Veteran Bring Back German WWII Silver Wound Badge with Packet-This unissued silver wound badge has lost approx. 80% of its original silver finish. The silver remains in the upper right side of the badge only. It still has very good details. There is some finish remaining on the reverse as well. This badge is nicely marked with a “25” under the pin for maker Josef Feix & Söhne from Gablonz. This is a nice badge. It comes complete with its original packet and tissue. The packet is nicely marked for B. Mayer. It is not unusual to find different packets with names that do not match the badge. This badge was brought home by a US veteran. We will supply the name to the buyer.
History: The wound badge was originally established on March 3rd, 1918 by King Wilhelm II to recognize the sacrifice of those wounded during WWI. The badge was instituted in three classes of black, silver and gold with the class bestowed reflecting the number or severity of the wounds received. On May 22nd, 1939 Adolf Hitler re-instituted a slightly modified version of the wound badge with the addition of a swastika to the WWI pattern badge for award to German volunteers who had been wounded supporting the Spanish Nationalist Falangist Generalissimo Francisco Franco against the communist allied Republican Loyalist party in the Spanish Civil War. (July 1936-March 1939). With the outbreak of WWII, on September 1st, 1939, Hitler once again re-instituted another slightly modified version of the wound badge by altering the WWI pattern helmet on the badge to the newly designed M35 style helmet. The badge was awarded to both military and uniformed non-military personnel and later, (March 1943), to civilian personnel who received wounds as a result of enemy actions. The black wound badge was the lowest of the three classes and was awarded for one or two wounds.