I liked.

    Meet Mr. Rice. To a four-year-old, he was a giant, sitting in his Skelly gas station. But, I would loosen the bolts on the seat of my tricycle so that I could take it over for him to “fix”. He would give me a bottle of pop and after he tightened the bolt on my tricycle seat, would take me back into his deep garage to show me his massive tow truck parked in front of a Model T. The seeds of fascination with big trucks were planted in Mr. Rice’s garage.

    Vic Palen was our next door neighbor. The Palens had been the next door neighbors of the Grafs for at least three generations, spanning back to about 1903. Vic and my dad were best buddies as kids. Vic’s daughter Frances would play with me even though I was just a little kid and she was a young grade schooler. I spent a lot of time talking to Vic about WWII. He was a professional photographer working in the studio that had been in his family since about 1875. During the War, Vic was in the Army Air Corps working as an aerial photographer. I loved visiting the studio and looking at the old, huge cameras on tripods and the boxes of glass negatives. It wasn’t too many years later that I decided to begin collecting antique photos, a passion I still pursue.

    Ralph Eikens was another neighbor and married to my Dad’s first cousin. Ralph was pretty crippled, the result of shrapnel in the back as he was carrying a stretcher out of the fight at Iwo Jima. In spite of gnarled and curled hands, Ralph could fix anything. I used to take my models and slot cars to him to help me modify or repair them. He showed me how to use a soldering iron. He also taught me how to break down a rifle beyond the basic cleaning level to repair firing pins and trigger assemblies. To this day, I use these skills every week and when I do, I think of Ralph.
    Dad’s high school pal was Gale Buxengard. Together, they passionately collected stamps and pursued their photography hobbies. When I was little, Gale was the town’s postmaster. He would save stamps for me and helped me build my own stamp collection. When I got a little older, he shared his collection with me showing me the many Leica cameras, Allgemeine SS uniform and various weapons he acquired while in the service. Gale opened my eyes to the treasure of souvenirs that veterans brought back from Europe and the Pacific.

    Kern Ferris was known around town as “Captain Ferris”. His dad had been an engineer on the narrow-gauge railroad that ran between Caledonia and Freeburg before the war. My Dad knew him, but Dad being an old NCO, regarded Kern as an “ROTC one-year wonder”. I met Kern when I was about 12 years old. I was interested in family genealogy. Kern was retired and spent his days researching his own family history. He quickly took me under his wing and taught me how to research public records. Though his mind would spin if he knew the likes of Footnote.com or Ancestory.com, I still follow the basic guidelines of research that Kern taught me.

    Harold St. Mary owned an auto shop that was on the way between my grade school and our grocery store. When the doors were open on the shop, I would stop in to say hi because I knew Harold collected old cars and trucks. His pride and joy was a 1903 Maxwell, but what captured my attention was a 1920s delivery truck, resplendent with loads of period packaging. I loved the attention to detail. Harold was also the director of our local museum. He would take me to the museum to help him build exhibits. When I was 13, he asked me to put together an exhibit on the Civil War. Little did I know that he had planted the seeds of my professional museum career.

    The list could go on. Like the Beaver, I was a pretty precocious kid. I was not shy about walking into an office and start talking to whoever was behind the desk. But there was one fellow in Caledonia who stood out—Percy “Perk” Steffen. Perk was a veteran of WWI, a retired editor of the town’s “Republican” newspaper, self-appointed keeper of the town’s heritage and Civil War enthusiast. My dad introduced me to Perk when I was about 10 years old. I visited him every Saturday afternoon for several years. We would talk about the Civil War, his World War experiences and the town’s history. I loved Perk. In fact, when my school had a grandparent’s day, I asked him if I could adopt him as a grandpa (not having known either of my grandfathers). Every year thereafter, I sent him a Father’s Day card. When Perk died, his wife Helen gave me the 10-volume set of Miller’s Photographic History of the Civil War that Perk and I poured over so many times. It sits on the top of one of my front room bookcases where I see it every day. Not a day passes that I don’t think of Perk or tap into the passion for the study of military history that he nurtured in me.

    It may have required a village to raise me, but it would not have been possible without the fundamentals of respect for elders, learning and daily chores that my parents instilled in me. They may not have attended my sporting events or been involved in every step of my day like so many parents are today, but perhaps it wasn’t necessary. I had a “village” of adults who looked out for me, taught me and listened to me.

    I miss them all, but during quiet moments, I realize that all of my successes as a writer, researcher, collector and historian, are due to people like Mr. Briggs, Mr. Rice, Ralph, Perk, Kern, Gale and Mr. St. Mary. It may be a tired expression, but to me, these men were truly part of the “Greatest Generation”.

John Adams-Graf
Editor, Military Trader and Military Vehicles Magazine



Wednesday, September 09, 2009 10:33:42 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [1]