WW1 Middlesex Regt. Officer's Silver Cap Badge, With Rare Battalion Battle Patch WW1 Middlesex Regt. Officer's Silver Cap Badge, With Rare Battalion Battle Patch WW1 Middlesex Regt. Officer's Silver Cap Badge, With Rare Battalion Battle Patch WW1 Middlesex Regt. Officer's Silver Cap Badge, With Rare Battalion Battle Patch WW1 Middlesex Regt. Officer's Silver Cap Badge, With Rare Battalion Battle Patch

WW1 Middlesex Regt. Officer's Silver Cap Badge, With Rare Battalion Battle Patch

The battalion battle patch, is a very rare surviving piece of divisional command identification, here, it is set mounted behind the silver badge, as the colour designation of the regiment, and in WW1 it was often used thus so on the tropical helmet with the helmet badge together, it could also be sown separately on the uniform as a patch, with the silver badge affixed as usual on the cap, and it is very rare to see complete, the patch with its silver officer’s badge.

On the Brodie helmet it would be added as a painted regimental badge for identification.

The 1st Battalion landed at Le Havre, as line of communication troops, in August 1914 for service on the Western Front.


Lieutenant-Colonel John Hamilton Hall (standing directly in front of the Red Cross on the ambulance), the CO of the 1st Battalion, Middlesex Regiment (98th Brigade, 33rd Division), with his officers. Photograph taken during the battalion's rest near Cassel, 25 April 1918.
The 2nd Battalion landed at Le Havre as part of the 23rd Brigade in the 8th Division in November 1914 also for service on the Western Front.[18]

The 3rd Battalion landed at Le Havre aspart of the 85th Brigade in the 28th Division in January 1915 for service on the Western Front before moving to Egypt in October 1915 and to Salonika in December 1915.

The 4th Battalion land at Boulogne-sur-Mer as part of the 8th Brigade in 3rd Division in August 1914 for service on the Western Front. Some 400 men of the 4th Battalion were killed at the Battle of Mons later that month

Code: 22371

165.00 GBP