Posts of the Concentration Camps and Ghettos

THE PHILATELIC REGISTER is owned, published and edited by Ian Lasok-Smith

Contact Address: 6 Hough Green, Chester, CH4 8JG.  Email: [email protected]

ThePhilatelicRegister.com has replaced the montly issue of The Philatelic Register. The change in format has been dictated by the need to have a format that is more sustainable with regards the time required to keep it updated. As was The Philatelic Register, this evolving resource is FREE, users just need to register (only name and email address required) on the site to gain full access to article content.  All articles may be downloaded and printed or saved to PC. The site has been constructed on a WordPress platform and as such  has afforded much more versatility and new opportunites compared with original format.

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Ian Lasok-Smith.  Owner, Publisher and Editor “The Philatelic Register”

Philatelic Traders Society (Gold Membership)

One Man’s War – Victor Broomhead

The Story of an ordinary man in extraordinary circumstances.

Victor Broomhead was 20 years old and a trainee bus driver in Derbyshire in October 1939, when he received his call up for military service.

His first posting was to Palestine and although his unit was later transferrd to Cyprus, Victor himself was posted to Egypt and was consequently taken captive when the Afrika Korps over-ran Tobruk.

With the Germans preoccupied with prosecuting the war, they handed over prisoners to the Italians. After being transported across North Africa, Victor then spent time in an Italian prisoner of war camp in Tarhuna, south east of Tripoli.

As North Africa began to fall to the Allies, British prisoners of war were eventually moved and Victor arrived in a new camp in occupied Poland.

Freedom from captivity for Victor eventually came in April 1945 and he arrived home in England on 7th May, the day before Victory in Europe Day.

John Wilson from the Forces Postal History Society, in a superb article  charts, by way of letters and documents from the time, Victor’s journey.

The Forces Postal History Society kindly gave permission for the article to be published in The Philatelic Register in 2021 and it was serialised over 4 issues and can be downloaded from the attachments below.

One Man’s War. Part 1

One Man’s War. Part 2

One Man’s War. Part 3

One Man’s War. Part 4

The History of the British Army Postal Service

In issues 6 t0 11 of the fortnightly publications of The Philatelic Register in 2021 I serialised the history of the development of the British Army Postal Service from Saxon times to the present day.  The serialisation is attached below

Origins to 1840

Crimean War 1854 to Royal Warrant 1882

1882 t0 1913 incl. Boer War

World War I 1914-1918

World War II 1939-1945

World War II to Royal Logistics Corps 1993

The Kinmel Park Military Camp Riots

On 4 and 5 March 1919 Kinmel Park in North Wales, experienced two days of riots in the Canadian sector of the local military complex, Kinmel Camp. The riots are believed to have been caused by delays in repatriation and by the Canadian soldiers’ resentment at being used by their British officers as forced labour.

Kinmel Park Riot

The article by Alan Spencer that can be downloaded from link above  has kindly been provided by

The Forces Postal History Society

   

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