Remarkable pictures showing hero British captain’s tank corps alongside Cossack warriors during the Russian Revolution are uncovered in a garden shed 100 years on
- A collection of photographs taken by British Army Captain Reginald Shaw MBE were found in a garden shed
- The photos were taken in South Russia between 1919 and 1920 when British troops aided the White Russians
- Captain Shaw MBE left Russia after being awarded the MBE Russian Order of St Vladimir and Order of St Anne
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An incredible collection of photographs depicting a decorated British tank captain alongside Cossack warriors during the Russian Revolution has come to light after being uncovered in a garden shed 100 years later.
The black and white snaps were taken by Captain Reginald Shaw MBE, who served with the White Russians during the revolution in 1919 and 1920.
The pictures were discovered after the captain’s old wooden transit chest was found in the garden of a recently deceased relative.
The collection of photos was found alongside Captain Shaw’s uniform and pocket book and the entire contents of the chest are set to be auctioned by Bosleys in Marlow, Buckinghamshire.
An incredible collection of photographs depicting British soldiers serving in Russia during the Bolshevik Revolution has emerged after the wooden transit chest of Captain Reginald Shaw MBE was discovered in a garden shed
In this black and white photograph a bear with a chain tied around its neck dances for the amusement of two officers stood next to a transport vehicle. The photo was taken during the Russian Revolution when British forces were sent to support the White Russian soldiers
A tank is unloaded from a transport ship in South Russia in 1919 as British forces prepared for to support Tsarist forces against the red Russian revolutionists. The photos were uncovered almost a century later in a garden shed
Captain Reginald Shaw MBE (left) took the photographs while serving as an instructor in the British Tank Corps between 1919 and 1920 when they joined the South Russia expedition. They served alongside White Russian soldiers loyal to the Tsar fighting against the red Bolshevik revolutionists. Pictured right: A tank is lifted by a crane while an officer stands on top
Bernard Pass, auctioneer at Bosleys, said: ‘When you consider this uniform, documents and photographs had laid dormant in Captain Shaw’s military uniform trunk for over 100 years, many of those years in a shed, it remains a remarkable find.
‘The rare connection with the British South Russian Expeditionary Force of 1919 which was to give aid to the Imperial White Russian Army during the Russian Civil war has created an international interest.
‘We’d had inquiries coming as far a field as the United States and the Russian Federation.’
The picture collection includes a portrait of Captain Shaw dressed in his military uniform and another snap of a tank being lifted into the air by a crane with an officer stood on top.
Another picture shows a soldier dancing alongside a small bear that has a chain wrapped around its neck.
British officers stand in a field in South Russia alongside Russian officers and Cossak warriors. A tank can be seen in the background. The British were involved in a series of small but brutal battles in the Russian Civil War
An imposing armoured train is shown in this incredible black and white photo from South Russia during the Russian Civil War. Britain sent thousands of soldiers to support the White Russians during the civil war
White Russian soldiers stand next to a tank in South Russia. Captain Shaw joined the South Russia expedition as an instructor in March 1919 and resigned his commission a year later after receiving the MBE, Russian Order of St Vladimir and Order of St Anne
Captain Shaw was involved in the first tank battle at Amiens on September 15, 1916, while he was serving with the 12th Battalion in the First World War – a year later he was commissioned into the Tank Corps.
Following the end of World War One, Britain sent forces to Russia to help the White Russians in the Bolshevik revolution.
Captain Shaw joined the South Russia expedition as an instructor in March 1919 and resigned his commission a year later after receiving the MBE, Russian Order of St Vladimir and Order of St Anne.
He later settled in Staffordshire and during World War Two served with the Stone Fire Service before being commissioned into the Royal Air Force Volunteer Reserve.
The sale of the photos, which are expected to fetch £200, will take place on Wednesday.