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Help with ID of an old pin ?

FrankG

New member
[attachment 26501 LapelPin192905-08-06.jpg]

I'm wondering if anyone could shed some light on this old pin the 250 found for me today. I'm guessing that the language might be russian. Above the 1929r date, it looks like possibly an aircraft symbol.

I'd like to know what the writing says.

Thanks
 
Well I typed "russia 1929 airplane" into the old search engine and this site came up:

http://www.heretical.com/miscella/rstofame.html

Are you maybe in the Vancouver area, and this was a commemorative for the flight?

Ken
 
Thanks Ace250,

No Vancouver area here. This cam from Massachusetts about 25 miles West of Boston.

That's an interesting page but I can't say there is any obvious link to what I found. In fact, I'm not even sure the language on the pin is Russian, I was just guessing.
 
Well I typed "russia 1929 airplane" into the old search engine and this site came up:

http://www.heretical.com/miscella/rstofame.html

Are you maybe in the Vancouver area, and this was a commemorative for the flight?

Ken
 
Well, I was able to get in touch with a Russian Person who gave me the following information.



Subject: RE: Any idea what this lapel pin says?

1929
The first flight between Syktyvkar and Archangelsk.



SYKTYVKAR [Syktyvkar], city (1989 pop. 232,000), capital of Komi Republic, NW European Russia, a port on the Sysola River near its entry into the Vychegda. Lumbering and the manufacture of wood products are the chief industries. Near Syktyvkar, on the Vychegda, is one of Russia's largest woodworking complexes. A settlement existed on the site of Syktyvkar by the late 16th cent. During the 17th and 18th cent. there was a flourishing grain and fur trade. The city, a center of Russian colonization in the late 18th and early 19th cent., was called Ust-Sysolsk until 1930.

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2006 Columbia University Press



ARKHANGELSK [Archangelsk] or Archangel, city (1990 est. 418,000), NW European Russia, on the Northern Dvina near its mouth at the White Sea. Although icebound much of the year, it is a leading Russian port and can generally be made usable by icebreakers. Timber and wood products make up the bulk of the exports. The city has factories producing pulp and paper, turpentine, resin, cellulose, building materials, and prefabricated houses. Fishing and shipbuilding are also major industries. It is the terminus of both the Northern Sea Route and the Baltic-White Sea Canal, which was built by slave labor. Once the site of a Norse settlement, the city was founded (1584) as Novo-Kholmogory; it was renamed (1613) for the monastery of the Archangel Michael (which still stands). Arkhangelsk was Russia's principal port until the founding of Saint Petersburg in 1703; it regained importance after the rail line to Moscow was completed in 1898. A supply port during World War I, Arkhangelsk was occupied from 1918 to 1920 by Allied forces (including Americans) and by the White Army; it served as their base for unsuccessful campaigns against the Bolsheviks. During World War II, U.S. and British shipments landed at Arkhangelsk. The city has a maritime school (1771), a regional museum (1859), and institutes of forestry and medicine.

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2006 Columbia University Press
 
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