Monaco 1912-1913 Speedboat Racing 63mm Silver Medal - By Szirmai

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63mm. Silver. 94.91g. By T. Szirmai.

Obverse showing facade of Le Grand Casino de Monte-Carlo, SAISON 1912-13 in cartouche below. Reverse with winged Fame flying over a racing speedboat. Engraved within tablet '"Angela II" - A - M.le Dr Morton Smart - 1r du Prix de la Mediterranee'. Edge stamped argent.

Very Fine and rare.

Sir Morton Warrack Smart, GCVO, DSO (1 December 1877–16 March 1956) was a Scottish manipulative surgeon who served George V, Edward VIII, George VI and Elizabeth II. He was a distinguished motorboater, yachtsman and horticulturalist

He attended George Watson's College and the University of Edinburgh; he served in the South African War, before graduating with Bachelor of Medicine and Bachelor of Surgery degrees from Edinburgh in 1902.

In the lead up to the First World War, he had become involved in the British Motor Boat Club and served on an Admiralty committee concerning the use of motor boats in the event of a war. During the war, the First Lord of the Admiralty Winston Churchill had him appointed a Commander in the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve. In 1914, he was appointed chief of staff to the admiral in command of gunboats in Belgian canals and was subsequently posted to the First Army in France. Service on a flotilla in the Dardanelles saw him awarded the Distinguished Service Order in 1917. He subsequently served in the Aegean and in the West Indies before demobilisation in 1919.

After the war, he returned to medicine. He was involved with the London Clinic for Injuries. He was employed as George V's manipulative surgeon and was appointed a Commander of the Royal Victorian Order in 1932; he also received decorations from Spain and Monaco recognising his service to their courts. In 1933, he was promoted to Knight Commander of the Royal Victorian Order. When Edward VIII succeeded to the throne in 1936, he appointed Smart to the new office of Manipulative Surgeon to the King, which he held during the reign of George VI, who he attended to during the king's illness in 1948, for which service Smart was promoted to Knight Grand Cross of the Royal Victorian Order in 1949 (the same year he was appointed Extra Manipulative Surgeon to the King, an appointment which was renewed under Elizabeth II from 1952). Meanwhile, he had been a consultant to the Royal Air Force during the Second War.

Smart died on 16 March 1956.