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AR15.COM
7/30/2011 1:40:23 PM EDT
After visiting Littlegavin and HMB today to get away from all the building work, I borrowed the aforementioned DVD from HMB.

This as you probably know is about the battle for Mt Tumbledown and is a powerful and gripping drama in the style that the BBC used to make.

It led me on a google search of Rick Jolly who was the British Military's chief surgeon in the Falklands.

I found this on Wiki

As Officer Commanding (OC) Medical Squadron of the Commando Logistic Regiment RM, Jolly was Senior Medical Officer of 3 Commando Brigade RM and commanded the field hospital at Ajax Bay. The facilities at Ajax Bay were very poor and despite dust, dirt, poor lighting & the presence of two unexploded bombs, only three of the 580 British soldiers and Marines wounded in action, died of their wounds.
After the war Jolly wrote the Book The Red and Green Life Machine about his experiences.
He remains the only serviceman to be decorated by both sides after the conflict, where in received an OBE from the UK and Oficial Orden de Mayo from Argentina. While visiting Argentina in 1998 Jolly had sent ahead a list of Argentine casualties and asked the authorities there what had become of them. As a result, the Argentine Foreign Ministry discovered the truth about the battlefield medical care of their wounded, invited over fifty of them to the ceremony in Buenos Aires, and then appointed him as an Oficial (Officer) in the Orden de Mayo (Order of May) in recognition.
Her Majesty the Queen personally authorized him to wear this "on all occasions" on behalf of the three hundred British Naval, Royal Marines & Army medics involved in the War.


Powerful stuff
7/30/2011 1:45:31 PM EDT
[#1]
And to top it all he was a Matelot.
7/30/2011 1:55:15 PM EDT
[#2]
Quoted:
And to top it all he was a Matelot.


He was indeed

I've seen him in a few programs over the years, quite a man

As for the story, I remember the character in the play, he suffered a severe gunshot wound to the head but survived.

IIRC he emigrated to OZ for the warm climate because of his injury


Why doesn't the BBC make decent programs anymore?
7/30/2011 5:52:42 PM EDT
[#3]
Well worth watching
7/30/2011 11:38:07 PM EDT
[#4]
Taff fought on Tumbledown Mark
7/31/2011 12:59:24 AM EDT
[#5]



Quoted:



Quoted:

And to top it all he was a Matelot.




He was indeed



I've seen him in a few programs over the years, quite a man



As for the story, I remember the character in the play, he suffered a severe gunshot wound to the head but survived.



IIRC he emigrated to OZ for the warm climate because of his injury





Why doesn't the BBC make decent programs anymore?



... because the sheeple prefer a diet of Dancing with the Stars