The
Victoria Cross (
VC) is the
highest
military decoration
which is, or has been, awarded for valour "in the face of the
enemy" to members of the armed forces of various
Commonwealth countries, and previous
British Empire territories. It takes
precedence over all other orders, decorations and medals. It may be
awarded to a person of any
rank in any
service and civilians under military command.
In the United Kingdom,
it is usually presented to the recipient or their next of kin, by
the British monarch during an
investiture held at Buckingham Palace
. In those Commonwealth countries where the
British monarch is the head of state, the
Governor-General usually fulfils the same
function.
It is the joint highest award for bravery in
the United
Kingdom
with the George Cross,
which is the equivalent honour for valour not in the face
of the enemy. However, the VC is higher in the order of wear
and would be worn first by an individual who had been awarded both
decorations (which has not so far occurred).
The VC was introduced on 29 January 1856 by
Queen Victoria to reward acts
of valour during the
Crimean War. Since
then, the medal has been awarded 1,356 times to 1,353 individual
recipients. Only 13 medals, nine to members of the British Army,
and four to the Australian Army have been awarded since the Second
World War. The traditional explanation of the source of the
gunmetal from which the medals are struck
is that it derives from Russian
cannon
captured at the
siege of
Sevastopol. Recent research has thrown doubt on this story,
suggesting a variety of origins for the material actually making up
the medals themselves. Due to its rarity, the VC is highly prized
and the medal can reach over
£400,000
at auction. There are a number of public and private collections
devoted to it.
Lord
Ashcroft, whose collection contains over one-tenth of the total
VCs awarded, announced in July 2008 a donation to the Imperial War
Museum, allowing his collection to be displayed there in a new
gallery which will open in 2010.
Since 1990, three Commonwealth countries that retain the Queen as
head of state have instituted their
own versions of the VC. As a result, the original Victoria Cross is
sometimes referred to as the "British Victoria Cross" or the
"Imperial Victoria Cross", to distinguish it from the newer
awards.
Origin
In 1854, after 40 years of peace, Britain found itself fighting a
major war against Russia. The
Crimean
War was one of the first wars with modern reporting, and the
dispatches of
William Howard
Russell described many acts of bravery and valour by British
servicemen that went unrewarded.
Before the Crimean War, there was no official standardised system
for recognition of gallantry within the British armed forces.
Officers were eligible for an award of one of the junior grades of
the
Order of the Bath and
brevet promotions whilst a
Mention in Despatches existed as an
alternative award for acts of lesser gallantry. This structure was
very limited; in practice awards of the Order of the Bath were
confined to officers of
field rank.
Brevet promotions or Mentions in Despatches were largely confined
to those who were under the immediate notice of the commanders in
the field, generally members of the commander's own staff.
Other
European countries had awards that did not discriminate against
class or rank; France
awarded the
Légion d'honneur (Legion of
Honour) and The
Netherlands
gave the
Order of William. There was
a growing feeling amongst the public and in the Royal Court that a
new award was needed to recognise incidents of gallantry that were
unconnected with a man's lengthy or meritorious service.
Queen Victoria issued a
Warrant under the
Royal sign-manual on 29 January 1856
(
gazetted 5 February 1856) that
officially constituted the VC. The order was backdated to 1854 to
recognise acts of valour during the
Crimean
War.
Queen
Victoria had instructed the War Office
to strike a new medal that would not recognise
birth or class. The medal was meant to be a simple
decoration that would be highly prized and eagerly sought after by
those in the military services. To maintain its simplicity, Queen
Victoria, under the guidance of
Prince Albert, vetoed the suggestion
that the award be called
The Military Order of Victoria
and instead suggested the name
Victoria Cross. The
original warrant stated that the Victoria Cross would only be
awarded to soldiers who have served in the presence of the enemy
and had performed some signal act of valour or devotion. The first
ceremony was held on 26 June 1857 where Queen Victoria invested 62
of the 111 Crimean recipients in a ceremony in Hyde Park.
Charles Davis Lucas was the first
recipient.
It was
originally intended that the VCs would be cast from the bronze cascabels
of two cannon that were captured from the
Russians
at the siege of Sevastopol.
The historian John Glanfield has since proven through the use of
x-rays of older Victoria Crosses that the metal used for VCs is in
fact from antique Chinese guns and not of Russian origin. One
theory is that the guns were originally Chinese weapons but the
Russians captured them and reused them at Sevastopol. It was also
thought that some medals made during the
First World War were composed of metal
captured from different Chinese guns during the
Boxer Rebellion but the original metal was
used after the war. It is also believed that another source of
metal was used between 1942 and 1945 to create five
Second World War VCs when the Sevastopol
metal went missing.
The
barrels of the cannon in question are on display at Firepower -
The Royal Artillery Museum
at Woolwich
.
The
remaining portion of the only remaining cascabel, weighing 358 oz
(10 kg), is stored in a vault maintained by 15 Regiment Royal Logistic Corps at Donnington,
Telford
. It can only be removed under armed guard.
It is estimated that approximately 80 to 85 more VCs could be cast
from this source. A single company of jewellers,
Hancocks of London, has been responsible for the
production of every VC awarded since its inception.
Appearance
The decoration is a
bronze cross pattée, 41 mm high, 36 mm
wide, bearing the
crown of Saint
Edward surmounted by a lion, and the inscription
FOR
VALOUR. This was originally to have been
FOR THE
BRAVE, until it was changed on the recommendation of
Queen Victoria, as it
implied that not all men in battle were brave. The decoration,
suspension bar and link weigh about 0.87
troy
ounces (27 g).
The cross is suspended by a ring from a
seriffed "V" to a bar ornamented with laurel leaves,
through which the ribbon passes. The reverse of the suspension bar
is engraved with the recipient's name, rank, number and unit. On
the reverse of the medal is a circular panel on which the date of
the act for which it was awarded is engraved in the centre.
The Original Warrant Clause 1 states that the Victoria Cross "shall
consist of a
Maltese cross of bronze".
Nonetheless, it has always been a cross pattée; the discrepancy
with the Warrant has never been corrected.
The ribbon is crimson, 38 mm (1.5 inches) wide. The original
(1856) specification for the award stated that the ribbon should be
red for army recipients and blue for naval recipients. However the
dark blue ribbon was abolished soon after the formation of the
Royal Air Force on 1 April 1918. On
22 May 1920
King George
V signed a warrant that stated all recipients would now receive
a red ribbon and the living recipients of the naval version were
required to exchange their ribbons for the new colour. Although the
Army warrants state the colour as being red it is defined by most
commentators as being crimson or "wine-red".
Award process
The Victoria Cross is awarded for A recommendation for the VC is
normally issued by an officer at
regimental level, or
equivalent, and has to be supported by three witnesses, although
this has been waived on occasion. The recommendation is then passed
up the military
hierarchy until it
reaches the
Secretary of
State for Defence. The recommendation is then laid before the
monarch who approves the award with his or her signature.
Victoria
Cross awards are always promulgated in the London Gazette with the single exception
of the award to the American Unknown Soldier
in 1921. The Victoria Cross warrant makes no
specific provision as to who should actually present the medals to
the recipients.
Queen
Victoria indicated that she would like to present the medals in
person and she presented 185 medals out of the 472 gazetted during
her reign. Including the first 62 medals presented at a parade in
Hyde Park on 26 June 1857 by
Queen
Victoria, nearly 900 awards have been personally presented to
the recipient by the reigning British monarch. Nearly 300 awards
have been presented by a member of the royal family or by a civil
or military dignitary. About 150 awards were either forwarded to
the recipient or next of kin by registered post or no details of
the presentations are known.
The original
Royal Warrant did not
contain a specific clause regarding posthumous awards, although
official policy was to not award the VC posthumously. Between the
Indian Mutiny and 1897 and the beginning of the
Second Boer War the names of six officers
and men were published in the
London Gazette with a
memorandum stating they would have been awarded the Victoria Cross
had they survived. A further three notices were published in the
London Gazette in September 1900 and April 1901 for
gallantry in the
Second Boer War. In
a partial reversal of policy, six posthumous Victoria Crosses, all
for South Africa including the three officers and men mentioned in
the notices in 1900 and 1901 were granted on 8 August 1902. Five
years later in 1907, the posthumous policy was completely reversed
and medals were sent to the next of kin of the six officers and
men. The awards were mentioned in notices in the
Gazette
dating back to the Indian Mutiny. The Victoria Cross warrant was
not amended to explicitly allow posthumous awards until 1920, but
one quarter of all awards for
World War
I were posthumous. Although the 1920 Royal Warrant made
provision for awards to women serving in the Armed Forces, no women
have been awarded a VC.
In the case of a gallant and daring act being performed by a
squadron, ship's company or a detached body of men (such as
marines) in which all men are deemed equally brave and deserving of
the Victoria Cross then a ballot is drawn. The officers select one
officer, the NCOs select one individual and the private soldiers or
seamen select two individuals. In all 46 awards have been awarded
by ballot with 29 of the awards during the
Indian Mutiny.
Four further awards were granted to Q
Battery, Royal Horse Artillery
at Korn
Spruit
on 31 March 1900 during the Second Boer War. The final ballot
awards for the Army were the six awards to the
Lancashire Fusiliers at W Beach during
the landing at
Gallipoli on 25 April 1915
although three of the awards were not gazetted until 1917. The
final seven ballot awards were the only naval ballot awards with
three awards to two
Q-Ships in 1917 and four
awards for the
Zeebrugge Raid in
1918. The provision for awards by ballot is still included in the
Victoria Cross warrant but there have been no further such awards
since 1918.
Between 1858 and 1881 the Victoria Cross could be awarded for
actions taken "under circumstances of extreme danger" not in the
face of the enemy. Six such awards were made during this
period—five of them for a single incident during an
Expedition to the Andaman Islands
in 1867. In 1881, the criteria were changed again and the VC was
only awarded for acts of valour "in the face of the enemy". Due to
this it has been suggested by many historians including Lord
Ashcroft that the changing nature of warfare will result in fewer
VCs being awarded. The prevalence of more remote fighting
techniques has meant that the opportunity to carry out acts of
bravery are diminishing. Since 1940, military personnel who have
distinguished themselves for gallantry
not in the face of the
enemy have been awarded the
George
Cross, which ranks immediately after the VC in the
Order of
Wear.
Colonial awards
The Victoria Cross was extended to colonial troops in 1867. The
extension was made following a recommendation for gallantry
regarding colonial soldier Major
Charles
Heaphy for action in the
New
Zealand land wars in 1864. He was operating under British
command and the VC was
gazetted in 1867. Later that year,
the Government of New Zealand assumed full responsibility for
operations but no further recommendations for the Victoria Cross
were raised for local troops who distinguished themselves in
action. Following gallant actions by three New Zealand soldiers in
November 1868 and January 1869 during the
New Zealand land
wars, an
Order-in-Council on 10
March 1869 created a “Distinctive Decoration” for members of the
local forces without seeking permission from the
Secretary of State for the
Colonies. Although the Governor was chided for exceeding his
authority, the Order in Council was ratified by the Queen. The
title “Distinctive Decoration” was later replaced by the title
New Zealand Cross.Abbott
PE, Tamplin JMA, Chapter 34, 230–236
The question of whether recommendations could be made for colonial
troops not serving with British troops was not asked in New
Zealand, but in 1881, the question was asked in South Africa.
Surgeon
John McCrea, an
officer of the South African forces was recommended for gallantry
during hostilities which had not been approved by British
Government. He was awarded the Victoria Cross and the principle was
established that gallant conduct could be rewarded independently of
any political consideration of military operations.
More recently, four
Australian soldiers were awarded the Victoria Cross in Vietnam
although Britain was not involved in the
conflict.
Indian troops were not originally eligible for the Victoria Cross
since they had been eligible for the
Indian Order of Merit since 1837 which
was the oldest British gallantry award for general issue. When the
Victoria Cross was created, Indian troops were still controlled by
the
Honourable East India
Company and did not come under Crown control until 1860.
European officers and men serving with the Honourable East India
Company were not eligible for the
Indian Order of Merit and the Victoria
Cross was extended to cover them in October 1857. It was only at
the end of the 19th Century that calls for Indian troops to be
awarded the Victoria Cross intensified. Indian troops became
eligible for the award in 1911. The first awards to Indian troops
appeared in the
London Gazette on 7 December 1914 to
Darwan Sing Negi and
Khudadad Khan. Negi was presented with the
Victoria Cross by
King
George V during a visit to troops in France. The presentation
occurred on 5 December 1914 and he is one of a very few soldiers
presented with his award before it appeared in the
London
Gazette.
Separate Commonwealth awards
In recent years, several
Commonwealth countries have
introduced their own honours systems, separate from the
British Honours System. This began
with the
Partition of India in
1947, when the new countries of India and Pakistan introduced their
own systems of awards. The VC was replaced by the
Param Vir Chakra (PVC) and
Nishan-e-Haider respectively, although the
new countries continued to permit winners of British honours to
wear their awards. Several Pakistani soldiers and officers were
authorised to wear both the British medals and the ones earned in
the later
Indo-Pakistani wars.
Three
Commonwealth realms—Australia, Canada
and New Zealand
—have each introduced their own decorations for
gallantry and bravery, replacing British decorations such as the
Military Cross with their own.
Most Commonwealth countries, however, still recognise some form of
the VC as their highest decoration for valour.
Australia was the first Commonwealth realm to create its own VC, on
15 January 1991. Although it is a separate award, its appearance is
identical to its British counterpart. Canada followed suit when in
1993 Queen Elizabeth signed Letters Patent creating the Canadian
VC, which is also similar to the British version, except that the
legend has been changed from
FOR VALOUR to the
Latin PRO VALORE This language
was chosen so as to favour neither French nor English, the two
official languages of Canada. New Zealand was the third country to
adapt the VC into its own honours system. While the New Zealand and
Australian VCs are technically separate awards, the decoration is
identical to the British design, including being cast from the same
Crimean War gunmetal as the British VC. The Canadian Victoria Cross
also includes metal from the same cannon, along with copper and
other metals from all regions of Canada.
As of January 2009, only two of the separate VCs have been awarded.
Willie Apiata received the
Victoria Cross for New
Zealand on 2 July 2007, for his actions in the
War in Afghanistan in
2004.
Mark Donaldson was awarded the
Victoria Cross for
Australia on 16 January 2009 for actions during
Operation Slipper, the Australian
contribution to the War in Afghanistan.
A Canadian version
has been cast that was originally to be awarded to the Unknown
Soldier
at the rededication of the Vimy
Memorial
on 7 April 2007. This date was chosen
as it was the 90th anniversary of the battle of
Vimy Ridge
but pressure from Veterans organisations caused the
plan to be dropped.
Authority and privileges
As the highest award for valour of the United Kingdom, the Victoria
Cross is always the first award to be presented at an investiture,
even before
knighthoods, as was shown at the
investiture of
Private Johnson
Beharry who received his medal before
General Sir Mike Jackson received his
knighthood. Due to its status, the VC is always the first
decoration worn in a row of medals and it is the first set of
post-nominal letters used to
indicate any decoration or order. Similar acts of extreme valour
that do not take place in the face of the enemy are honoured with
the George Cross, which has equal precedence but is awarded second
due to fact that the GC is newer.
There is a widespread erroneous myth that it is statutory for "all
ranks to salute a bearer of the Victoria Cross". There is no
official requirement that appears in the official Warrant of the
VC, nor in
Queen's
Regulations and Orders, but tradition dictates that this occurs
and as such the Chiefs of Staff will salute a
Private awarded a VC or GC.
The Victoria Cross was at first worn as the recipient fancied. It
was popular to pin it on the left side of the chest over the heart,
with other decorations grouped around the VC. The Queen's
Regulations for the Army of 1881 gave clear instructions on how to
wear it; the VC had to follow the badge of the
Order of the Indian Empire. In
1900 it was ordained in Dress Regulations for the Army that it
should be worn after the cross of a Member of the
Royal Victorian Order. It was only in
1902 that King
Edward VII gave the cross
its present position on a bar brooch. The cross is also worn as a
miniature decoration on a brooch or a chain with
mess jacket,
white tie
or
black tie. As a bearer of the VC is not
a
Companion in an
Order of Chivalry, the VC has no place in a
coat of arms.
Annuity
The original warrant stated that NCOs and private soldiers or
seamen on the Victoria Cross Register were entitled to a £10 per
annum
annuity. In
1898, Queen Victoria raised the pension to £50 for those that could
not earn a livelihood, be it from old age or infirmity. Today
holders of the Victoria Cross or George Cross are entitled to an
annuity, the amount of which is determined by the awarding
government. Since 2002, the annuity paid by the British government
is £1,495 per year. As of January 2005, under the
Canadian
Gallantry Awards Order, members of the
Canadian Forces or people who joined the
British forces before 31 March 1949 while domiciled in Canada or
Newfoundland receive
Can$3,000 per
year. Under Subsection 103.4 of the Veterans' Entitlements Act
1986, the Australian Government provides a Victoria Cross
Allowance. Until November 2005 the amount was
Aus$3,230 per year. Since then this amount
has been increased annually in line with the Australian Consumer
Price Index.
Forfeited awards
- See also :Category:Victoria Cross
forfeitures
The original Royal Warrant involved an expulsion clause that
allowed for a recipient's name to be erased from the official
register in certain wholly discreditable circumstances, and his
pension cancelled.
King
George V though felt very strongly that the decoration should
never be forfeited and in a letter to his Private Secretary,
Lord
Stamfordham, on 26 July 1920, his views are forcibly
expressed:
The power to cancel and restore awards is still included in the
Victoria Cross warrant but none has been forfeited since
1908.
Recipients
A total of 1,356 Victoria Crosses have been awarded since 1856 to
1,353 men. There are several statistics related to the largest
number of VCs awarded in individual battles or wars.
The largest number
awarded for actions on a single day was 24 on 16 November 1857, at
the relief of Lucknow during the
Indian Mutiny and the number awarded
in a single action was 11 for the defence of Rorke's Drift
on 22 January 1879 during the Zulu War. The record for the number of
Victoria Crosses awarded in a single conflict was 628 during the
First World War. There are only
seven living
holders of the VC—three British, one Australian, three
Gurkhas—three of them for exploits during the Second
World War; in addition one New Zealander holds the Victoria Cross
for New Zealand and one Australian holds the Victoria Cross for
Australia.
Eight of the then-twelve surviving holders
of the Victoria Cross attended the 150th Anniversary service of
remembrance at Westminster Abbey
on 26 June 2006.
In 1921
the Victoria Cross was given to the American Unknown
Soldier
of the First World War. (The British Unknown
Warrior
was reciprocally awarded the US Medal of Honor.) One VC is in existence that
is not counted in any official records. In 1856, Queen
Victoria laid a Victoria Cross beneath the foundation stone of
Netley
Military hospital
.
When the
hospital was demolished in 1966 the VC, known as "The Netley VC",
was retrieved and is now on display in the Army Medical
Services Museum
, Ash, near Aldershot.
Three people have been awarded the VC and
Bar, the bar representing a second award of the
VC. They are:
Noel Chavasse
and
Arthur Martin-Leake, both
doctors in the
Royal Army
Medical Corps, for rescuing wounded under fire; and New
Zealander
Charles Upham, an
infantryman, for pure combat actions. Upham remains the only
combatant soldier to have received a VC and Bar. An Irishman,
Surgeon General
William
Manley, remains the sole recipient of both the Victoria Cross
and the
Iron Cross. The VC was awarded
for his actions during the
Waikato-Hauhau Maori War, New
Zealand on 29 April 1864 whilst the Iron Cross was awarded for
tending the wounded during the
Franco-Prussian War of 1870–71. New
Zealand Flying Officer
Lloyd
Trigg, has the distinction of being the only serviceman ever
awarded a VC on evidence solely provided by the enemy, for an
action in which there were no surviving Allied witnesses.
The
recommendation was made by the captain of the German
U-boat U-468
sunk by Trigg's aircraft. Lieutenant-Commander Gerard Roope was also awarded a VC on
recommendation of the enemy, the captain of the
Admiral Hipper, but there
were also numerous surviving Allied witnesses to corroborate his
actions.
Since the end of the
Second World
War the original VC has been awarded 13 times: four in the
Korean War, one in the
Indonesia-Malaysia
confrontation in 1965, four to
Australians
in the Vietnam War, two during the
Falklands War in 1982, one in the
Iraq War in 2004, and one in the
War in Afghanistan
in 2006. The Victoria Cross for New Zealand has been awarded once,
which was earned in Afghanistan in 2004 but awarded in 2007. The
Victoria Cross for Australia has been awarded once, which was
earned in Afghanistan in 2008 but awarded in 2009.
The two awards given in the 21st century to British personnel have
been for actions in the
Afghanistan War
and the
Iraq War. On 18 March
2005,
Lance Corporal (then
Private)
Johnson
Beharry of the 1st Battalion,
Princess of Wales's Royal
Regiment became the first recipient of the VC since Sergeant
Ian McKay in 1982. The most recent
award of the Victoria Cross to a British service person was the
posthumous award on 14 December 2006 to
Corporal Bryan Budd of
3 Para.
It was
awarded for two separate acts of "inspirational leadership and the
greatest valour" which led to his death, during actions against the
Taliban in Afghanistan
in July and August 2006.
Value
Medal sales
Some recipients have felt the need to sell their medals, often to
avoid rows between their children:
The value of the VC can be seen by the increasing sums that the
medals reach at auction. In 1955 the set of medals awarded to
Edmund Barron Hartley was
bought at
Sotheby's for the then record
price of £300. In October 1966 the
Middlesex Regiment paid a new record
figure of £900 for a VC awarded after the
Battle of the Somme. In January 1969 the
record reached £1700 for the medal set of
William Rennie In April 2004 the VC awarded
in 1944 to
Sergeant Norman Jackson,
RAF, was sold at auction for £235,250.
On 24
July 2006, an auction at Bonhams in Sydney
of the VC
awarded to Captain Alfred Shout
fetched a world record hammer price of AU$1 million. Captain Alfred Shout
was awarded the VC posthumously in 1915 for hand-to-hand combat at
the Lone Pine trenches in Gallipoli
Turkey
. The
buyer,
Kerry Stokes has since donated
the medal set to the Australian War Memorial. It is on display with
the eight other VCs awarded to Australians at Gallipoli.
Thefts
Several
VCs have been stolen and being valuable have been placed on the
Interpol
watch-list for stolen items. The VC awarded to
Milton Gregg, which was donated
to the Royal Canadian
Regiment Museum in London, Ontario
Canada
in 1979, was
stolen on Canada Day, (1 July 1980), when
the museum was overcrowded and has been missing since. A VC
awarded in 1917 to Canadian soldier Corporal
Filip Konowal was stolen from the same museum
in 1973 and was not recovered until 2004.
On 2
December 2007, 9 VCs were among 100 medals stolen from locked,
reinforced glass cabinets at the QEII Army
Memorial Museum
in Waiouru
, New Zealand with a value of around NZD$20 million. Charles
Upham's VC and Bar was among these. A reward of NZ$300,000 was
posted for information leading to the recovery of the decorations
and conviction of the thieves, although at the time there was much
public debate about the need to offer reward money to retrieve the
medals. On 16 February 2008 New Zealand Police announced all the
medals had been recovered.
Collections
Public collections
Museums with holdings of ten or more VCs include:
| In the UK |
| Museum |
Location |
Number of VCs |
The
Imperial War
Museum |
Kennington , London |
50 |
The
National
Army Museum |
Chelsea, London |
39 |
The
Royal Green
Jackets Museum |
Winchester , Hampshire |
34 |
The
Royal
Engineers Museum |
Gillingham, Kent |
26 |
The
Army Medical
Services Museum |
Mytchett , Surrey |
22 |
| Firepower, The Royal Regiment of
Artillery Museum |
Woolwich , London |
20 |
| The Queen's Own
Highlanders Museum |
Ardersier , Inverness-shire |
16 |
| The South Wales Borderers
Museum |
Brecon ,
Wales |
16 |
The
Green
Howards Regimental Museum |
Richmond , Yorkshire |
15 |
| The Royal
Fusiliers Museum |
Tower of London |
12 |
| The Gordon Highlanders
Museum |
Aberdeen |
12 |
The
National
Maritime Museum |
Greenwich , London |
11 |
| The National War Museum of
Scotland |
Edinburgh Castle |
11 |
The
RAF
Museum |
Hendon ,
London |
11 |
| The
Sherwood Foresters Museum |
Nottingham |
11 |
| The Gurkha Museum |
Winchester , Hampshire |
10 |
The
Royal
Marines Museum |
Portsmouth , Hampshire |
10 |
| The Royal Welch Fusiliers
Museum |
Caernarfon Castle , Wales |
10 |
| Outside the UK |
Australian War Memorial |
Canberra , Australia |
61 (note 2) |
Canadian War Museum |
Ottawa , Ontario |
33 |
QEII Army Memorial Museum |
Waiouru , New Zealand |
11 |
(note 1 = Many VCs are on loan to the museums and are owned by
individuals and not owned by the museums themselves.)
(note 2 = It is the largest publicly held collection in the
world, including all nine VCs awarded to Australians at
Gallipoli.)
Private collections
British businessman and politician
Lord Ashcroft has amassed a
private collection of over 150 VCs. Lord Ashcroft purchased his
first in 1986 and the collection now contains over a tenth of the
VCs ever awarded, the largest private or public collection of such
decorations ever accumulated. The collection is administered by
The Ashcroft Collection Trust.
Victoria Cross
Heroes by Michael Ashcroft was published in November 2006.
It was
announced in July 2008 that Lord Ashcroft is donating £5 million
for a permanent gallery at the Imperial War Museum
where the 50 VCs held by the museum will be put on
display alongside his own collection of 152 VCs.
Other
Memorials
In 2004 a
national Victoria Cross and George Cross memorial was installed in
Westminster
Abbey
close to the tomb of The Unknown Warrior
. Westminster Abbey is a living monument to
British history in that it contains monuments and memorials to
central figures in British History including
Charles Darwin and
James VI & I. As such it was a
significant honour for the VC to be commemorated in Westminster
Abbey.
Canon William Lummis,
MC, was a military historian who built up an
archive on the service records and final resting places of Victoria
Cross holders. This was then summarised into a pamphlet which was
taken to be an authoritative source on these matters. However,
Lummis was aware of short-comings in his work and encouraged
David Harvey to continue it.
The result was Harvey's seminal book
Monuments to Courage. In 2007 the
Royal Mail used material from Lummis'
archives to produce a collection of stamps commemorating Victoria
Cross recipients.
Soldiers' club naming traditions
It is a tradition within the
Australian
Army for soldiers' recreational clubs on military bases to be
named after a particular recipient of the Victoria Cross, usually
one with whom the unit is historically associated. Permission for
such naming rights is usually obtained not only from the relevant
command hierarchy within the military itself, but also from the
family of the recipient. Once dedicated, the club and its
participants typically take great pride in the deeds of the person
with whom they are associated, and often family members will be
invited to attend certain functions held by the club as a mark of
thanks and respect.
See also
Notes
- Ashcroft, Michael, Preface to Victoria Cross Heroes
- Original Warrant Foreword:
- British Gallantry Awards, p283
- The Gazette publishing the original Royal Warrant
- Ashcroft, Michael, p.7-10
- Original Warrant, Clause 5:
- Original Warrant, Clause 1:
- Ashcroft, Michael, p.16
- Abbott and Tamplin (1981). British Gallantry Awards. Nimrod Dix
and Co.. ISBN 0902633740.
- Original warrant, Clause Two:
- Crook, MJ, Chapter 18, p.204
- Pillinger, Dennis; Staunton, A, p.73
- Crook, MJ, Chapter 8 pp.68–90
- Original Warrant, Clause 13:
- Warrant Amendment dated 1858-08-10:
- Crook, MJ, Chapter 19, pp.242–251
- Crook, MJ, Chapter 11. pp 117–125
- The Gazette containing the most up-to-date Order of
Precedence
- Beharry, Johnson p.359
- Sir Ivan de la Bère, The Queen's Orders of
Chivalry, 1964
- The complete book of Heraldry by Stephen Slater, 2002
- Original Warrant, Clause 14:
- Warrant Amendment 1898-07-1898
- Glanfield, John, Chap1
- Australian Veteran's Entitlement Act 1986, Clause
103, Victoria Cross allowance granted to a veteran
under this section is payable at the rate of Aus$3,230 per
year. The amount fixed by this subsection is indexed annually in
line with CPI increases., (accessdate=2007-06-30)
- Original Warrant Clause 15:
- Arthur, Max; pp.185–371
- Victoria Cross Register
- Ashcroft, Michael, Introduction: A brief History of the VC
(p.14-18)
- Ashcroft, Michael, p.296-298, Information on Flying Officer
Lloyd Allan Trigg
- £1700 World Record...;The Times; 22 January 1969; pg 12 col F
References
External links