Auction Catalogue
Queen’s South Africa 1899-1902, no clasp (W. Punt) officially re-impressed naming, nearly extremely fine £140-£180
Dix Noonan Webb, September 2000.
Willem Punt was the railway officer who met the captured Churchill on his journey to Pretoria and later in the war rendered services to the British forces that earned him a Queen’s South Africa Medal.
‘The section of track through Elandslaagte fell under the jurisdiction of a railway official named Willem Punt. The story of what befell Winston Churchill on his arrival at the station has been handed down through the family, and was told to me by his grandson also Willem Punt.
“It began to rain, and when the prisoners were told to take shelter in the baggage room, Churchill was taken to one side and put under guard in the ticket office. But the fun started when they were all told to board the train. One or two officers who had just joined the party objected to travelling with a newspaperman.”
This seems extraordinary, given Churchill’s military background and his recent exploits. It is possible that the officers feared the consequences of Churchill’s determination to escape.
“My grandfather,” Willem Punt continued, “told the officers that they would have to put up with the newspaper man. He was unaware of the newspaper man’s identity but I’m sure that in any case he would have ignored the officer’s objections.”’ (Churchill Wanted Dead or Alive refers)
The Boer Forces were driven from Natal in 1900 and Willem Punt served under the ‘Staff for Engineer Services’ from 14 February 1901 to 3 August 1901.
Sold with copied medal roll extract.
Share This Page