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OUTSTANDING VICTORIA CROSS AWARDED TO SOLDIER WHO RISKED HIS OWN LIFE IN THE GREAT WAR AFTER FIVE OF HIS COLLEAGUES HAD LOST THEIRS FETCHES £248,000* AT DIX NOONAN WEBB

 
 
 
 
 

16 April 2021

The outstanding Great War 1918 ‘Final Advance to Victory’ V.C. group of five awarded to 21-year-old Lancashire Lad Private James Towers, 2nd Battalion, The Cameronians (Scottish Rifles) who, with utter disregard for his own safety, volunteered to carry a vital message, under continuous heavy fire, to a stranded platoon at Mericourt in October 1918 whilst in the knowledge that five of his comrades had already been in killed in turn making their attempts to carry out the same task was sold for £248,000 by Dix Noonan Webb in their auction of Orders, Decorations, Medals and Militaria Today (Wednesday, April 14, 2021) . Bought by a Private Collector, it was expected to fetch £140,000-180,000.

Setting out under heavy enfilading machine-gun fire amid scant cover, Towers moved between shell craters and crawled through barbed wire entanglements, before coming across the slumped body of the first volunteer runner - his close friend, Private Frank Dunlop, the Company Messenger. Undeterred, Towers continued, only to become pinned down beneath a guarded embankment which, opting for surprise, he navigated with a running leap - landing within five yards of a fully manned enemy machine-gun post whose fire he avoided in the mist by speed of movement and some grace of providence. Finally reaching the trapped platoon intact, he delivered his vital despatch and guided it back to safety after dusk, his display of supreme courage and determination a great inspiration to all ranks.

Following the sale,
Christopher Mellor-Hill, Head of Client Liaison (Associate Director) of Dix, Noonan, Webb, commented: “This is an outstanding Victoria Cross in that he knowingly knew he was following in the path of 5 colleagues all killed preceding him in trying to get a message through enemy lines to a stranded platoon and it is rewarding to see his VC make the very respectable sum of £200,000 as a just accolade of his exceptional gallantry. It has gone to a good home with a private collector of gallantry awards.”

Later on, Preston-born
James Towers, V.C., reflected upon events at Mericourt in The Lancashire Daily Post in 1929:I joined up as a youngster for a bit of fun, but it didn’t turn out like that. We were young men made old before our time. I felt then, that I had to go to the help of these lads. After all, they were my pals. Five men tried to get through and I was the sixth. I made a dive and got through. The worst part was that I didn’t know just where our chaps were. I had to find them, and in a run for about 150 yards I went within five yards of one of Jerry’s machine-guns. It was my lucky day.”

Towers was Invested with his V.C. by H.M. King George V in the Quadrangle at Buckingham Palace on 8 May 1919, Towers returned to the Palace to attend the V.C. Garden Party in June of the following year. He was also one of 74 V.C. holders who formed a special Guard of Honour for the burial of the Unknown Warrior at Westminster Abbey on 11 November 1920.

Having been demobilised in January 1919, Towers returned to his father’s dairy farm at Broughton. Later, when his father retired, he set up on his own, running a four-acre poultry farm and a milk distribution business. He died at the Royal Infirmary, Preston in January 1977, aged 79. His funeral was attended by Major Ian Ritchie on behalf of the Cameronians (Scottish Rifles), a regimental wreath accompanying the coffin. ‘James Towers V.C. Close’ was subsequently named in his memory on the Lonsdale Estate in Preston. In more recent years a major thoroughfare in Broughton, opened in 2017, was named for him and on 6 October 2018, the hundred year anniversary of the date of the action which led to the award of his V.C., a commemorative plaque was unveiled at the Preston Flag Market.

The Victoria Cross awarded to Towers was one of three won by the Cameronians (Scottish Rifles) in the Great War and one of a total of 13 such awards to the Regiment for all campaigns and wars. With the exception of Towers’s V.C., all of them are held in regimental museums - the other two Great War issues being held by the Scottish Rifles Museum.

FULL CATALOGUING AVAILABLE

PLEASE NOTE THAT THE PRICE INCLUDES 24% BUYERS PREMIUM


FORTHCOMING SALES AT DNW

TUESDAY, MAY 4  & WEDNESDAY, MAY 5 – COINS, TOKENS & HISTORICAL MEDALS 
WEDNESDAY, MAY 19 - ORDERS, DECORATIONS, MEDALS AND MILITARIA
THURSDAY, MAY 27 - BRITISH, IRISH AND WORLD BANKNOTES
TUESDAY, JUNE 15 - JEWELLERY, WATCHES, ANTIQUITIES & OBJECTS OF VERTU

Free online bidding is available is 
www.dnw.co.uk
For more information, please call 020 7016 1700
DNW are on Social Media 
Instagram @dixnoonanwebb
Facebook: dixnoonanwebb
Twitter @dixnoonanwebb

NOTES TO EDITORS: 
Dix Noonan Webb – a brief history 
In 1991, its first year of trading, the company held three medal auctions and sold 1,200 lots for a total hammer price of £553,000. Two years later it opened a coin department which also auctions commemorative medals and tokens and in 2015 DNW added jewellery to its sales calendar. In 2018, it set up a standalone banknotes department and expanded into premises next door. In the same year, DNW achieved a total hammer price of £11,676,580 and the total number of lots across all departments was 20,273. To date the company has sold in excess of 300,000 lots totalling £155 million.

For further press information and images please contact: 
Rachel Aked - Tel: 07790732448/ Email: 
Rachel@rachelaked.co.uk                                                                                                                                    
April 2021

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