East & West Africa Medal 1887-99

Obverse: Head of Queen Victoria in a diadem and veil (left). Legend: 'VICTORIA REGINA'. Reverse: a group of soldiers and Africans fighting in the bush for their fallen comrades. Bar: 'WITU 1890'. Inscription on edge: 'G.E.KEMP, A.B., H.M.S. BOADICEA.' Suspended from a bar, and yellow ribbon with a broad black edge and two narrow black central stripes.

George Kemp (1869-1930) was born in Stoke Damerel, near Devonport, Devon. In the 1871 census, his mother Elizabeth says that her husband is a seafarer. This is probably George Kemp who married Elizabeth Crocker at Stoke Damerel in 1865. By 1881, she was a widow, working as a nurse for a family in Clapham, London. Her son George, at this time was a pupil at the Greenwich Hospital School. He then worked as a dock labourer, entering the Royal Navy on 2nd October 1884 and signing up for ten years’ service on 1 May 1887. In HMS 'Boadicea', he took part in the expedition again the Sultan of Witu, Fumo Bakari in 1890. In 1891, he was in the troop ship 'Crocodile'. He also served in the river gunboat HMS 'Woodcock' on the China Station from 1899-1900. Kemp was made a Chief Petty Officer on 1 October 1899. After qualifying for his Royal Naval Pension, he married Florence Alice Exton in Grimsby in 1907 and they settled in Cleethorpes where he worked for the North Lincolnshire Fruit Preserving Works, Grimsby (probably the firm known as Tickler’s Jam). The couple had a daughter Florence Ellen in 1908.

George Kemp was called up during World War I and served at 'Pembroke', the shore base at Chatham until demobilised in 1919.

Object Details

ID: MED1386
Collection: Coins and medals
Type: War medal
Display location: Not on display
Creator: Poynter, Edward John; Wyon, Leonard Charles
Events: Witu Expedition, 1890
Vessels: Boadicea (1875)
Date made: 1874
People: Kemp, George E.; Queen Victoria
Credit: National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, London
Measurements: Overall: 36 mm