Dishwasher safe.
Glass mini decanter and 2 tot glasses, engraved with Corps Badge (KING'S CROWN)
This is a genuine British Pewter tankard made by craftsmen by traditional methods using traditional materials.
Made by WENTWORTH Pewter of Sheffield, England est.1946
Wentworth Pewter is a hallmark of quality, heritage and craftmanship. Each of our products has been lovingly handcrafted, one piece at a time, at our works in Sheffield, UK, the heart of the metalwork industry.
Engraved with the Corps Badge with the King's Crown
Glass Bottom
190ml Bell Goblet engraved with the intelligence Corps Badge
This is a genuine British Pewter spirit flask made by craftsmen by traditional methods using traditional materials.
Retractable Biro with black ink
Dimensions: W 14.5mm x H 18.5mm (5.5 x 7.5 inches)
Gold Plated and Enamelled with Corps Badge
Woven in Corps Colours with Metal Buckle Fastening
Silicon
Engraved with Corps Badge
Dimensions: Diameter 1.5cm
Hardboard coaster decorated with the Corps badge.
Orders are now being taken for the Intelligence Corps Blazer which is available in both Gents and Ladies cut. Waistcoats are also available in the same colours.
The blazer/waistcoat will be tailored to individual specification – it is recommended to get your measurements taken by a professional tailor.
Price: £230 for the blazer and £100 for the waistcoat. Please note, postage is not included and will be calculated on despatch.
Point of Contact:
Order and Measurement forms are available from WO1 Lamb, NPSS, Northwood HQ, Middlesex, HA6 3HP.
Mil Tel: 9360 57842, Civ Tel: 01923 957842
Email: charles.lamb198@mod.gov.uk
Embroidered General Staff cloth cap badge on Cypress Green felt for INT CORPS beret
In this first-ever authorised history of the ultra-secret Government Communications Headquarters, Professor John Ferris digs deep into the past of Britain's biggest cyber-intelligence agency.
You know about MI5. You know about MI6. Now uncover the mystery behind Britain's most secretive intelligence agency, in the first ever authorised history of GCHQ.
For a hundred years, GCHQ - Government Communications Headquarters - has been at the forefront of innovation in national security and British secret statecraft. Famed for its codebreaking achievements during the Second World War, and essential to the Allied victory, GCHQ also held a critical role in both the Falklands War and Cold War. Today, amidst the growing threats of terrorism and online crime, GCHQ continues to be the UK's leading intelligence, security and cyber agency, and a powerful tool of the British state.
Based on unprecedented access to classified archives, Behind the Enigma is the first book to authoritatively tell the entire history of this most unique and enigmatic of organisations - and peer into its future at the heart of the nation's security.
If you like finding out what really happened in the secret Second World War, you will enjoy Setting the Med Ablaze. In the tradition of Ben MacIntyre and Antony Beevor, it tells the story of the secret Mediterranean base called Massingham. Americans, Brits, French, Italians and Spaniards operated undercover together to defeat Hitler. The subversion and sabotage they spearheaded was crucial to undermining Fascist power in Italy, France and the Mediterranean. It wasn't easy. Often, they mistrusted each other as much as their common foe. But it worked. The men and women of Massingham found the courage to rise above the political differences of their capitals. The lives of brave agents were in their hands: parachuting on to a moonlit field, rowing from a silent submarine to a blacked-out beach or transmitting from a clandestine radio. Discover Massingham's role in Italy's surrender, the conquest of the Mediterranean islands and 'the other D-Day' in Southern France.
This book focuses on telling a history of British Military intelligence from the 19th Century to the most recent campaigns by describing some objects lodged in the Military Intelligence Museum and the Archives at Chicksands in Bedfordshire and then telling the story behind them or explaining why the object is of historical interest.
With a Foreword by Lord Hague of Richmond The Intelligence Corps is one of the smallest and most secretive elements of the British Army. It has existed in various guises since the early twentieth century, but it was only formally constituted in July 1940. In this book, Michael Ashcroft tells the astonishing stories of some of its most courageous and ingenious figures, who have operated all over the world from the First World War to the present day. Whether carrying out surveillance work on the street, monitoring and analysing communications, working on overseas stakeouts, receiving classified information from a well-placed contact or interrogating the enemy in the heat of war, a hugely diverse range of people have served in the Corps, often supplementing their individual professional skills with original thinking and leadership in the name of the Crown. This book pays tribute to them and shows why, in the words of the 1st Duke of Marlborough, 'No war can be conducted successfully without early and good intelligence.'
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