LONDON.- The Important Battle of Britain fighter aces group of eleven awarded to Group Captain Peter Townsend (1914-1995) of the Royal Air Force, who was also known for his romance with the Queens sister, Princess Margaret sold for a hammer price of £260,000 today (Wednesday, July 21, 2021) at
Dix Noonan Webb in their auction of Orders, Decorations, Medals and Militaria. After much interest, they sold on the telephone to a Private Collector.
Mark Quayle, Medal Specialist (Associate Director) Dix Noonan Webb, commented: We had hoped this iconic group of medals was going to achieve this spectacular result, if only as a reflection of Group Captain Townsends glittering service career as a Battle of Britain fighter ace - One of the Few, and his story combined with a tale of royal love and heartbreak provided the ultimate human interest story that appeals to all collectors.
Peter Wooldridge Townsend was born in Rangoon, Burma on November 22, 1914 and was brought home to be raised in Devon. In February 1940, he became the first pilot to bring down an enemy aircraft on English soil, later commanding No. 85 Squadron from May 1940 until June 1941, a period that witnessed him completing over 300 operational sorties, twice taking to his parachute - once when wounded - and raising his score to at least eleven enemy aircraft destroyed. He was subsequently awarded a richly deserved D.S.O, and in June 1942 he assumed command of No. 605 Squadron, recently back from the Far East, and later R.A.F. West Malling and the Free French Training Wing.
He was then appointed Equerry to H.M. King George VI in 1944, and Comptroller to the Queen Mothers Household in 1953, his ultimately forlorn romance with the Queens sister, Princess Margaret, brought him further celebrity status to add to his spectacular wartime achievements. Turning his attention to writing, in later years he authored the classic Battle of
Britain memoir Duel of Eagles whilst his well regarded 1978 autobiography Time and Chance tells the story of his eventful personal life.
The group of eleven including a C.V.O., D.S.O., D.F.C. and Second Award Bar were sold with the recipients original Flying Log Books, bound in one volume - with later annotation in his own hand - covering the entirety of his operational career.
In later years Townsend was drawn to the plight of some of the worlds young, not least those who were the victims of war, and, having been approached by the sponsors of the United Nations Year of the Child Appeal in 1979, travelled the world to meet such children in person. The result of his endeavours was a book about a girl who belonged to the Boat People, a girl who was the sole survivor of a shipwreck on a deserted reef, and he followed up this title in 1984 with a book relating the story of a boy who had been maimed by the atom bomb attack on Nagasaki. Indeed it was as a result of such stories that Townsend decided to sell his Honours and Awards at auction in London in November 1988, having found them lying around in a bag at the bottom of a drawer ... I thought it would be sensible to put them to use. And so he did, the entire proceeds being donated to a charitable fund set up to assist children.