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NZSAS - The First Fifty Years
By Ron Crosby
Double Cross: The True Story of The D-Day Spies
By Ben Macintyre
Message
<blockquote data-quote="geronimo" data-source="post: 42440" data-attributes="member: 392"><p>well the best place to start is by getting hold of his records. you need to contact these people</p><p>Army Personnel Centre,</p><p>Historical Disclosures,</p><p>Mail Point 555,</p><p>Kentigern House,</p><p>65 Brown Street,</p><p>Glasgow,</p><p>G2 8EX</p><p>it will cost you ?30 and you need a copy of his death certificate and a certificate of kinship that they send you as a proof of a relationship.</p><p></p><p>then you send a copy of the records to the SAS association at this address</p><p></p><p>The Occupier</p><p>PO Box 35051</p><p>London</p><p>NW1 4WF</p><p></p><p>they will use the record to see If they have anything on record and send it to you for free.</p><p></p><p>after that its all books, kew gardens records office etc etc but I think that should get you started</p><p></p><p>other than that have a look on amazon books at various SAS books that have been written on the subject to give you clues of what to look at. I have done the first two things on this list and it helped get the search started. the rest is down to traveling about to get info and speak to people and endless hours and expense buying books</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="geronimo, post: 42440, member: 392"] well the best place to start is by getting hold of his records. you need to contact these people Army Personnel Centre, Historical Disclosures, Mail Point 555, Kentigern House, 65 Brown Street, Glasgow, G2 8EX it will cost you ?30 and you need a copy of his death certificate and a certificate of kinship that they send you as a proof of a relationship. then you send a copy of the records to the SAS association at this address The Occupier PO Box 35051 London NW1 4WF they will use the record to see If they have anything on record and send it to you for free. after that its all books, kew gardens records office etc etc but I think that should get you started other than that have a look on amazon books at various SAS books that have been written on the subject to give you clues of what to look at. I have done the first two things on this list and it helped get the search started. the rest is down to traveling about to get info and speak to people and endless hours and expense buying books [/QUOTE]
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