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#1 | |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Posts: 987
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I am indeed very pleased with the acquisition.
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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 |
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 |
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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