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Billy Wright blue England v. Wales, Northern Ireland and Scotland International cap, 1955-56 the blue velvet cap with embroidered three lion badge inscribed W v. E, E v. I S v E 1955-56 The above cap represents Wright's 70th, 71st and 73rd appearance for England, in the match against Wales played on 22nd October 1955 at Ninian Park, the match ended in a 1-1, in the match against Northern Ireland played 3rd November at Wembley, England defeated Northern Ireland 3-0 and in the match against Scotland played on 14th April 1956 at Hampden Park, the match ended in a 1-1 draw The following Lots 688 to 693 relates to the career of England and Wolves legend Billy Wright CBE Billy Wright CBE Truly one of the "All-Time Greats" William Ambrose Wright was a model professional and ambassador for the game. He was without doubt an inspiring captain for Wolverhampton Wanderers and England in the late 1940s and 1950s another mark of his greatness was the fact that he was never sent -off or even cautioned. Billy Wright was born on 6th February 1924 and joined Wolves ground staff straight from school, turning professional in 1941. In the war years he made guest playing appearances for Leicester City and as a corporal in the Shropshire Light Infantry he made his first appearance for England in the unofficial "Victory" match against Belgium on 19th January 1946, he played a further two "Victory" Internationals matches before making his first full International against Northern Ireland played on 28th September 1946 at Windsor Park, Belfast, with England defeating Northern Ireland 7-2. Just a year later after a full season in League football Wolves manager Ted Vizard made him club captain and one year on from that at 24, England manager Walter Winterbottom made his captain of the International side. Wright made 59 appearances for England at wing-half before being moved to centre-half during the 1954 World Cup in Switzerland and this move has been widely accepted as prolonging an already exceptional career. Settling into the new position was comfortable for Wright and he was able to display his defensive capabilities to their best advantage. At this stage in his domestic career he had already captained Wolves to their 1948-49 F.A.Cup victory and later in 1953-54 to the club's first-ever League Championship. He was awarded the Footballer of the Year in 1952 and arguably should have had two more awards for the 1958 and 1959 League Championship-winning season. His International career spanned almost 13 years and made his final appearance for his country in a 8-1 victory against the USA played 28th May 1959. He is unique as he was the first-ever player to make 100 appearances at International level and that milestone was reach in the match against Scotland played on 11th April 1959. His last 70 appearances were consecutive a then record (until bettered by legendary Spanish goalkeeper Andoni Zubizarreta) and all were as captain, another record. After playing in excess of 500 matches for Wolves he retired from playing in August 1959 and became manager/coach of England's Youth team in October 1960 and finally managing his boyhood club Arsenal until 1966
Billy Wright's, CBE Commander Of The Order Of The British Empire medal inscribed For God and The Empire, the reverse Royal Cypher is surmounted by a Kings crown, with original ribbon and in original fitted case and framed presentation certificate (2) The following Lots 688 to 693 relates to the career of England and Wolves legend Billy Wright CBE Billy Wright CBE Truly one of the "All-Time Greats" William Ambrose Wright was a model professional and ambassador for the game. He was without doubt an inspiring captain for Wolverhampton Wanderers and England in the late 1940s and 1950s another mark of his greatness was the fact that he was never sent -off or even cautioned. Billy Wright was born on 6th February 1924 and joined Wolves ground staff straight from school, turning professional in 1941. In the war years he made guest playing appearances for Leicester City and as a corporal in the Shropshire Light Infantry he made his first appearance for England in the unofficial "Victory" match against Belgium on 19th January 1946, he played a further two "Victory" Internationals matches before making his first full International against Northern Ireland played on 28th September 1946 at Windsor Park, Belfast, with England defeating Northern Ireland 7-2. Just a year later after a full season in League football Wolves manager Ted Vizard made him club captain and one year on from that at 24, England manager Walter Winterbottom made his captain of the International side. Wright made 59 appearances for England at wing-half before being moved to centre-half during the 1954 World Cup in Switzerland and this move has been widely accepted as prolonging an already exceptional career. Settling into the new position was comfortable for Wright and he was able to display his defensive capabilities to their best advantage. At this stage in his domestic career he had already captained Wolves to their 1948-49 F.A.Cup victory and later in 1953-54 to the club's first-ever League Championship. He was awarded the Footballer of the Year in 1952 and arguably should have had two more awards for the 1958 and 1959 League Championship-winning season. His International career spanned almost 13 years and made his final appearance for his country in a 8-1 victory against the USA played 28th May 1959. He is unique as he was the first-ever player to make 100 appearances at International level and that milestone was reach in the match against Scotland played on 11th April 1959. His last 70 appearances were consecutive a then record (until bettered by legendary Spanish goalkeeper Andoni Zubizarreta) and all were as captain, another record. After playing in excess of 500 matches for Wolves he retired from playing in August 1959 and became manager/coach of England's Youth team in October 1960 and finally managing his boyhood club Arsenal until 1966
Billy Wright blue England v. Holland International cap, 1946-47 the dark blue velvet cap with embroidered three lion badge inscribed The Football Association, Holland 1946-47 The above cap represents Wright's fourth appearance, in the match against Holland played on 27th November 1946 at Leeds Road, Huddersfield, England defeated Holland 8-2 The following Lots 688 to 693 relates to the career of England and Wolves legend Billy Wright CBE Billy Wright CBE Truly one of the "All-Time Greats" William Ambrose Wright was a model professional and ambassador for the game. He was without doubt an inspiring captain for Wolverhampton Wanderers and England in the late 1940s and 1950s another mark of his greatness was the fact that he was never sent -off or even cautioned. Billy Wright was born on 6th February 1924 and joined Wolves ground staff straight from school, turning professional in 1941. In the war years he made guest playing appearances for Leicester City and as a corporal in the Shropshire Light Infantry he made his first appearance for England in the unofficial "Victory" match against Belgium on 19th January 1946, he played a further two "Victory" Internationals matches before making his first full International against Northern Ireland played on 28th September 1946 at Windsor Park, Belfast, with England defeating Northern Ireland 7-2. Just a year later after a full season in League football Wolves manager Ted Vizard made him club captain and one year on from that at 24, England manager Walter Winterbottom made his captain of the International side. Wright made 59 appearances for England at wing-half before being moved to centre-half during the 1954 World Cup in Switzerland and this move has been widely accepted as prolonging an already exceptional career. Settling into the new position was comfortable for Wright and he was able to display his defensive capabilities to their best advantage. At this stage in his domestic career he had already captained Wolves to their 1948-49 F.A.Cup victory and later in 1953-54 to the club's first-ever League Championship. He was awarded the Footballer of the Year in 1952 and arguably should have had two more awards for the 1958 and 1959 League Championship-winning season. His International career spanned almost 13 years and made his final appearance for his country in a 8-1 victory against the USA played 28th May 1959. He is unique as he was the first-ever player to make 100 appearances at International level and that milestone was reach in the match against Scotland played on 11th April 1959. His last 70 appearances were consecutive a then record (until bettered by legendary Spanish goalkeeper Andoni Zubizarreta) and all were as captain, another record. After playing in excess of 500 matches for Wolves he retired from playing in August 1959 and became manager/coach of England's Youth team in October 1960 and finally managing his boyhood club Arsenal until 1966
Billy Wright UEFA 100 Caps presentation cap the dark blue velvet cap with embroidered three lion badge inscribed Billy Wright 100 CAPS, the reverse embroidered UEFA in original UEFA case In 2011 UEFA launched a new award to commemorate players from UEFA's 53 member associations who have made 100 or more appearances for their national team. The award will consist of a commemorative cap to be given to the players who have reached this milestone. The cap was presented to the family of Billy Wright. The following Lots 688 to 693 relates to the career of England and Wolves legend Billy Wright CBE Billy Wright CBE Truly one of the "All-Time Greats" William Ambrose Wright was a model professional and ambassador for the game. He was without doubt an inspiring captain for Wolverhampton Wanderers and England in the late 1940s and 1950s another mark of his greatness was the fact that he was never sent -off or even cautioned. Billy Wright was born on 6th February 1924 and joined Wolves ground staff straight from school, turning professional in 1941. In the war years he made guest playing appearances for Leicester City and as a corporal in the Shropshire Light Infantry he made his first appearance for England in the unofficial "Victory" match against Belgium on 19th January 1946, he played a further two "Victory" Internationals matches before making his first full International against Northern Ireland played on 28th September 1946 at Windsor Park, Belfast, with England defeating Northern Ireland 7-2. Just a year later after a full season in League football Wolves manager Ted Vizard made him club captain and one year on from that at 24, England manager Walter Winterbottom made his captain of the International side. Wright made 59 appearances for England at wing-half before being moved to centre-half during the 1954 World Cup in Switzerland and this move has been widely accepted as prolonging an already exceptional career. Settling into the new position was comfortable for Wright and he was able to display his defensive capabilities to their best advantage. At this stage in his domestic career he had already captained Wolves to their 1948-49 F.A.Cup victory and later in 1953-54 to the club's first-ever League Championship. He was awarded the Footballer of the Year in 1952 and arguably should have had two more awards for the 1958 and 1959 League Championship-winning season. His International career spanned almost 13 years and made his final appearance for his country in a 8-1 victory against the USA played 28th May 1959. He is unique as he was the first-ever player to make 100 appearances at International level and that milestone was reach in the match against Scotland played on 11th April 1959. His last 70 appearances were consecutive a then record (until bettered by legendary Spanish goalkeeper Andoni Zubizarreta) and all were as captain, another record. After playing in excess of 500 matches for Wolves he retired from playing in August 1959 and became manager/coach of England's Youth team in October 1960 and finally managing his boyhood club Arsenal until 1966
Billy Wright white No.5 England International short-sleeved, 1955, Playrite Sports, 40 with v-neck collar and embroidered three lion badge inscribed CONTINENTAL TOUR 1955, various moth holes and three small repairs front and one on back, band of staining below number The Continental Tour comprised three matches, France, Spain and Portugal. In the match against France played on 15th May in Paris, France defeated England 1-0, the match against Spain was played on 18th May in Madrid and ended in a 1-1 draw, in the final match of the tour against Portugal played in Oporto on 22nd May, Portugal defeated England 3-1 The following Lots 688 to 693 relates to the career of England and Wolves legend Billy Wright CBE Billy Wright CBE Truly one of the "All-Time Greats" William Ambrose Wright was a model professional and ambassador for the game. He was without doubt an inspiring captain for Wolverhampton Wanderers and England in the late 1940s and 1950s another mark of his greatness was the fact that he was never sent -off or even cautioned. Billy Wright was born on 6th February 1924 and joined Wolves ground staff straight from school, turning professional in 1941. In the war years he made guest playing appearances for Leicester City and as a corporal in the Shropshire Light Infantry he made his first appearance for England in the unofficial "Victory" match against Belgium on 19th January 1946, he played a further two "Victory" Internationals matches before making his first full International against Northern Ireland played on 28th September 1946 at Windsor Park, Belfast, with England defeating Northern Ireland 7-2. Just a year later after a full season in League football Wolves manager Ted Vizard made him club captain and one year on from that at 24, England manager Walter Winterbottom made his captain of the International side. Wright made 59 appearances for England at wing-half before being moved to centre-half during the 1954 World Cup in Switzerland and this move has been widely accepted as prolonging an already exceptional career. Settling into the new position was comfortable for Wright and he was able to display his defensive capabilities to their best advantage. At this stage in his domestic career he had already captained Wolves to their 1948-49 F.A.Cup victory and later in 1953-54 to the club's first-ever League Championship. He was awarded the Footballer of the Year in 1952 and arguably should have had two more awards for the 1958 and 1959 League Championship-winning season. His International career spanned almost 13 years and made his final appearance for his country in a 8-1 victory against the USA played 28th May 1959. He is unique as he was the first-ever player to make 100 appearances at International level and that milestone was reach in the match against Scotland played on 11th April 1959. His last 70 appearances were consecutive a then record (until bettered by legendary Spanish goalkeeper Andoni Zubizarreta) and all were as captain, another record. After playing in excess of 500 matches for Wolves he retired from playing in August 1959 and became manager/coach of England's Youth team in October 1960 and finally managing his boyhood club Arsenal until 1966
Vivienne Westwood & Malcolm McLaren: An 'Anarchist Punk Gang' Seditionaries Muslin Shirtc.1979/80,in white muslin, front with black, green and red printed design, Malcolm McLaren Vivienne Westwood Seditionaries Personal Collection label stitched within the fabric lower right (now moved due to stitching coming away), with D-ring to each shoulder, and D-ring and dog-clip to each long sleeve, accompanied by a letter of provenanceFootnotes:ProvenanceOffered by the vendor who purchased it at the time of creation.'Anarchist Punk Gang', or as it is also known 'The One Per Centers', is one of the final, and darkest, designs by Malcolm McLaren and Vivienne Westwood to be introduced at Seditionaries. In 1979 McLaren regularly spent time away from London in Paris and later said that while he approved the design, Westwood was principally responsible for the genesis and realisation. The bleakness of the artwork not only reflects the beleaguered state of affairs experienced by the pair and their coterie but also acts as a memoriam for Sex Pistols bass-player Sid Vicious, who had died in February 1979 from a heroin overdose. The Pistols, around whom McLaren and Westwood's design work revolved from 1976, split up at the beginning of 1978 and in October that year, Vicious had been arrested in New York for the murder of his partner Nancy Spungen. His death four months later coincided with the commencement of an extremely acrimonious court case brought against Pistols manager McLaren by the surviving members of the group with the backing of Richard Branson's record company Virgin Records. Since Punk had gone overground, Seditionaries was by this time regularly closed as a result of it being vandalised and graffiti-ed by passing punks and football hooligans, while members of the staff pilfered stock to fund their drug habits. The appropriately death-cult design takes its text and imagery from Hell's Angels biker gangs, and features a skull at the centre surrounded by the phrase 'As You Were I Was As I Am You Will Be.' This derives from a graffiti scrawl attributed to Heinrich Himmler the gonzo writer Hunter S. Thompson included as a chapter heading in his 1966 book Hell's Angels. The skull is positioned between two banners, with all text in so-called 'blackmail' lettering as if cut out of newspaper headlines, just as in the Sex Pistols band logo, 3 and both feature the encircled capital 'A' anarchy sign which first appeared as a radical political symbol in the 1860s as a protest design of the International Workingmen's' Association of Spain. One flagpole is emblazoned '1%' above the statement 'Anarchist Punk Gang'; in contrast, the other carries a quote from a recording of Vicious in an interview circulated after his death: '99% is shit.' This appears above the slogan: 'Create hell and get away with it.' Underneath the red, green and black vector bearing the skull is the statement: 'The barrier between friend and foe is thin 'At certain times of day there are only us.' This is from a quote by a biker in Raymond C. Morgan's book Angels Do Not Forget, which was published in the summer of 1979. The final statement in the design announces: 'We're the 1% who don't fit and don't care.' As well as looping back to Vicious's original statement, this quotes from the chorus of the Pistols' anthem Pretty Vacant, which ends with Johnny Rotten declaring: 'And we don't care.' Note: the opposing texts '1%' and '99% is shit' are absent from this shirt due to the shoulder insets of the muslin design.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
EDISON STANDARD PHONOGRAPH - a Victorian Edison Standard phonograph wax cylinder player, complete with case and original funnel, together with a large boxful of phonograph cylinders, all boxed, titles including Edison Gold Moulded Records, Tell Me The Old Old Story, Clarion Record, Asleep In The Deep, Edison Record, 90 and 9 (same key), etc, overall width 25cm
JVC Separates / Pioneer Record Deck, JVC E-3 separates including Amplifier A-E3, Cassette Deck D-E3, Tuner T-E3 and Record Deck L-E3 with instruction booklet (no lid) plus JVC CD Player XL-V20 and a Pioneer Record Deck PL-990 with instruction booklet, all very good condition especially Pioneer, all untested
Hi Fi Stereo Systems, three Stereo systems Kenwood includes Cassette, CD player, Tuner, Amplifier and Speakers - 83L system; JVC system Record Deck AL-E21, CD CA-E21L, Amplifier, Cassette, CD Player and speakers - 21L system and a Pye system containing Record deck, Amplifier, Tuner, Cassette, CD Player and speakers ST6 150 plus a pair of Mission 735 speakers very good condition untested
Technics HiFi System / Wharfdale Speakers, Technics HiFi system that includes Amplifier SU-X101, CD Player SL-PJ27A, Tuner ST-X301L, Cassette RS-X101 and Record Deck SL-J110R (broken lid) with leads plus a pair of Wharfdale Delta 70 Speakers (some white paint to front of one) all black generally very good condition untested
THE RISE AND FALL OF PARAMOUNT RECORDS 1928-1932 VOLUME TWO (BOX SET TMR 204). The second instalment of the exceptional 'Rise And Fall Of Paramount Records' box set series. Limited issue of 5000. The vinyl albums do not have paper labels but have the side number etched into the record where the labels would be. Contents: * 800 newly-remastered digital tracks, representing 175 artists. * 90+ fully-restored original 1920s-30s Paramount ads from The Chicago Defender * 6 x 180g LPs pressed on label-less alabaster-white vinyl, each side with its own hand-etched numeral and holographic image. * 250 pg. large-format clothbound hardcover book featuring original Paramount art and the label's curious tale * 400 pg. encyclopedia-style softcover field guide containing artist bios & portraits and full Paramount discography * First-of-its-kind music and image player app containing all tracks and ads, housed on custom metal USB drive * Polished aluminum and stainless steel "Machine Age" cabinet, upholstered in sapphire blue velvet.In 'As New' condition.
JIMMY WINSTON AND HIS REFLECTIONS - SORRY SHE'S MINE 7" (DEMO - F.12410). A lovely record by Jimmy Winston (original keyboard player for the Small Faces) to include Sorry She's Mine c/w It's Not What You Do (But The Way You Do It). The record is in strong VG condition with some scuffs and hairlines - non of which are feelable.
Grampian Six Two Four Germanium Preamp.Serviced, 12V battery power input disconnected.Originally a PA speaker/record player amp. 2 germanium mic pre’s and a germanium Gramophone driver (switched to unbalanced jack).3x AC128 germanium transistorsOh, did we mention it’s germanium(A) Tested and working. No guarantee or warranty implied. Operational status may change during shipping. See the main Buying Page for further important information.

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11512 item(s)/page