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#1 | |
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Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Posts: 987
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I am indeed very pleased with the acquisition.
![]() Quote:
I have a very very vague childhood recollection of visiting some cousin and seeing a sabre next to the fireplace (I don't remember a tassel, so I don't think that it was this one). I imagine that was his official side-arm, since the one I bought is described as "non-official" (or something to that effect). One of HP's two sabres was also described as "non-official," as well. There is also apparently CP's cavalry cape in a dresser drawer somewhere in a cousin's house -- it is interesting to note that the uniform in the auction didn't include the cape. Keeping family history is a tradition in my family, and one quirky thing about 19th C. New England families (maybe others as well at that time), is that they liked to self-publish memoires & correspondence, and publish little tributes or memorances of the departed. We have a few of these, including a pamphlet with CP's Civil War correspondence. |
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#2 |
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Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
Posts: 100
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Congratulations Mark,
Your story gives hope to people like me, who are still in the lookout for their family's long lost Pusaka. Unfortunately, record keeping has always been rather problematic in this part of the world, so a long lost pusaka might just end up being that, long and lost. |
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#3 |
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Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Kernersville, NC, USA
Posts: 793
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Fascinating and heartening! Great story. Congratulations on returning a family heirloom to a member of the family who can appreciate it.
Steve |
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