We are moving to our new website. Until August 28th 2023, please complete all purchases by contacting us at +1-905-634-3848 or info@emedals.com

Tel: 1 (905) 634-3848

Text: 1 (905) 906-3848

Purveyors of Authentic Militaria

  • Canada. A Memorial Cross to Private Rayner, Died of Wounds from the Battle of Hill 70
  • Canada. A Memorial Cross to Private Rayner, Died of Wounds from the Battle of Hill 70
  • Canada. A Memorial Cross to Private Rayner, Died of Wounds from the Battle of Hill 70
  • Canada. A Memorial Cross to Private Rayner, Died of Wounds from the Battle of Hill 70
  • Canada. A Memorial Cross to Private Rayner, Died of Wounds from the Battle of Hill 70
  • Canada. A Memorial Cross to Private Rayner, Died of Wounds from the Battle of Hill 70
  • Canada. A Memorial Cross to Private Rayner, Died of Wounds from the Battle of Hill 70

Item: C5036

Canada. A Memorial Cross to Private Rayner, Died of Wounds from the Battle of Hill 70

Hammer Price:

Bid History

$154
4

Time Remaining:

Buyer's Premium  

eMedals proudly ships worldwide, see our shipping information

What's a max bid?

Your maximum bid should be the highest amount you're willing to pay for an item.

Your entered maximum bid will not be disclosed to the seller or other auction participants at any point.

Max bidding example:

If the current auction price is $100 dollars and you place a maximum bid of $120 dollars, the system will bid $101 dollars on your behalf.

If no other participant places a bid, you win that auction lot for $101 dollars.

If another auction participant places a bid of $110 dollars, the system will subsequently place a bid of $111 dollars on your behalf. The system will continue to bid in $1.00 dollar increments until your maximum bid of $120 dollars is exceeded.

If another auction participant places a bid for $125 dollars, the auction lot price will display $121 dollars having exceeded your previously submitted maximum bid by $1.00 dollar.

Buyer's Premium

All bids are subject to a Buyer's Premium which is in addition to the placed successful bid. The following rate of Buyer's Premium will be added to the Hammer Price of each Lot that you purchase:

Twenty-Two Percent (22%) of the Hammer Price

Canada. A Memorial Cross to Private Rayner, Died of Wounds from the Battle of Hill 70

Canada; George V (838169 Pte S. RAYNER.). Sterling silver, marked "STERLING" and hallmarked "R" on the reverse, on a replacement ribbon, light contact, near extremely fine.

Footnote: Stephen Rayner was born on January 18, 1888 in Leytonstone, Essex, England, the son of Henry Rayner and Jane M. Rayner. As a young man, he later moved to Canada and was a resident of Owen Sound, Ontario, working in a saw mill, when he enlisted with the Canadian Expeditionary Force, signing his Attestation Paper as a Private (838169) with the 147th Infantry Battalion "Grey Battalion", on December 4, 1915 in Owen Sound, at the age of 26, naming his next-of-kin as his mother, Mrs. Jane Rayner of Leytonstone, stating that he had no previous military service, that he was not married, that his religion was Methodist and that his trade was that of Plasterer. He was named Acting Lance Corporal on October 22, 1916. Stephen Rayner was one of six brothers who signed up for active service: his oldest brother, Harry Rayner, was later discharged as "Medically Unfit", while the others, William, Frank, Harold and Wallace were at the front. The 147th Infantry Battalion was raised in Grey County, Ontario with mobilization headquarters at Owen Sound under the authority of G.O. 151, December 22, 1915. The Battalion sailed on November 14, 1916 from Halifax, Nova Scotia aboard the S.S. Olympic, under the command of Lieutenant-Colonel G.F. McFarland with a strength of 32 officers and 910 other ranks, arriving in England on November 20th. Six weeks after arriving in England, he was struck off strength of the 147th Infantry Battalion to the 8th Reserve Battalion on January 1, 1917. Rayner was with the 8th Reserve Battalion when he reported to authorities "injured" on May 25, 1917, having suffered a slight gun shot (shrapnel) wound to his hand, as the result of being an "Air Raid Casualty", but remained at duty. He reverted to the rank of Private at his own request on July 6, 1917, as he had received notice that he was to see service soon in the French theatre. He was struck off strength of the 8th Reserve Battalion and proceeding overseas to the 58th Infantry Battalion, on July 12, 1917. He arrived in France shortly thereafter, leaving for his new unit on July 28th and joining them in them in the field on August 18th. 838169 Private Stephen Rayner, 58th Infantry Battalion, Died of his Wounds in the aftermath of the Battle of Hill 70, on August 30, 1917, at the age of 29. He is buried in Aix-Noulette Communal Cemetery Extension, Aix-Noulette, Pas de Calais, France, Plot: I. P. 8., just west of Lens, and is commemorated on page 313 of the First World War Book of Remembrance. For his First World War service, Private Brown was posthumously awarded the British War Medal and the Victory Medal, which were forwarded to his "unmarried" wife, Elizabeth Rayner of Toronto, along with his Memorial Plaque and Scroll. His mother, Jane M. Rayner of Leytonstone, received his Memorial Cross. In his Will, dated September 25, 1916, he bequeathed all his real estate and personal estate to his wife, Elizabeth Rayner.

Back To Top