Finding collections relating to d/Deaf, disabled and neurodiverse people

One of the aims of our project is to make collections relating to d/Deaf, disabled and neurodivergent people more visible – and to share some of the objects our Fellows and Trainees are discovering.

Some will have quite obvious connections to disabled people’s lives – a walking stick, some braille or images of disabled people. But we will also be exploring less obvious connections too. Sometimes the significance of an object is its owner; its part in a bigger story, or the way someone with lived experience of disability has responded to it. In this way we hope to broaden the ways that d/Deaf, disabled and neurodivergent stories are told.

Collections

LAPEL BADGE (Military badge)

1914-1918

MOL.2010.27.85.4

ID: A small silver lapel pin badge. The words 'For King and Empire; Services Rendered' are embossed around the rim. The royal cypher, the letters 'GRI', is monogrammed in the centre. These stand for 'Georgius Rex Imperator', or 'George, King and Emperor' in Latin. There is a small crown motif on top of the lettering.This...

Read More

Rights information: Courtesy of Museum of Liverpool

Description

ID: A small silver lapel pin badge. The words 'For King and Empire; Services Rendered' are embossed around the rim. The royal cypher, the letters 'GRI', is monogrammed in the centre. These stand for 'Georgius Rex Imperator', or 'George, King and Emperor' in Latin. There is a small crown motif on top of the lettering.

This badge was issued during the First World War to service personnel who were discharged early through illness or injury. It is commonly referred to as the Silver War Badge.

It has a pin on the back, so it could be worn as a brooch. Veterans would wear the badge to show that they had been wounded in active service. The most common reason someone would be awarded a Silver War Badge would be if they became permanently physically unfit for service.

The badges were numbered on the back, to identify them to the person they were awarded to. This badge belonged to Private Alfred Arkle. Records tell us that he was discharged in September 1917, after being wounded in service.

Over two million men returned from the First World War having become permanently disabled during their service. As they recovered and readjusted to life, many wore this badge in public as a symbol of their service. It also distinguished them from others back home who had conscientiously objected to serving in the military, who were often treated harshly by their peers.

Community curation: One of the stops on the Museum of Liverpool tactile trail, developed as part of Curating for Change to highlight existing tactile and sensory content in the museum, features a replica of this badge that visitors can touch.