2015 Krugerrand 1OZ MM Launch Set Churchills Life and Legacy

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2020 11 25
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DEAR COLLECTORS

A NUMISMATIC GEM

THIS WEEKS FEATURED ITEM - HISTORY IN YOUR HANDS

THIS IS OUR NEW PROMOTION - A MUST HAVE - GET IT NOW

A 50 YEAR 

CELEBRATION OF

WINSTON CHURCHILL'S LIFE AND LEGACY

30 NOVEMBER 1874 to 24 JANUARY 1965

 2015 

LAUNCH KRUGERRAND 

MINTMARKED SET

OUR SPECIAL LAUNCH PROMOTION OF THE SA MINTS PROOF KRUGERRAND SET 

The set includes the 1 ounce Gold Proof Krugerrand with the

"WINSTON CHURCHILL 50 YEAR"
Lazer Mintmark 
as well as the 1 ounce 925 Sterling Silver
50 Year Winston Churchill Medallion 

Contact us on +27 (0)11 789 2233

Limited Stock Available

2015 Gold 1oz Krugerrand Mintmarked and  Silver 1oz Medal Launch Set

 this composite image is the copyright of Randburg Coin only

 A CHOICE GOLD SET - OFFERED AT A VERY LOW PRICE

BE ONE OF THE FEW 

TO OWN THIS TRULY MAGNIFICENT
CELEBRATORY COMMEMORATIVE SET

OUR PROMOTION PRICE

R 38 000  ONLY

 GET THIS ICONIC LAUNCH SET 

NOW SELLING AT AN ADVANTAGEOUS PRICE OPPORTUNITY 

LIMITED OFFER - NOW AVAILABLE - CALL TO CONFIRM

Details

1 oz Gold Krugerrand : 916 Au 

1oz Sterling Silver Medallion : 925 Ag

Mintage - Limited Edition Worldwide of Set : 384 only

Certificated set

Info

The Boer War

War: The Boer War.

Date: 15th December 1899

Place : Colenso on the Tugela River in Northern Natal, South Africa

Combatants: British against the Boers.  

Generals: General Sir Redvers Buller
against General Botha.  

Size of the armies:16,000 British against 12,000 Boers.  

Arms and equipment at the Battle of Colenso: The Boer War was a serious jolt for the British Army. At the outbreak of the war British tactics were appropriate for the use of single shot firearms, fired in volleys controlled by company and battalion officers; the troops fighting in close order.  The need for tight formations had been emphasised time and again in colonial fighting.

Winston Churchill by the wrecked
railway trucks of the Armoured Train at
Chieveley on 15th November 1899

Winston Churchill  was part of a scouting expedition on an armoured train when it was attacked by the enemy.

Churchill's heroics during the ambush led to speculation that he would receive the Victoria Cross, although this never happened.

He was taken to a prison camp in Pretoria but a month later he made his escape and travelled 300 miles to safety.

He became a national hero, but it was not enough for Churchill who then joined the army and helped relieve the British at the Siege of Ladysmith and then take Pretoria . Source: Mail Online

  On 15th November 1899 the Armoured Train left Estcourt with a company of Royal Dublin Fusiliers a half-company of Durban Light Infantry and a 7 pounder muzzle loading gun manned by a naval gun crew, all commanded by Captain Haldane.  Also on board was Mr Winston Churchill, the war correspondent of the Morning Post.

 Travelling north the train passed Chieveley and then encountered Boers in strength on a hill.  One of the advantages of the railway was the ability to use the telegraph laid along the line.  The presence of Boers was reported back to Estcourt and the train ordered back. Two miles short of Frere the train encountered a force of Boers with two field guns and a Maxim pom-pom gun. The Boers opened fire and the driver put on full speed to escape, but the Boers had placed a large rock on the line which the train hit, derailing several trucks.

 Under heavy fire from the Boers Haldane and Churchill supervised the operation of moving the damaged trucks off the line so that the engine was able to pass the obstacle, but without any of the trucks.  Churchill set off on the engine with the wounded.  After reaching Frere Churchill returned on foot to the scene, arriving in time to be part of the surrender of the remaining eighty soldiers. Source: British Battles.com

 When Churchill escaped from the P O W camp, a wanted poster was issued, offering £25 for the young war correspondent’s recapture.

The Boer authorities distributed a description of him, noting that he could not speak a word of Dutch.

Despite this, he made it to safety.

Boer commander PJ Joubert, who had imprisoned Churchill two months earlier, said: ‘He is just 'n klein koerant-skrywertjie’ - ‘he’s just a little newspaper man’.

Soon after gaining his freedom, Churchill joined the South African Light Horse, an irregular cavalry unit which fought his former captors.

For the next few months, he stayed on in South Africa as a soldier/correspondent, thrilling readers with his reportage and slow march to victory. Source: Mail Online

Read morehttp://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2094822/Photo-Winston-Churchill-horseback-daring-Boer-War-prison-camp-

escape-auction.html#ixzz3ceiCiYbY

 Read more: http://www.britishbattles.com/battle-of-colenso/

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Botha was a charismatic leader and the principal Boer commander in the Second Boer War. He eventually made peace with the British and later became the first prime minister of the Union of South Africa .

The superior infantry tactics of the Boers helped them inflict a series of shocking defeats on the British Army in the opening stages of the Second Boer War

However, the string of victories racked up by the British Army in the latter half of the nineteenth century inspired a false confidence in its military tactics. Weaponry was evolving dramatically in this era, and the introduction of the magazine-fed bolt-action rifle dramatically increased the amount of firepower available to the infantryman of the age. While such advanced weaponry remained beyond the reach of most indigenous forces, one group was to acquire these weapons and use them to deadly effect against the British in the largest and bloodiest colonial conflict waged in the era – the Second Boer War of 1899-1902.

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 Offer expires - Wednesday Wed 2nd December 2020 - and/or subject to availability.
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