So some servicemen are not getting the Jubilee Medal. So what! I and many others did our National Service and were not considered worthy of a medal to commemorate our service to this country.
My demob group was 198, and had it been three weeks later, groups 201 onwards, I would have seen action in Korean.
There was a good probability that those few weeks saved my life.
Very many years later I was informed that I was entitled to a National Service Medal by a grateful (?) country. All I had to do was to apply and enclose my cheque for the sum of £30. This was all the thanks I got, and to put it politely, they were told where they could stuff the medal.
It was quite probable that I and many others could have given their lives in the Korean War, yet this country insulted our service and showed its thanks by expecting us to pay £30 for a bit of tin. Being without this bit of metal and a couple of inches of coloured ribbon does not dim my pride in the fact that I served my country when called upon, and would have given my life, as many did, in its service. To hell with the medal, it means nothing to me.
A P Tobias, Bury
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