The George Medal is awarded by the United Kingdom and Commonwealth of Nations for acts of great bravery; over 2,000 medals have been awarded since its inception in September 1940. Below is set out a selection of recipients of the award, during the 1950s. A person's presence in this list does not suggest their award was more notable than any other award of the George Medal.
Where a recipient has received a second George Medal, a picture of the ribbon bearing the bar symbol is shown.
ARTHUR HILTON British 5th Army - During an operation in Celle in Germany the lorry he was travelling in skidded and went off a bridge into the River Aller. Even though he could not swim, he dived underneath the truck to rescue 2 men trapped in the cabin, unfortunately being unable to find his friend who was in the back of the lorry with himself, who was later found drowned underneath the vehicle
Name | Rank and unit | Action/citation | Year awarded |
---|---|---|---|
William Anderson | Column Officer, National Fire Service, Glasgow | Anderson was one of three fire officers awarded the GM for "showing utter disregard of their own safety in making persistent attempts to save the lives of the trapped men..." in a fire at a cabinet-makers at Ballater Street, Glasgow. [1] | 1953 |
Ramadhani Athumani | Constable, Tanganyika Police Force | When 22 Masai and Waarush tribesmen ran away when a lion sprang and started to maul a government veterinary officer, the constable attacked a fully grown lion with the butt of his rifle as a club. After seizing the constable's right arm and a violent struggle, the lion ran off; saving the veterinary officer's life. [2] | 1957 |
David Frederick Alfred Bloom | Assistant superintendent, Marine Branch, Trinidad and Tobago Police Force | A wooden schooner with 8000 gallons of fuel caught fire in a heavily congested part of the Port of Spain harbour. Despite the probability of an explosion, the police launch with the port services tug moved the schooner in darkness to waste land. Bloom boarded the vessel to do fire fighting. He was in the gravest danger of being killed immediately, while demonstrating calm and cool leadership. [2] Chief Fire Officer Ronald Godfrey Cox was also awarded the George Medal. | 1957 |
Keith Trevor Burdett | Constable, Metropolitan Police | Three males were trying to steal a car, but ran off when the officer approached. After telephoning for assistance, with other officers he sought to apprehend a dangerous criminal. When trying to climb a wall, the officer was shot at several times, resulting in injuries. Four other officers were awarded the British Empire Medal. [3] | 1956 |
Allassan Busanga | Corporal, Gold Coast Police Reserve | Busanga was one of eight police officers who, armed only with batons, faced down a hostile crowd estimated at 2,000 on the bridge near Elmina Castle. While engaging the rioters Busanga received severe gunshot wounds in the head and body. [4] | 1953 |
Wilfred Cain | Constable, Nottingham City Police | Shortly after midnight Cain saw a man in the river near Trent Bridge, Nottingham, and heard a call for help. Using the headlights from a patrol car Cain swam to the rescue. The man was about 150 feet (46 m) from the bank, and the river, between 12–15 feet (3.7–4.6 m) in depth, was running with a very strong current. The water was also extremely cold and the man struggled continuously. Cain, however, swam with him for about 350 yards (320 m) until reaching the river bank. [5] | 1953 |
Robert Campbell | Constable, Dumfries and Galloway Constabulary | For disarming and arresting Robert Dobie Smith, after Smith had shot dead fellow police officer William Gibson while the officers were on duty. [6] Smith was hanged in Saughton, Edinburgh, in September 1951. [7] | 1951 |
Chew Kim Chuan | Inspector, Federation of Malaya Police Force | For outstanding gallantry in action against communist terrorists, and responsible for the capture of the leaders of many gangs. On one occasion he undertook, unarmed, an operation which involved facing terrorists armed with sten guns, rifles, and hand grenades, and after a fierce hand-to-hand struggle succeeded in overcoming them and bringing them to justice. [8] | 1956 |
Thomas Vivian Chisnall | Farmer, Gwelo, Southern Rhodesia | When an aircraft crashed into some trees after overshooting the runway at Thornhill airfield, Chisnall, who lived nearby, rushed to the scene. The aircraft was on fire and the pilot, badly injured and unconscious, was still strapped into the cockpit. Chisnall attempted to release him, but was driven back by the flames. A neighbour, Mr. Richard Walton Fores Cox, a garage manager, then arrived and attempted to cut the pilot free with his penknife, but was also driven back. Chisnall, using a coat and hat as a shield, returned several times to the aircraft and using Cox's knife eventually managed to cut the pilot free, and he and Cox dragged him away from the wreckage and administered first aid. Cox was subsequently awarded the British Empire Medal. [9] | 1953 |
Bruce Desmond Christofferson | Detective, New Zealand Police Force | For tackling two youths armed with rifles, suspected of robbery, during which he was shot in the chest. The two fled the scene, but were subsequently arrested. [10] | 1953 |
Osmund Ertmann 'Ossie' Cislowski | Constable #4598, Queensland Police Force | On 10 August 1954, Cislowski was shot by a revolver in the chest, left hip, and right leg when seeking to arrest a 24-year-old male labourer, in Denham Street, Townsville. He continued to chase and arrest the offender after being shot. The constable was assisted by fellow Constable #4035 Earle Leonard Needham, who was invested with the British Empire Medal (Civil Division). [11] Offender later sentenced to 14 years gaol, additional to matters of burglary. Cislowski was the first Queensland officer to get the medal. [12] [13] [14] | 1956 |
Leo Lewis Clarke | Stoker | Picked up and ran with a bomb that was about to explode, throwing it clear of his colleagues, and thereby sustaining injuries to his hand. Also received the Order of Industrial Heroism. [15] | 1950 |
Leslie Robert Colquhoun | Civil Test Pilot, Vickers-Armstrongs Supermarine Works | In May 1950 Colquhoun was flying an Attacker to test the effectiveness of the air brakes. On the third of two dives the outer portion of the starboard wing folded up and the ailerons became locked. Colquhoun decided not to eject and made a high-speed landing at Chilbolton airfield, saving the aircraft so that the cause could be discovered. [16] | 1950 |
Ronald Godfrey Cox | Chief Fire Officer, Trinidad and Tobago Fire Services | A wooden schooner with 8000 gallons of fuel caught fire in a heavily congested part of the Port of Spain harbour. Despite the probability of an explosion, the police launch with the port services tug moved the schooner in darkness to waste land. Long efforts resulted in the extinguishing of the blaze. [2] Police assistant superintendent David Frederick Alfred Bloom was also awarded the George Medal. | 1957 |
Dama Dagarti | Sergeant, Gold Coast Police Reserve | Sergeant Dagarti was one of eight police officers who, armed only with batons, faced down a hostile crowd estimated at 2,000 on the bridge near Elmina Castle. Shots were fired from the crowd killing the Commanding Officer and mortally wounding another constable. Dagarti took command and engaged the crowd with batons. In a short period of time all except Dagarti were wounded, preventing them from taking further part in the action, but he continued to engage the crowd single-handed until reinforcements arrived. [4] | 1953 |
Leonard Deptford | Constable, Lincolnshire Constabulary | During notorious flooding across parts of the country, the officer entered a two-story house, roped together seven people sheltering upstairs, and let them to safety, with 'his cheerful determination and competent handling of the desperate situation'. [17] | 1953 |
Lawrence Silvester Dick | Junior Nurse, Ministry of Health, Gold Coast | For going to the assistance of police officers who had been shot by rioters, whilst under fire. [4] | 1953 |
George Arthur Dorsett | Constable, Metropolitan Police | Awarded for disarming a man armed with a pistol who had already shot at another officer. [18] Awarded a bar to the GM for disarming a man with a shotgun. [19] | 1953 1959 |
Hugh Douglas | Police Constable, Nottingham City Police | Saved a young child from a burning house after the flames had forced three others from attempting a rescue. [20] | 1950 |
David George Ensor | Civil Servant, Ministry of Labour and National Insurance, Northern Ireland | For pursuing armed robbers on foot and by car. [21] | 1953 |
Oswald Falconar | Colour Sergeant, Royal Marines | On 17 May 1953 at RAF Luqa, Malta, an aircraft, carrying men from 40 Commando crashed on takeoff. The Marines evacuated the aircraft as flames and smoke swept through, but Falconar realized that one man was trapped by his safety belt. He turned back from the exit to release him, and once outside, despite his burnt hands, helped the man to tear off his burning clothing. [22] | 1953 |
Augustus James Voisey Fletcher | Assistant Superintendent of Police, Area Special Branch Officer, Kuala Pilah and Bahau Districts, Negri Sembilan, Federation of Malaya | A series of highly successful and interconnected operations were carried out by a combined Police and Military Unit against Communist Terrorists in the Kuala Pilah and Bahau Police Districts of Negri Sembilan. These operations, which included assaults on two occupied Terrorist camps, were carried out by night with great daring and determination under hazardous conditions and in extremely difficult terrain. They culminated in the surrender of three, the capture of four, and the killing of three Communist Terrorists. Fletcher displayed outstanding coolness, reliability and gallantry in the face of grave personal danger on several separate occasions during these operations. [23] [24] | 1957 |
Alexander Forsythe | Constable, Royal Ulster Constabulary | Together with Woman Sergeant Maud Musselwhite (who was awarded the British Empire Medal), working the dock area of Derry for likely targets by terrorists, located three male persons. Forsythe followed and detained the men and extinguished a lit fuse attached to gelignite. An explosion occurred soon after. [2] | 1957 |
Acton Henry Gordon Gibbon | Captain, Royal Regiment of Artillery | Awarded in recognition of his long-sustained courage as a prisoner during the Korean War. In May 1951, Gibbon helped three officers to escape, resulting in his "vigorous interrogation" in the camp reserved for this treatment near Pyongyang, known as "Pak's Palace" after its commandant, Major Pak. [25] | 1951 |
George Alfred Harrison | Shop Assistant, Jaeger & Co., Birmingham | For showing outstanding devotion to duty and courage. His determination and persistence, although injured, were the means of bringing a dangerous gang of criminals to justice. [26] | 1950 |
Goh Chin Hee | Inspector, Special Branch Police Department | For showing great bravery in capturing four Communist Party of Malaya (CPM) members. [27] | 1957 |
Ian Henderson | Superintendent, Kenya Police | Henderson was first awarded the medal in 1954 for his work attempting to arrange meetings between Government representatives and the Mau Mau, [28] and received a second award in 1955. [29] In 1957 General Sir Gerald Lathbury when wrote that "Ian Henderson has probably done more than any single individual to bring the Emergency to an end". [30] | 1954 1955 |
Freda Holland | Night Sister, Dellwood Maternity Home, Reading | For saving 15 newborn babies in a fire on 18 April 1954. [31] [32] | 1954 |
Frederick Leslie Jones | Constable, New South Wales Police | For disarming a man armed with a rifle. [33] [34] | 1953 |
Freeman Kilpatrick | Staff Sergeant, United States Air Force, 47th Bombardment Wing | While stationed at RAF Sculthorpe, Norfolk, he was cited for rescuing 18 people in floods in East Anglia on 31 January 1953. [35] | 1953 |
John Rodney Lees | Flight Sergeant, Royal Air Force Mountain Rescue Service | Rescued an injured British Army officer, Major Hugh Robertson, from the Welsh mountain, Craig yr Ysfa, in winter by carrying him down the rock face on his back while being lowered, and while the major was struggling in delirium, in the dark. [36] | 1958 |
Reis Leming | Airman 2nd class, United States Air Force, 67th Air Rescue Squadron | While stationed at RAF Sculthorpe, he saved the lives of 27 people in floods in East Anglia on 31 January 1953 by venturing alone on a small rubber raft in the dark. [37] | 1953 |
Yiu Tong Leung | Detective Corporal, Special Branch, Hong Kong Police Force | Corporal Leung was attacked by two men in Grampian Road, Kowloon, and was despite being shot in the stomach returned fire, wounding one assailant. The second man fled, but was pursued by Leung for about a quarter of a mile, finally catching up with him on some waste ground. The man drew a knife, but Leung subdued and arrested him and took him into custody, before he eventually collapsed. [1] (Chinese naming format: Leung Yiu Tong) | 1953 |
Charles Lewis | Inspector, Lincolnshire Constabulary | The Mablethorpe police station was entirely surrounded by water, during notorious flooding across parts of the country. Upon hearing cries, the inspector exited the station by the window, caught in a torrent, and rescued two elderly persons. He continued without a break for 54 hours. [38] | 1953 |
Stanley McArdle | Lieutenant-Commander, Royal Navy, HMS Contest | Following the sinking of the MV Princess Victoria Contest came upon a survivor clinging to a liferaft, clearly exhausted. Despite heavy seas McArdle dived overboard and dragged him back to the ship. [22] | 1953 |
Allan Thomas MacKay | Constable #5314, Queensland Police Force | At Jandowae, a dispute in a workers camp saw one man killed by a rifle by another. After threats, the constable attended, and engaged the offender in conversation. With a rifle pointed directly at him, a sudden rush and a violent struggle saw the offender overcome and arrested. [39] MacKay is the third officer of the Force to be awarded a George Medal. | 1958 |
James Melvin | Divisional Officer, National Fire Service, Glasgow | Melvin was one of three fire officers awarded the GM for "showing utter disregard of their own safety in making persistent attempts to save the lives of the trapped men..." in a fire at a cabinet-makers at Ballater Street, Glasgow. [1] | 1953 |
Robert Gordon Morgan | Flight Lieutenant, Royal Canadian Air Force | Rescued a pilot from a burning F86 Sabre on 21 July 1955 at No. 1 Fighter Wing, Marville, France. With ammunition exploding and while standing on the wing which had a partially filled fuel tank, he along with Leading Aircraftman Harry John Waters were able to pull the pilot from the wreckage. [40] | 1957 |
William Robert Morrow | Sergeant, Royal Ulster Constabulary | The sergeant was asleep in a bedroom of the Royal Ulster Constabulary Station at Rosslea, County Fermanagh, when armed offenders placed gelignite near the guardroom. After the explosion, the offenders with automatic weapons entered the station and commenced shooting. Morrow showed coolness in giving instructions, and taking on the task to repel the offenders with complete disregard for personal safety. [11] | 1956 |
Kanda Msiko | Mine Boss Boy, Mindola Mine, Kitwe, Northern Rhodesia | For saving the lives of two fellow miners on 11 October 1950. [41] | 1950 |
Tenzing Norgay | Mountaineer, Nepal | For his part in the first ascent to the summit of Mount Everest. [42] | 1953 |
David Walker Park | Deputy Labour Director, Scottish Division, National Coal Board | During the Knockshinnoch mining accident of September 1950, over 100 men were trapped below ground. An escape route was made through disused workings to the trapped men, but parts were heavily charged with inflammable gas. Park volunteered to enter the mine, joining the trapped men and instructing them in the use of breathing apparatus, and organising their escape. When the last of the men had been rescued he stayed behind to lead a search party to ensure that no one had been left behind. [43] [44] | 1951 |
Menggong anak Panggit | Iban Tracker, Johor, Federation of Malaya | Menggong was second in command of an Iban platoon patrolling in the Labis area of Segamat, Johor. While attacking a bandit camp the Lieutenant in command was killed, and Menggong assumed command. Seizing a Bren gun and under heavy fire he rushed into the enemy camp, while his men, inspired by his example, charged. Although outnumbered by more than two to one, they fought until the bandits were forced to withdraw. Menggong then organised a search of the area, and only when this proved fruitless did he order the withdrawal of his platoon. [45] | 1953 |
Anthony Hart Piercy | Constable, Lincolnshire Constabulary | A man who had threatened to shoot his wife, took a rifle and ammunition and as his wife ran out of the house, shot at her. Sergeant Savage and Constable Mayes of the Lincolnshire Constabulary arrived and tried to reason with the man, but he shot at both of them inflicting a flesh wound on Savage and hitting Mayes in the leg. He then ran out of the house with the two policemen following as best they could. Constable Anthony Hart Piercy entered the street and saw the man approaching him with the rifle held near his hip and the two policemen following him. The man threatened to shoot Piercy but Piercy ignored him and walked forward to within a few yards of him. The man then fired at him and as he brought the gun to bear for another shot Piercy jumped forward, brought him to the ground and restrained him until help arrived. In September 1952 Piercy became the first Lincolnshire policemen to be awarded the George Medal for gallantry. [46] | 1952 |
Eric Joseph Rippon | Sergeant, New South Wales Police | For disarming a man armed with a shotgun. [33] [34] | 1953 |
Anthony Alfred James Rivers | Lampman, British Transport Commission, Western Region | For saving a woman who was trapped on the line at Cradley Heath railway station. [47] [48] | 1955 |
Bernard Edward Ruck | Assistant Superintendent, Kenya Police | For conspicuous gallantry and devotion to duty in a series of incidents over a long period during attempted negotiations with the Mau Mau in the Mount Kenya area. [28] He received a bar to the GM in 1955 for conspicuous gallantry and devotion to duty over a period of three months making and maintaining contact with Mau Mau leaders. Ruck made thirty-four visits to the forest as a member of a team, usually only three strong, which had to enter unarmed for talks. He knew that there were a number of armed Mau Mau in the vicinity, and on occasions these showed themselves and more than once adopted an aggressive and provocative attitude. Despite this Ruck calmly continued to do his duty. [29] | 1954 1955 |
Frederick Sadd | Leading fireman, Great Yarmouth Fire Brigade | During notorious flooding across parts of the country, houses at Gorleston were in water more than 5 feet (1.5 m), Sadd waded and swan house-to-house in darkness, reassuring the occupants. [17] | 1953 |
John Christopher Strickfuss | Constable 1st class #4420, Queensland Police Force | Based at Cannon Hill, Brisbane, the officer responded to rifle shots from a house nearby. From a now-burning house, while intending fire-fighting, shots were discharged at the off-duty officer. Finding the bodies of four deceased persons, a now-deceased male, and a baby, he extinguished the fire. He showed great devotion to duty and courage in the face of extreme danger. [2] Second officer of the department to receive the George Medal. | 1957 |
John Swanson | Assistant Firemaster, National Fire Service, Glasgow | Swanson was one of three fire officers awarded the GM for "showing utter disregard of their own safety in making persistent attempts to save the lives of the trapped men..." in a fire at a cabinet-makers at Ballater Street, Glasgow. [1] | 1953 |
Anthony Trevor Taylor | Sergeant, Royal Army Ordnance Corps | On 7 October 1956, Sergeant Taylor, the Ammunition Examiner attached to an infantry brigade during the Cyprus Emergency, was called on deal with time bombs located in a practically completed new Police Station. On arrival he was informed that three bombs had already exploded, the last only ten minutes before, doing considerable damage. He entered the building, finding a fourth bomb concealed in the wall beneath the stairs. Taylor, with some difficulty, removed a time pencil, which operated harmlessly in his hand while he was removing the bomb. In the previous six months Taylor had dealt with no less than ten similar time bombs and many home-made bombs and grenades which he had examined and rendered safe. [49] | 1956 |
Samuel Turkington | Postman, Glasgow | For intervening in an attempted armed robbery of a sub-Post Office on Tollcross Road, Glasgow, and grappling with, and then pursuing, an armed man, who was eventually overpowered and arrested by two police officers. [9] | 1953 |
Wilfred Warren | Chief Petty Officer, Royal Navy, HMS Contest | Assisted Lieutenant-Commander Stanley McArdle in saving a survivor from the sunken ferry MV Princess Victoria. [22] | 1953 |
Harry John Waters | Leading Aircraftman, Royal Canadian Air Force | For assisting in the rescue of a pilot from a burning F86 Sabre on 21 July 1955 at No. 1 Fighter Wing, Marville, France. Waters helped Robert Morgan pull the injured pilot from the wreckage. [40] | 1955 |
Douglas Albert Muncaster | Lieutenant - Royal Canadian Navy | "Lieutenant Muncaster, with complete disregard for his own safety, was instrumental in saving the life of a pilot who was trapped inside his flaming aircraft after it had crashed. On the afternoon of 9 March 1955, Lieutenant Muncaster was the co-pilot of a Bell Helicopter which had arrived at the site of an aircraft crash, about one mile south of the Royal Canadian Naval Air Station, Shearwater, Nova Scotia. The aircraft--a Sea Fury, piloted by Sub-Lieutenant(P) J.V. Searle, R.C.N., 0-65687--had crashed about three minutes earlier, in a heavily wooded area, and it was noted that it had broken in two, the forward section, including the cockpit, being inverted, with the engine on fire. He Helicopter could not land owing to the density of the trees and undergrowth. The pilot, therefore, hovered about fifty yards from the aircraft, where the wood were more sparse, while Lieutenant Muncaster jumped to the ground from a height of about eight feet. As Lieutenant Muncaster ran towards the wreckage, one of the fuel tanks exploded. On nearing the forward section of the aircraft, from sound inside the cockpit, he realized that the pilot was alive. The Perspex canopy of the cockpit was resting on the ground and pilot was pinned inside. Being unable to open the canopy or break the Perspex with his hands or feet, Lieutenant Muncaster found a rock and smashed a hole in it. By this time the flames had reached the cockpit and there was imminent danger of the remaining fuel tanks exploding. The pilot was able to push his head and shoulders through the hole made in the canopy by Lieutenant Muncaster who, after considerable pulling, extricated Sub-Lieutenant Searle from the flaming cockpit and assisted him from the immediate vicinity of the aircraft. The remaining fuel tanks exploded a few minutes later." | 1955 |
William Arthur Waterton | Chief Test Pilot, Gloster Aircraft Company | He landed the prototype Gloster Javelin aircraft after flutter had destroyed the elevators, thereby saving important information. [50] [51] | 1952 |
The George Medal (GM), instituted on 24 September 1940 by King George VI, is a decoration of the United Kingdom and Commonwealth, awarded for gallantry, typically by civilians, or in circumstances where military honours are not appropriate.
The Distinguished Conduct Medal was a decoration established in 1854 by Queen Victoria for gallantry in the field by other ranks of the British Army. It is the oldest British award for gallantry and was a second level military decoration, ranking below the Victoria Cross, until it was discontinued in 1993 when it was replaced by the Conspicuous Gallantry Cross. The medal was also awarded to non-commissioned military personnel of other Commonwealth Dominions and Colonies.
Major General Sir Douglas Anthony Kendrew,, often known as Joe Kendrew especially during his rugby career, was an officer of the British Army who served in the Second World War and the Korean War, an international rugby player, and the 22nd Governor of Western Australia from 1963 to 1974.
The King's Police Medal (KPM) is awarded to police in the United Kingdom for gallantry or distinguished service. It was also formerly awarded within the wider British Empire, including Commonwealth countries, most of which now have their own honours systems. The medal was established on 7 July 1909, initially inspired by the need to recognise the gallantry of the police officers involved in the Tottenham Outrage. Renamed the King's Police and Fire Services Medal (KPFSM) in 1940, it was replaced on 19 May 1954 by the Queen's Police Medal (QPM), when a separate Queen's Fire Service Medal was also instituted. The current award was renamed the King's Police Medal following the death of Queen Elizabeth II in 2022 and the accession of King Charles III to the throne of the United Kingdom.
Royal Australian Naval Volunteer Reserve (RANVR) was a reserve force of the Royal Australian Navy.
The Australian Institute of Architects, officially the Royal Australian Institute of Architects, is Australia's professional body for architects. Its members use the post-nominals FRAIA (Fellow) and RAIA. The Institute supports 14,000 members across Australia, including 550 Australian members who are based in architectural roles across 40 countries outside Australia. SONA is the national student-membership body of the Australian Institute of Architects. EmAGN represents architectural professionals within 15 years of graduation, as part of the Australian Institute of Architects.
The Imperial Service Medal is a medal affiliated with the Imperial Service Order. The medal was established under the statutes of the Imperial Service Order, on 8 August 1902, by King Edward VII, with the first awards appearing in the London Gazette in May 1903.
The Air Efficiency Award, post-nominal letters AE for officers, was instituted in 1942. It could be awarded after ten years of meritorious service to officers, airmen and airwomen in the Auxiliary and Volunteer Air Forces of the United Kingdom and the Territorial Air Forces and Air Force Reserves of the Dominions, the Indian Empire, Burma, the Colonies and Protectorates.
The Efficiency Medal was instituted in 1930 for award to part-time warrant officers, non-commissioned officers and men after twelve years of efficient service on the active list of the Militia or the Territorial Army of the United Kingdom, or of the other Auxiliary Military Forces throughout the British Empire. At the same time a clasp was instituted for award to holders of the medal upon completion of further periods of six years of efficient service.
The Meritorious Service Medal (MSM) is a British medal awarded to Senior Non Commissioned Officers and Warrant Officers of the British armed forces for long and meritorious service. From 1916 to 1928, eligibility was extended to cover both valuable services by selected other ranks irrespective of length of service, and for gallantry not in the face of the enemy.
The Efficiency Decoration, post-nominal letters TD for recipients serving in the Territorial Army of the United Kingdom or ED for those serving in the Auxiliary Military Forces, was instituted in 1930 for award to part-time officers after twenty years of service as an efficient and thoroughly capable officer. The decoration superseded the Volunteer Officers' Decoration, the Colonial Auxiliary Forces Officers' Decoration and the Territorial Decoration.
The Medal for Long Service and Good Conduct (Military) is a medal awarded to regular members of the armed forces. It was instituted by King George V in 1930 and replaced the Army Long Service and Good Conduct Medal as well as the Permanent Forces of the Empire Beyond the Seas Medal. The medal was originally awarded to Regular Army warrant officers, non-commissioned officers and men of the UK Armed Forces. It also had a number of territorial versions for the Permanent Forces of the British Dominions. The eligibility criteria were relaxed in 1947 to also allow the award of the medal to officers who had served a minimum period in the ranks before being commissioned. Since 2016, the eligibility was widened to include officers who had never served in the ranks, and so the medal can now be awarded to all regular members of the British Armed Forces who meet the required length of service.
The Efficiency Medal (South Africa) was instituted in 1930 for award to part-time warrant officers, non-commissioned officers and men after twelve years of efficient service on the active list of the Citizen Force of the Union of South Africa. At the same time, a clasp was instituted for award to holders of the medal upon completion of further periods of six years of efficient service. The medal superseded the Colonial Auxiliary Forces Long Service Medal.
The Police Long Service and Good Conduct Medal is a decoration for police officers of the United Kingdom. First instituted in 1951, the medal is presented for twenty aggregate years of service in the police services of the United Kingdom.
The Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve Long Service and Good Conduct Medal, initially designated the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve Long Service Medal, was instituted in 1908. It could be awarded to part-time ratings in the United Kingdom's Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve after twelve years of service and good conduct. The medal was a Naval version of the Volunteer Long Service Medal and its successor, the Territorial Force Efficiency Medal.
The Permanent Forces of the Empire Beyond the Seas Medal is a long service and good conduct medal, instituted for award to other ranks of the Permanent Forces of the Dominions and Colonies of the British Empire. The medal, also known as the Permanent Overseas Forces Long Service and Good Conduct Medal, was established in 1910 as a single common award to supersede the several local versions of the Army Long Service and Good Conduct Medal which were being awarded by the various territories.
The Royal Air Force Long Service and Good Conduct Medal is a medal awarded to regular members of the Royal Air Force in recognition of long service. It was instituted by King George V in 1919, the year following the establishment of the world's first independent air force. At first, the medal was awarded to Regular Force non-commissioned officers and airmen of the Royal Air Force. The award criteria were later relaxed to also allow the award of the medal to officers who had served a minimum period in the ranks before being commissioned. Since 2016, it is awarded to all regular members of the RAF, including officers who had never served in the ranks.
In May 1895, Queen Victoria authorised Colonial governments to adopt various British military medals and to award them to their local permanent military forces. The Cape of Good Hope and Colony of Natal instituted their own territorial versions of the Meritorious Service Medal in terms of this authority. These two medals remained in use in the respective territories until after the establishment of the Union of South Africa in 1910.
The Medal for the Best Shot in the British Army, Infantry, was instituted by Queen Victoria in 1869 and was awarded annually from 1870 to 1882 to the best shot of the Infantry of the British Army, including the Royal Engineers and the Colonial Corps.