Ref.no. 2008.23.11 No known copyright restrictions.
Rank:
Stoker
Birth date:
09.11.1889
Birth Place:
Sidkup, Kent, United Kingdom
Service Number:
K3259
Date Joined:
08.06.1909
Date Discharged:
08.10.1919
Death date:
28.12.1958
Place of death:
Lower Hutt, New Zealand

Display No. 2C

OFFORD, Charles Thomas

Charles Offord joined the Royal Navy in June 1909 as a Stoker 2nd Class, training in HMS Acheron. Prior to the First World War he served for several years each in HM Ships Pembroke, Diamond, and Indomitable.

At the outbreak of the First World War, Offord was serving in HMS Pembroke. He was soon posted to the destroyer HMS Oberon where he served for the rest of the war. He was invalided out of the Royal Navy in October 1919. He immigrated to New Zealand with his wife in 1920, settling in Lower Hutt.

The 1914-1915 Star, The Victory Medal

Awarded medal(s)

Medal Description [Left to Right]:

The 1914-1915 Star

The 1914-15 Star was awarded to servicemen and servicewomen who served in the First World War between 5 August 1914 and 31 December 1915 in any “theatre of war”, provided they had not qualified for the 1914 Star. This included service at Gallipoli between 25 April 1915 and 31 December 1915, service in Egypt between 5 November 1914 and 31 December 1915, and service during the capture of German Samoa on 29 August 1914. Those eligible for the medal must have “served on the establishment of a unit in a theatre of war” during the relevant dates of operations in that area. The ribbon’s red, white and blue shaded and watered bands represent the flag of the United Kingdom.

The Victory Medal

The Victory Medal was awarded in the First World War to all those who had already qualified for the 1914 Star or the 1914-15 Star, and to most persons who had already qualified for the British War Medal. The Victory Medal was awarded to all New Zealand troops serving overseas, except for those who arrived in Samoa after 30 August 1914 and those serving in Great Britain only. It has a unique double rainbow ribbon.

A bronze spray of oak leaves on the medal ribbon denotes that the recipient was Mentioned in Despatches during the period that the medal recognises. To be Mentioned in Despatches a member of the armed forces has had their name mentioned in an official report, written by a superior officer, and sent to a higher command. The report would describe the individual’s gallant or meritorious action in the face of the enemy.