Hubbry Logo
Victoria CrossVictoria CrossMain
Open search
Victoria Cross
Community hub
Victoria Cross
logo
8 pages, 0 posts
0 subscribers
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Victoria Cross
Victoria Cross
from Wikipedia

Victoria Cross
A bronze cross pattée bearing the crown of Saint Edward surmounted by a lion with the inscription "for valour". A crimson ribbon is attached
Obverse of the cross; ribbon: 1+12 inches (38 mm), crimson (blue ribbon for naval awards 1856–1918)
TypeMilitary decoration
Awarded for"... most conspicuous bravery, or some daring or pre-eminent act of valour or self-sacrifice, or extreme devotion to duty in the presence of the enemy"[1]
DescriptionBronze Cross pattée with Crown and Lion Superimposed, and motto: "For Valour"
Presented byThe monarch of the United Kingdom
EligibilityPersons of any rank in the Naval, Military and Air Forces of the United Kingdom, its colonies or territories, and Commonwealth countries that award UK honours; members of the Merchant Navy; and civilians serving under the orders, directions or supervision of any of the above-mentioned forces or services[2]
Post-nominalsVC
ClaspsBars can be awarded for further acts of valour
StatusActive
Established29 January 1856
First award26 June 1857
Total1,358
Total recipients1,355

Ribbon bar

Second award bar
Order of Wear
Next (higher)None
Next (lower)George Cross (Equal in stature)[3]

The Victoria Cross (VC) is the highest and most prestigious decoration of the British decorations system. It is awarded for valour "in the presence of the enemy" to members of the British Armed Forces and may be awarded posthumously. It was previously awarded to service personnel in the broader British Empire (later Commonwealth of Nations), with most successor independent nations now having established their own honours systems and no longer recommending British honours. It may be awarded to a person of any military rank in any service and to civilians under military command. No civilian has received the award since James Adams in 1879. Since the first awards were presented by Queen Victoria in 1857, two thirds of all awards have been personally presented by the British monarch. The investitures are usually held at Buckingham Palace.

The VC was introduced on 29 January 1856 by Queen Victoria to honour acts of valour during the Crimean War. Since then, the medal has been awarded 1,358 times to 1,355 individual recipients. Only 15 medals, of which 11 to members of the British Army and 4 to members of the Australian Army, have been awarded since the Second World War. The traditional explanation of the source of the metal from which the medals are struck is that it derives from a Russian cannon captured at the siege of Sevastopol. However, research has indicated another origin for the material.[4] The historian John Glanfield has established that the metal for most of the medals made since December 1914 came from two Chinese cannons and that there is no evidence of Russian origin.[5]

The VC is highly prized and has been valued at over £400,000 at auctions.[6] A number of public and private collections are devoted to the Victoria Cross. The private collection of Lord Ashcroft, which has been amassed since 1986, contains over one-tenth of all Victoria Crosses awarded.[7]

Beginning with Canada on its centenary of confederation in 1967,[8] followed in 1975 by Australia[9] and New Zealand,[10] these countries developed their own national honours systems, separate from and independent of the British or Imperial honours system. As each country's system evolved, operational gallantry awards were developed with the premier award of each system, with the Victoria Cross for Australia, the Canadian Victoria Cross and the Victoria Cross for New Zealand being created and named in honour of the Victoria Cross. They are unique awards of each honours system recommended, assessed, gazetted and presented by each country.

Origin

[edit]

In 1854, after 39 years of peace, Britain was in 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.[11]

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 while 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[12] and 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.[13]

Other European countries had awards that did not discriminate against class or rank; France awarded the Légion d'honneur (Legion of Honour, established 1802) and the Netherlands gave the Order of William (established in 1815). There was a growing feeling among the public and in the Royal Court that a new award was needed to recognise incidents of gallantry that were unconnected with the length or merit of a man's service. Queen Victoria issued a warrant under the royal sign-manual on 29 January 1856[11][14] (gazetted 5 February 1856)[14] that officially constituted the VC. The order was backdated to 1854 to recognise acts of valour during the Crimean War.[15]

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.[16] 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 officers and men who had served in the presence of the enemy and had performed some signal act of valour or devotion.[17] The first ceremony was held on 26 June 1857 at which Queen Victoria invested 62 of the 111 Crimean recipients in a ceremony in Hyde Park, London.[11]

Manufacture

[edit]

A single company of jewellers, Hancocks & Co, has been responsible for the production of every VC awarded since its inception.[18]

It has long been widely believed that all the VCs were cast in bronze from the cascabels of two cannons that were captured from the Russians at the siege of Sevastopol.[18][19][20] However, in 1990 Creagh and Ashton conducted a metallurgical examination of the VCs in the custody of the Australian War Memorial,[21][22] and later the historian John Glanfield wrote that, through the use of X-ray studies of older Victoria Crosses, it was determined that the metal used for almost all VCs since December 1914 is taken from antique Chinese guns, replacing an earlier gun.[4][20][18][23] Creagh noted the existence of Chinese inscriptions on the cannon, which are now barely legible due to corrosion.[21] A likely explanation is that the cannon were taken as trophies during the First Opium War and held in the Woolwich repository.

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. This is not so, however. The VCs examined by Creagh and Ashton[21][22] both in Australia (58) and at the National Army Museum in New Zealand (14)[21] spanned the entire time during which VCs have been issued and no compositional inconsistencies were found.[21] It was 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".[4] Creagh accessed the Army records at MoD Donnington in 1991 and did not find any gaps in the custodial record.[21] The composition found in the WW2 VCs, among them those for Edwards (Australia) and Upham (New Zealand), is similar to that for the early WW1 medals. This is likely to be due to the reuse of material from earlier pourings, casting sprues, defective medals, etc.

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 MoD Donnington and may only be removed under armed guard. It is estimated that approximately 80 to 85 more VCs could be cast from this source.[4]

Appearance

[edit]
The obverse and reverse of the bronze cross pattée medal; obverse showing the crown of Saint Edward surmounted by a lion with the inscription "for valour" with a crimson ribbon; the reverse shows the inscription of the recipient on the bar connecting the ribbon with the regiment in the centre of the medal.
The front and back of Edward Holland's VC

The decoration is a bronze cross pattée, 1+3964″ (41 mm) high, 1+2764″ (36 mm) wide, bearing the crown of Saint Edward surmounted by a lion, and the inscription "for valour".[24] This was originally to have been "for the brave", until it was changed on the recommendation of Queen Victoria, as it implied that only men who were awarded the cross were brave.[20] The decoration, suspension bar, and link weigh about 0.87 troy ounces (27 g).[25]

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.[16] 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.[16]

The Original Warrant Clause 1 states that the Victoria Cross "shall consist of a Maltese cross of bronze".[24] Nonetheless, it has always been a cross pattée; the discrepancy with the warrant has never been corrected.[26]

The ribbon is crimson, 1+12″(38 mm) wide. The original (1856) specification for the award stated that the ribbon should be red for army recipients and dark blue for naval recipients,[27] but the dark blue ribbon was abolished soon after the formation of the Royal Air Force on 1 April 1918. On 22 May 1920 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.[28] Although the army warrants state the colour as being red, it is defined by most commentators as being crimson or "wine-red".[29]

Since 1917 a miniature of the Cross has been affixed to the centre of the ribbon bar when worn without the Cross. In the event of a second award bar, a second replica is worn alongside the first.[26]

Award process

[edit]

Selection

[edit]
The obverse of the bronze cross pattée medal; showing the crown of Saint Edward surmounted by a lion with the inscription FOR VALOUR with a blue ribbon
The obverse of William Johnstone's VC showing the dark blue ribbon for pre-1918 awards to naval personnel

The Victoria Cross is awarded for

... most conspicuous bravery, or some daring or pre-eminent act of valour or self-sacrifice, or extreme devotion to duty in the presence of the enemy.[1]

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.[30] 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.[31] 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.[32]

The original royal warrant did not contain a specific clause regarding posthumous awards, although official policy was not to award the VC posthumously. Between the First war of Indian Independence in 1857 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 an exception to policy for the Second Boer War, six posthumous Victoria Crosses, three to those mentioned in the notices in 1900 and 1901 and a further three, were granted on 8 August 1902, the first official posthumous awards.[33][note 1] Five years later in 1907, the posthumous policy was reversed for earlier wars, and medals were sent to the next of kin of the six officers and men whose names were mentioned in notices in the Gazette dating back to the Indian Mutiny.[34] 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.[35][36]

The process and motivations of selecting the medal's recipients has sometimes been interpreted as inconsistent or overly political. The most common observation has been that the Victoria Cross may be given more often for engagements that senior military personnel would like to publicly promote.[37][38]

The 1920 royal warrant made provision for awards to women serving in the Armed Forces. No woman has been awarded a VC.[note 2][40]

Criteria

[edit]

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, a ballot is drawn. The officers select one officer, the NCOs select one individual, and the private soldiers or seamen select two individuals.[41]

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.[30]

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.[42] Six such awards were made during this period—five of them for a single incident during an Expedition to the Andaman Islands in 1867.[43] In 1881, the criteria were changed again and the VC was only awarded for acts of valour "in the face of the enemy".[43] 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.[44]

Colonial awards

[edit]

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 Wars in 1864.[45] 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.[46] Following gallant actions by three New Zealand soldiers in November 1868 and January 1869 during the New Zealand 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.[47] 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.[46] In addition, in 1870 Victoria sent six ceremonial Highland broadswords to New Zealand, to be presented as "Swords of Honour" to Māori rangatira who had served with distinction during the New Zealand Wars. The swords were presented in a ceremony in Wellington in June 1870 to Mōkena Kōhere, Te Keepa Te Rangihiwinui (Major Kemp), Te Pokiha Taranui, Henare Tomoana, Ropata Wahawaha, and Ihaka Whaanga.[48]

The question of whether awards could be made to colonial troops not serving with British troops was raised in South Africa in 1881. Surgeon John McCrea, an officer of the South African forces was recommended for gallantry during hostilities which had not been approved by the 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 the Vietnam War although Britain was not involved in the conflict.[49]

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 East India Company and did not come under Crown control until 1860. European officers and men serving with the 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 Singh Negi and Khudadad Khan. Negi was presented with the Victoria Cross by 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.[50]

Separate Commonwealth awards

[edit]
The cross pattée bearing the crown of Saint Edward surmounted by a lion with the inscription FOR VALOUR etched into stone.
Victoria Cross as it appears on Commonwealth War Graves Commission headstones.

Since the Second World War, most but not all Commonwealth countries have created their own honours systems and no longer participate in the British honours system. This began soon after 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 (NH) respectively. Most if not all new honours systems continued to permit recipients of British honours to wear their awards according to the rules of each nation's order of wear. Sri Lanka, whose defence personnel were eligible to receive the Victoria Cross until 1972, introduced its own equivalent, the Parama Weera Vibhushanaya medal. Three Commonwealth realms—Australia, Canada and New Zealand[51]—have each introduced their own decorations for gallantry and bravery, replacing British decorations such as the Victoria Cross with their own. The only Commonwealth countries that can now recommend the VC are the small nations that still participate in the British honours system, none of whose forces have ever been awarded the VC.[52]

When the Union of South Africa instituted its own range of military decorations and medals with effect from 6 April 1952, these new awards took precedence before all earlier British decorations and medals awarded to South Africans, with the exception of the Victoria Cross, which still took precedence before all other awards. The other older British awards continued to be worn in the order prescribed by the British Central Chancery of the Orders of Knighthood.[3][53][54]

Australia was the first Commonwealth realm to create its own VC, on 15 January 1991.[55] Canada followed suit when in 1993, followed by New Zealand in 1999. While each of these new awards are technically separate from the British award, the Australian and New Zealand decoration is identical to the British design and is cast from the same gunmetal.[51] The Canadian Victoria Cross is almost identical, except that the legend has been changed from "for valour" to the Latin "pro valore". This language was chosen so as to favour neither English nor French, the two official languages of Canada. It also includes metal from the same cannon, along with copper and other metals from all regions of Canada.[56][57]

There have been six recipients of the Victoria Cross for Australia, four for action in Afghanistan and one awarded for action in the Second World War following a review. The first was to Trooper Mark Donaldson (Special Air Service Regiment) on 16 January 2009 for actions during Operation Slipper, the Australian contribution to the War in Afghanistan;[58] Ben Roberts-Smith,[59] Daniel Keighran[60] and Cameron Baird were also awarded the Victoria Cross for Australia for actions in Afghanistan. Teddy Sheean was awarded the VC after the Australian Government convened an expert panel to review his case.[61] The Victoria Cross for New Zealand has been awarded once: Corporal Willie Apiata (New Zealand Special Air Service) on 2 July 2007, for his actions in the War in Afghanistan in 2004. The Canadian Victoria Cross has been cast once, to be awarded to the Unknown Soldier at the rededication of the Vimy Memorial on 7 April 2007 (this date being chosen as it was the 90th anniversary of the battle of Vimy Ridge), but pressure from veterans' organisations caused the plan to be dropped.[62]

Privileges

[edit]

Authority

[edit]

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.[19] Owing 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.[52] Similar acts of extreme valour that do not take place in the face of the enemy are honoured with the George Cross (GC), which has equal precedence but is awarded second because the GC is newer.[63]

It is not 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 King's Regulations and Orders, but tradition dictates that this occurs and, consequently, senior officers will salute a private awarded a VC or GC.[63]

As there was no formal order of wear laid down,[64] 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 Edward VII gave the cross its present position on a bar brooch.[65] 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.[66]

Annuity

[edit]

The original warrant stated that NCOs and private soldiers or seamen on the Victoria Cross Register were entitled to a £10 per annum annuity.[67] In 1898, Queen Victoria raised the pension to £50 for those that could not earn a livelihood, be it from old age or infirmity.[68] 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 2015, the annuity paid by the British Government is £10,000 per year.[69] This is exempted from tax for British taxpayers by Section 638 Income Tax (Earnings and Pensions) Act 2003, along with pensions or annuities from other awards for bravery.[70] In Canada, under the 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.[71] Under Subsection 103.4 of the Veterans' Entitlements Act 1986, the Australian Government provides a Victoria Cross Allowance.[72] Until November 2005 the amount was A$3,230 per year. Since then this amount has been increased annually in line with the Australian Consumer Price Index.[73][74]

Forfeited awards

[edit]

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.[75] Eight were forfeited between 1861 and 1908. The power to cancel and restore awards is still included in the Victoria Cross warrant.[76]

King George V felt very strongly that the decoration should never be forfeited and in a letter from his Private Secretary, Lord Stamfordham, on 26 July 1920, his views are forcefully expressed:[31]

The King feels so strongly that, no matter the crime committed by anyone on whom the VC has been conferred, the decoration should not be forfeited. Even were a VC to be sentenced to be hanged for murder, he should be allowed to wear his VC on the scaffold.

Recipients

[edit]
"Lucknow 16 November 1857. The 93rd Highlanders Entering The Breach At The Storming of the Secundrabagh" depicts 93rd Highlanders storming Sikandar Bagh, 17 VCs were awarded for the action.
"James Hill Johnes, VC, Attacking the Enemy" by Frank Nowlan depicts James Hills-Johnes earning his Victoria Cross at the siege of Delhi in July 1857

A total of 1,358 Victoria Crosses have been awarded since 1856 to 1,355 men.[77] The greatest number of Victoria Crosses awarded for a single day was 24 for deeds performed during the Indian Mutiny on 16 November 1857, 23 for deeds at Lucknow and one by Francis David Millet Brown for action at Narnoul.[78] The greatest number won by a single unit during a single action is seven, to the 2nd/24th Foot, for the defence of Rorke's Drift, 22–23 January 1879, during the Zulu War.[79] The greatest number won in a single conflict is 628, during the First World War.[80] Ishar Singh became the first Indian Sikh to receive the award.[81] Eight of the 12 surviving holders of the Victoria Cross attended the 150th Anniversary service of remembrance at Westminster Abbey on 26 June 2006.[82]

Three people have been awarded the VC and Bar, the bar representing a second award of the VC. They are Noel Godfrey Chavasse and Arthur Martin-Leake, both doctors in the Royal Army Medical Corps, for rescuing wounded under fire; and New Zealander Captain Charles Upham, an infantryman, for combat actions.[83] Upham remains the only combatant soldier to have received a VC and Bar. Surgeon General William George Nicholas Manley, an Irishman, is 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, while the Iron Cross was awarded for tending the wounded during the Franco-Prussian War of 1870–71.[84] Royal New Zealand Air Force Flying Officer Lloyd Allan Trigg is 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.[85] 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.[86]

Since the end of the Second World War, the original VC has been awarded 15 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 three in the War in Afghanistan for actions in 2006, 2012 and 2013.[87][88][89][90]

In 1921, the British Unknown Warrior was awarded the US Medal of Honor and reciprocally the Victoria Cross was presented to the American Unknown Soldier of the First World War.[87] This is the only ungazetted VC award following the normal British practice for both gallantry and meritorious awards to foreign recipients not being gazetted. It is included in the total of 1,358 awards.

In 1856, Queen Victoria laid an unnamed Victoria Cross beneath the foundation stone of Netley Military hospital.[91] 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, Mytchett, near Aldershot. This VC is not counted in official statistics.[91]

Public sales

[edit]

Since 1879, more than 300 Victoria Crosses have been publicly auctioned or advertised. Others have been privately sold. The value of the VC can be seen by the increasing sums that the medals reach at auctions. In 1955 the set of medals awarded to Edmund Barron Hartley was bought at Sotheby's for the then record price of £300 (approximately £9900 in present-day terms[92]). In October 1966 the Middlesex Regiment paid a new record figure of £900 (approximately £21200 in present-day terms[92]) for a VC awarded after the Battle of the Somme. In January 1969, the record reached £1700 (£35300[92]) for the medal set of William Rennie.[93] In April 2004 the VC awarded in 1944 to Sergeant Norman Jackson, RAF, was sold at an auction for £235,250.[94][95] 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 A$1 million (approximately £410,000 at the time).[6] In November 2009, it was reported that almost £1.5 million was paid to St Peter's College, Oxford by Lord Ashcroft for the VC and bar awarded to Noel Chavasse.[96] Vice Admiral Gordon Campbell's medal group, including the VC he received for actions while in command of HMS Farnborough, was reportedly sold for a record £840,000.[97]

Thefts

[edit]

Several VCs have been stolen and, being valuable, have been placed on the Interpol watch-list for stolen items.[98] 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[99] and has been missing since. A VC awarded in 1917 to Canadian soldier Corporal Filip Konowal[100] was stolen from the same museum in 1973 and was not recovered until 2004.[101]

On 2 December 2007, nine VCs were among 100 medals (12 sets) 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.[102] A reward of NZ$300,000, provided by Lord Ashcroft, was posted for information leading to the recovery of the decorations. On 16 February 2008, New Zealand Police announced that all of the medals had been recovered.[103]

Collections

[edit]

There are a number of collections of Victoria Crosses. The VC collection of businessman and politician Lord Ashcroft, amassed since 1986, contains 162 medals, over one-tenth of all VCs awarded. It is the largest collection of such decorations. In July 2008 it was announced that Ashcroft was to donate £5 million for a permanent gallery at the Imperial War Museum where the 50 VCs held by the museum would be put on display alongside his collection.[104] The Lord Ashcroft Gallery at the Imperial War Museum opened on 12 November 2010, containing a total of 210 VCs and 31 GCs.[7] After a 2008 donation to the Imperial War Museum, the Ashcroft collection went on public display alongside the museum's Victoria and George Cross collection in November 2010.[7] It was announced that the Lord Ashcroft Gallery will close from 1 June 2025 (collection to be returned to Lord Ashcroft).[105]

Prior to the November 2010 opening of the Ashcroft Gallery, the largest collection of VCs on public display was held by the Australian War Memorial, whose collection includes all nine VCs awarded to Australians at Gallipoli. Of the 101 medals awarded to Australians (96 VCs, and five VCs for Australia), this collection contains around 70 medals, including three medals awarded to British soldiers (Grady, 1854; Holbrook, 1914; and Whirlpool, 1858), and three of the VCs for Australia (Donaldson, 2008; Keighran, 2010; and Roberts-Smith, 2010).[106]

Museums with holdings of ten or more VCs include:[107][108]

In the UK
Museum Location Number
of VCs
Lord Ashcroft Gallery, Imperial War Museum North Lambeth, London 210
The National Army Museum Chelsea, London 39
The Royal Green Jackets (Rifles) Museum Winchester, Hampshire 34
The Royal Engineers Museum Gillingham, Kent 26
The Army Medical Services Museum Mytchett, Surrey 22
Firepower – The Royal Artillery Museum Woolwich, London 20
The Queen's Own Highlanders Museum Fort George, Inverness-shire 16
The Regimental Museum of The Royal Welsh 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 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 ~70[109]
Canadian War Museum Ottawa, Ontario, Canada 39[110]
National Army Museum Waiouru, New Zealand 11
Note: Many VCs are on loan to the museums and are owned by individuals and not owned by the museums themselves.[107]

Legacy

[edit]

Memorials

[edit]

In 2004, a national Victoria Cross and George Cross memorial was installed in Westminster Abbey close to the tomb of the Unknown Warrior.[111] Westminster Abbey contains monuments and memorials to central figures in British history including Isaac Newton and Charles Darwin.[112] One VC recipient, Lord Henry Percy, is buried within a family vault in the Abbey.[113]

Canon William Lummis was a military historian who built up an archive on the service records and final resting places of Victoria Cross holders.[114] 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 own 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.[115]

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.[116] Australia has another unique means of remembering recipients of the Victoria Cross. Remembrance Drive is a path through city streets and highways linking Sydney and Canberra. Trees were planted in February 1954 by Queen Elizabeth II in a park near Sydney Harbour and at the Australian War Memorial in Canberra, marking either end of the route, with various plantations along the roadsides in memory of the fallen. Beginning in 1995, 23 rest stop memorials named for Australian recipients of the VC from World War II onwards have been sited along the route, providing picnic facilities and public amenities to encourage drivers to take a break on long drives. 23 of the 26 memorial sites have been dedicated, with a further three reserved for the surviving VC recipients, including two of the newer Victoria Cross for Australia awards. Edward Kenna was honoured with the most recent rest stop on 16 August 2012, having died in 2009.[117]

Valour Road is a residential street in the city of Winnipeg, Canada named in honour of three World War I recipients of the Victoria Cross who lived in the same block of that street. The story is also commemorated in a sixty-second short film commonly seen on Canadian television.[118]

In art

[edit]

The subject of soldiers earning the VC has been popular with artists since the medal's inception. Notable are the fifty paintings by Louis William Desanges that were painted in the late 1850s and early 1860s. Many of these were exhibited at the Egyptian Gallery in Piccadilly, but in 1900, they were brought together by Lord Wantage as the Victoria Cross Gallery and exhibited in the town of Wantage, at that time in Berkshire. Later, the collection was broken up and many of the paintings were sent to the various regiments depicted. Some were damaged or destroyed.[119] A number of the acts were also portrayed in a Second World War propaganda pamphlet, and the images commissioned by the Ministry of Information are presented in an online gallery available on the website of The National Archives.[120] In 2016, portrait photographer Rory Lewis was commissioned by the Victoria Cross and George Cross Association to hold portrait sittings with all living recipients of the Victoria Cross and the George Cross.[121]

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]

References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
The Victoria Cross (VC) is the highest military decoration for valour awarded to members of the British Armed Forces and select Commonwealth militaries for most conspicuous bravery, or some daring or pre-eminent act of valour or self-sacrifice, or extreme devotion to duty in the presence of the enemy. Instituted by Royal Warrant of Queen Victoria on 29 January 1856 to recognise acts of gallantry during the Crimean War (1854–1856), it remains the pre-eminent gallantry award in the British honours system, open to all ranks and services without distinction. The medal comprises a bronze cross pattée, cast from metal of Russian ordnance captured at Sevastopol, featuring the Royal Crown of Saint Edward surmounted by a lion above the inscription "For Valour", suspended from a crimson ribbon. First presented by Queen Victoria in 1857, the VC has since been awarded for extraordinary feats across major conflicts, underscoring its enduring symbol of selfless courage amid mortal peril.

Origins and Establishment

Historical Context of Creation

The Victoria Cross emerged from the exigencies of the Crimean War (1853–1856), during which British forces, allied with and the against , suffered heavy casualties and demonstrated widespread individual heroism without adequate distinction in existing honors. Prior systems favored officers through rank-restricted orders like the , founded in 1725 for meritorious service, while enlisted ranks received only undifferentiated campaign medals, leaving no mechanism for recognizing personal gallantry across classes. Contemporary media advancements, including telegraph dispatches and newspaper accounts, amplified reports of such deeds—exemplified by Acting Mate Charles Davis Lucas's act of throwing an armed shell overboard from HMS Hecla on 24 June 1854, averting potential —spurring public and parliamentary pressure for reform. This was compounded by observations of egalitarian foreign awards, such as the French , which honored valor irrespective of status, exposing Britain's outdated framework. In 1855, Prince Albert proposed a universal cross for bravery; Captain George Treweeke Scobell further championed the initiative in that December, arguing for incentives to valor amid the war's brutal conditions. Queen Victoria formalized the award via royal warrant on 29 January 1856, designating it the for "conspicuous bravery" in combat, open to all ranks, branches, and even non-combatants in extremis, with the inscription "For Valour" added at her insistence. Retroactive to actions from autumn 1854, it directly addressed Crimean precedents while establishing a for meritocratic recognition, yielding the first 111 awards in predominantly for that conflict.

Initial Awards and Early Precedents

![A bronze cross pattée bearing the crown of Saint Edward surmounted by a lion with the inscription "for valour". A crimson ribbon is attached](./assets/Victoria_Cross_croppedcropped Prior to the establishment of the Victoria Cross in 1856, the British military lacked a standardized decoration specifically for acts of conspicuous gallantry that was equally accessible to officers, non-commissioned officers, and enlisted personnel across all services. Officers were typically rewarded through promotions, mentions in dispatches, or admission to orders such as the Order of the Bath, while lower ranks received ad hoc recognitions like monetary awards or informal commendations, with no unified symbol of valor comparable to continental European equivalents. Earlier precedents included the Army Gold Medal and Naval Gold Medal introduced during the Napoleonic Wars for significant actions, but these were limited in scope, often service-specific, and not intended as a universal highest award for battlefield bravery. The (1854–1856) exposed this gap through widespread reports of heroic actions, particularly during events like the on 25 October 1854, where ordinary soldiers displayed exceptional courage amid logistical failures and high casualties. Public and parliamentary pressure, amplified by war correspondents such as , demanded formal recognition for all ranks, prompting Lord Panmure to propose the VC in late 1855 as a bronze cross "for valour" open to all, irrespective of rank or branch. approved the royal warrant on 29 January 1856, making the award retrospective to 14 September 1854—the start of the Siege of Sevastopol—to honor Crimean exploits. The first Victoria Cross was gazetted to Charles Davis Lucas, a mate aboard HMS Hecla, for his action on 21 June 1854 during the bombardment of the Russian fortress at Bomarsund in the , where he seized and hurled overboard a live 9-inch shell that had landed on deck, preventing an explosion that could have destroyed the ship and crew. Lucas's deed exemplified the empirical basis for the award: a direct, causal intervention averting immediate disaster through personal risk, without reliance on rank-based privilege. A total of 111 VCs were awarded for the , with the inaugural presentation ceremony occurring on 26 June 1857 in , where personally invested 62 recipients before an estimated 400,000 spectators. Early precedents beyond the retrospective Crimean awards emerged during the , marking the first forward conferrals for an ongoing conflict. On 16 November 1857, eight VCs were gazetted for the storming of during the Siege of , including to Private John McGuire for repeatedly charging enemy positions despite wounds, demonstrating the award's application to sustained combat valor in colonial suppression operations. These initial post-Crimean awards validated the VC's design as a merit-based instrument, prioritizing verifiable acts of gallantry over institutional biases, with recipients selected through eyewitness accounts and command endorsements rather than posthumous or politicized nominations.

Design and Symbolism

Physical Characteristics

![A bronze cross pattée bearing the crown of Saint Edward surmounted by a lion with the inscription "for valour". A crimson ribbon is attached](./assets/Victoria_Cross_croppedcropped The Victoria Cross medal consists of a cross pattée, measuring 35 mm (1.375 inches) in width. It is cast from derived from captured enemy cannon, including Russian guns from the . The obverse features the crown of Saint surmounted by a statant gardant, with the inscription "FOR VALOUR" in raised lettering positioned below the . The reverse of the cross is plain, with the date of the act of valour engraved upon it. A V-shaped suspender bar, embossed with laurel leaves, connects the cross to the via a small link. The complete decoration, including the suspender bar and link, weighs approximately 25 grams (0.87 ounces). The is , 38 mm wide, though originally dark blue for naval recipients and for personnel before in 1918. The medal is suspended from a straight bar on the , which allows it to be worn from the left . All Victoria Crosses are manufactured by Hancocks & Co., jewellers, maintaining consistency in design since the award's institution in 1856.

Manufacturing Process and Materials

The Victoria Cross is cast from , a primarily composed of approximately 88–90% , 10% tin, and trace amounts of . A long-held asserts that the metal derives from the cascabels of two Russian cannons captured during of in 1855, symbolizing valor against the enemy, but metallurgical analysis has demonstrated this origin to be apocryphal. Chemical composition studies of awarded medals reveal inconsistencies with the purported cannons, including variations in and tin ratios; early specimens align more closely with from Chinese-manufactured Russian , while some World War II-era crosses used unrelated commercial stock, indicating reliance on general supplies rather than a singular captured source. Since its institution in 1856, all Victoria Crosses have been manufactured exclusively by the London firm Hancocks & Co., appointed as the sole supplier under royal warrant. The production process differs from struck medals, involving hand-casting: is melted and poured into molds to form the 39-millimeter , which is then meticulously finished by filing and polishing to achieve the specified dimensions and . The obverse features a raised crown of Saint Edward surmounted by a statant guardant, with the inscription "FOR VALOUR" arched above; the reverse is engraved with the recipient's name, unit, and date of the act of valor, followed by attachment of a V-shaped suspension bar for the (dark for naval and recipients). Each is produced on demand post-approval, ensuring uniqueness, with Hancocks maintaining dies and techniques refined over 168 years, though exact modern methods remain proprietary to preserve craftsmanship standards.

Award Criteria and Process

Core Eligibility and Valor Standards

The Victoria Cross is awarded exclusively to members of the armed forces of the and realms who demonstrate exceptional valor during active operations. Eligibility extends to personnel of any rank across all services—, , —and includes civilians serving under military command, though no civilian awards have occurred since 1867. Posthumous conferment is permitted, reflecting the award's emphasis on acts performed irrespective of personal survival. Core valor standards mandate "most conspicuous bravery, or a daring or pre-eminent act of valour or , or extreme devotion to duty in the presence of the enemy," as stipulated in the Royal Warrant establishing the decoration on 29 January 1856. This threshold requires deeds surpassing those warranting lesser gallantry awards, prioritizing direct confrontation with adversarial forces over strategic contributions or acts behind lines. The "presence of the enemy" criterion ensures awards recognize immediate peril, excluding non-combat risks despite occasional interpretive expansions in modern conflicts. These standards underscore a first-principles focus on individual heroism amid existential threat, demanding of risk to life or mission-critical objectives. Only 1,358 VCs have been issued since inception, averaging fewer than four annually, which attests to the rarity and rigor of validation processes involving eyewitness corroboration and command scrutiny.

Nomination, Review, and Approval Mechanisms

Recommendations for the Victoria Cross are initiated by sub-unit commanders or higher-ranking officers who possess personal knowledge of the act of valour or receive credible reports thereof, utilizing the Joint Personnel Administration (JPA) form S004. For a Victoria Cross recommendation, which represents the highest level of operational gallantry (Level 1), submissions must include at least two independent witness statements, preferably from a or senior , to substantiate the claim of "most conspicuous bravery, or some daring or pre-eminent act of valour or , or extreme devotion to duty in the presence of the enemy." The recommendation ascends through the chain of command, where each superior may endorse, reject, or downgrade the proposed level based on of the and alignment with criteria. In operational contexts, the force commander forwards validated submissions to the Armed Forces Operational Awards Committee (AFOAC) for initial review, which assesses the merits against established standards and may involve validation by the (PJHQ) Operational Review Board and Front Line Commands. Citations accompanying recommendations are drafted in the third person using on JPA S004, detailing the specific actions, their context, risks incurred, and decisive outcomes, without referencing the level itself. Further scrutiny occurs at the inter-service level, with endorsements progressing through the (COS(I)) and the Inter-Departmental Committee on Honours, Decorations, and Medals (HD Committee), chaired by relevant defence authorities, to ensure consistency and evidentiary rigor. The then submits the consolidated recommendation via the Secretary of State for Defence to the for final approval, who holds the to confer the award. Approved Victoria Crosses are promulgated in , with full citations published to detail the recipient's deeds, and the medal is typically presented by the or a delegated representative. Posthumous awards follow the identical process, emphasizing the mechanism's impartiality toward living or deceased nominees.

Adaptations for Commonwealth Realms

, , and , as realms sharing the British monarch as , have each instituted national variants of the Victoria Cross to recognize acts of extraordinary gallantry by their armed forces personnel, thereby localizing the award within evolving sovereign honors frameworks while preserving the imperial precedent's design and standards. These adaptations emerged amid post-colonial developments in and military autonomy, with each variant cast from the same Crimean War-era Russian cannon as the original, featuring the identical bronze , crowned lion, and "FOR VALOUR" inscription, suspended from a . The was established by signed by Queen Elizabeth II on 15 January 1991, supplanting eligibility for the imperial Victoria Cross for Australian forces. It recognizes "most conspicuous gallantry, or some daring or pre-eminent act of valour or self-sacrifice, or extreme devotion to duty in the presence of the enemy," with awards recommended by the and approved by the monarch, often presented by the Governor-General. Five recipients were honored between 2009 and 2018 for actions primarily in , including Trooper , the inaugural awardee on 25 January 2009 for rescuing a comrade under fire; a sixth, Class Two Richard Norden, was posthumously granted on 1 October 2024 for gallantry during the 1968 Battle of Coral-Balmoral in , reflecting retrospective applicability in exceptional cases. Canada's Victoria Cross, formalized in 1993, mirrors the original criteria for "acts of valour, self-sacrifice, or extreme devotion to duty in the presence of the enemy" and is administered through the on ministerial advice, yet no awards have been conferred as of 2025 despite 99 imperial Victoria Crosses previously granted to Canadian personnel since 1854. New Zealand introduced the Victoria Cross for New Zealand on 20 March 1999 via royal warrant, awarding it solely for "most conspicuous gallantry, or some daring or pre-eminent act of valour or self-sacrifice or extreme devotion to duty in the presence of the enemy." Only one has been issued: to Corporal Willie Apiata on 26 July 2007 for carrying a wounded comrade 70 meters under heavy fire during a 2004 Afghanistan engagement, marking the sole national variant recipient to date amid 22 imperial awards to New Zealanders historically. These realm-specific iterations underscore continuity in valor recognition under the Crown while accommodating distinct national governance of military honors.

Recipients and Empirical Analysis

Statistical Overview and Distribution

Since its institution in , the Victoria Cross has been awarded 1,358 times to 1,355 individuals, with the discrepancy arising from three recipients—Charles , Noel Chavasse, and Arthur Martin-Lea—who received a bar for a second . The award's distribution reflects the scale and intensity of conflicts involving British and forces, with the highest concentrations during periods of mass mobilization. The First World War (1914–1918) saw the largest number of citations at 626, surpassing all other conflicts combined in volume due to the protracted trench warfare and high casualties. The Second World War (1939–1945) followed with 181 awards to 180 recipients, one posthumous bar included. Earlier 19th-century campaigns yielded fewer but notable tallies, including 182 for actions during the Indian Mutiny (1857–1859) and 78 during the Second Boer War (1899–1902). Post-1945 awards totaled 15, comprising four for the Korean War, four for Vietnam War actions (primarily Australian recipients), two for the Falklands War, one for the Indonesia–Malaysia confrontation, two for Iraq, and two for Afghanistan.
Major ConflictAwards Issued
First World War626
Second World War181
Indian Mutiny182
78
4
Post-1945 total15
Awards have been distributed primarily among ground forces, with the receiving the overwhelming majority across all eras, supplemented by smaller numbers to and personnel once aviation entered . Commonwealth realms contributed significantly, particularly (96 imperial awards) and (81 total, including 64 from the First World War). No awards have been made to non-Commonwealth forces beyond rare cases like five American-born recipients serving in British units.

Demographic Patterns and Diversity

All recipients of the Victoria Cross have been male, reflecting the historical exclusion of women from frontline combat roles in British and forces until recent decades; although women became eligible for the award in 1921, none has received it as of 2025. Awards by nationality align closely with the composition of imperial and militaries, with the overwhelming majority—over 80%—going to individuals born in the or its territories. Significant shares were awarded to personnel from dominions: has 102 recipients, primarily for actions in the World Wars and later conflicts, while counts 99, including 70 from the First World War alone. Other nations received fewer, such as (22) and (78 across imperial service), with isolated cases from non- allies like during the World Wars. In total, 27 recipients were of non-British nationality outside typical lines, underscoring the award's imperial focus. Ethnic and racial diversity among recipients remains low, mirroring the predominantly European descent of enlisted forces during peak award periods like the World Wars, when over 600 VCs were issued. Non-European recipients include 13 soldiers from , awarded for service in units, and four of African descent—the first being William Hall in for actions during the Indian Rebellion. Such cases represent less than 2% of total awards, with no systemic over- or under-representation beyond force demographics; claims of bias in conferral lack empirical substantiation from official records, which emphasize valor over identity. In terms of rank, VCs have been conferred across all levels without formal preference, but data from major campaigns show other ranks receiving a slight majority—approximately 58% on the Western Front in 1914–1918—due to their prevalence in direct combat exposure. Officers accounted for about 42% in the same period, often for leadership in valorous actions. Age at award typically falls in the 20s and 30s, with the youngest confirmed recipient, , at 15 years and 3 months during the Indian Mutiny, and the oldest, William Raynor, at 69 for defending in 1857; no comprehensive average exists, but patterns reflect the youth of frontline troops.

Exemplary Cases Across Conflicts

The first Victoria Cross was awarded to Mate Charles Davis Lucas of HMS Hecla for his actions on 21 June 1854 during the bombardment of Bomarsund in the during the . A live shell landed on the ship's deck; Lucas seized it and hurled it overboard, preventing an explosion that would have caused severe casualties among the crew. This act of immediate courage under fire established the precedent for the award's emphasis on conspicuous in the face of the enemy. During the , the assault on on 16 November 1857 at resulted in one of the largest concentrations of Victoria Crosses for a single action, with 24 awards gazetted for exploits that day, many tied to the storming of the fortified garden where over 2,000 rebels were entrenched. Notable recipients included Captain William Stewart, elected by his officers for leading the final breach, and Sergeant David Mackay, who continued fighting despite severe wounds. These awards highlighted the medal's application to infantry assaults involving and sustained valor amid high casualties, with British forces suffering 61 killed and 363 wounded in the operation. In the First World War, Captain , a medical officer attached to the Scottish, received the only Victoria Cross and Bar awarded during the conflict, underscoring exceptional self-sacrifice in rescue operations. His first VC came for actions at Guillemont on 31 July to 2 September 1916, where, despite being wounded, he tended to over 100 casualties under heavy shellfire and machine-gun fire during the Somme offensive. The bar was added for his work at Wieltje near on 31 July 1917 during Passchendaele, where he again rescued wounded soldiers before succumbing to a fatal head wound on 2 August 1917. Chavasse's citations emphasized his disregard for personal safety in retrieving the dead and dying from no-man's-land, saving lives in conditions of mud, gas, and continuous bombardment. Captain Charles Hazlitt Upham of the earned the Victoria Cross and Bar in the Second World War, the only such double award to a combatant soldier. His initial VC was for leadership during the on 20–30 May 1941, where he repeatedly charged enemy positions, destroyed machine guns, and captured over 40 prisoners despite wounds. The bar followed for actions at Ruweisat Ridge, , on 14–15 July 1942, involving assaults on multiple strongpoints under fire, resulting in his capture after further injuries. Upham's feats demonstrated tactical initiative and physical endurance in desert and island warfare against numerically superior forces. Sergeant Ian John McKay of 3rd Battalion, The Parachute Regiment, received a posthumous Victoria Cross for his role in the on 12 June 1982 during the night assault on Mount Longdon. After his platoon was pinned down, McKay led a charge on an Argentine machine-gun position, exposing himself to fire to draw attention from his men, and engaged in close combat until killed, enabling the objective's capture. This award, one of only two VCs from the conflict, exemplified the medal's continued relevance in modern infantry operations involving small-unit maneuvers under .

Privileges, Honors, and Expectations

Monetary and Official Perks

Recipients of the Victoria Cross are entitled to a tax-free as a monetary recognition of their valor. In the , living holders receive an annual payment of £10,000, a provision confirmed by the in 2021 following an uplift to ensure adequate support independent of service pensions or other benefits. This amount superseded earlier statutory levels, such as £2,129 effective from April 2014, and traces back to the original 1856 warrant granting £10 annually to non-commissioned officers and enlisted personnel. Commonwealth realms provide analogous but varying annuities. In , the Victoria Cross Allowance delivers AUD 5,696 per year as of October 2025, payable alongside other veteran entitlements like healthcare and disability support. stipulates CAD 3,000 annually for Victoria Cross holders under the Gallantry Awards Order. Official perks emphasize ceremonial and institutional precedence rather than expansive material benefits. Within the , Victoria Cross recipients—regardless of substantive rank—hold seniority over other decorations and personnel for processional and honors purposes, facilitating salutes and positioning in formations. Retired or civilian holders append "VC" to their names in official capacities and receive invitations to state commemorations, though these do not confer formal political or administrative authority. In , recipients may access a dedicated package for representational duties, including support for public engagements tied to the award.

Ceremonial Recognition and Duties

The Victoria Cross is formally presented to recipients by the British Sovereign or, in Commonwealth realms, by the or a designated representative during dedicated ceremonies, often held at or equivalent official venues. The inaugural presentations took place on 26 June 1857 in , where personally awarded the medal to 62 recipients for actions during the , establishing a tradition of royal involvement in recognizing extreme valour. In contemporary practice, such ceremonies maintain pomp and protocol, with posthumous awards delivered to ; for instance, on 16 July 2025, the was presented to the family of Private Richard Norden at a special in for his 1968 actions in . Recipients hold ceremonial precedence over all other British orders, decorations, and medals, entitling them to wear the VC nearest the left shoulder and receive salutes from all ranks regardless of their own military status. This recognition extends to post-nominal letters "VC" appended to their names in official contexts, underscoring the award's singular status in the honours system. Living holders are automatically eligible for membership in the Victoria Cross and George Cross Association, founded to foster camaraderie among approximately 10 surviving VC recipients as of , which organizes annual reunions, supports mutual welfare, and coordinates participation in national events such as royal receptions and commemorations. Association duties for members include preserving the legacy of the awards through activities like maintaining records of graves and memorials, attending wreath-laying at sites like , and representing valour traditions at public and military gatherings, thereby ensuring ongoing ceremonial visibility and historical continuity. These roles emphasize collective responsibility over individual obligations, with the group's objectives centered on unity across nations and advocacy for the medals' enduring significance.

Controversies and Challenges

Historical Disputes in Conferral

One notable early dispute occurred during the at the on January 22, 1879, where 11 Victoria Crosses were awarded to British defenders who repelled an estimated 4,000 Zulu warriors with only 150 men, suffering 17 casualties. British high command initially opposed the awards, arguing the soldiers were merely fulfilling their duty in a defensive position akin to "rats in a trap" rather than demonstrating the "extreme devotion" or self-sacrifice required for the VC, as per the warrant's criteria. intervened amid public acclaim, overriding military objections to approve the citations, which also served to restore morale following the prior defeat at . In the Falklands War, Private Stephen Illingsworth of 2nd Battalion, The Parachute Regiment, was posthumously recommended for the VC after actions on May 28, 1982, during the , where he rescued a wounded comrade under fire and was killed retrieving ammunition for his platoon. Despite endorsements from field commanders like Sir Richard Trant and Admiral Sir John Fieldhouse, the recommendation was rejected at , with declassified documents citing concerns that multiple VCs would "cheapen" the award and fuel perceptions of favoritism toward paratroopers; Illingsworth received the instead. This decision reflected broader hesitancy, as no VCs were initially proposed for the conflict until Thatcher's intervention prompted reviews. Post-Second World War, political factors influenced conferrals in realms, particularly , where no British VCs were awarded to Canadian forces despite eligible actions in Korea and later conflicts, amid government preferences for national decorations over imperial honors. Bureaucratic rules, such as a two-year limit instituted in 1950, further complicated upgrades, as seen in the denial of a VC to Jess Larochelle for 2002 actions in , originally awarded the Star of Courage; exceptions have been rare and politically driven. Colonial-era biases also limited awards to non-European recipients until the , with the first to an Indian soldier, , only in 1914 during the First World War, reflecting institutional preferences for white troops in earlier campaigns. During the Second World War, Lieutenant Colonel Robert Blair "Paddy" Mayne of the faced repeated denials despite multiple recommendations for the VC, including a 1945 citation for rescuing comrades and repelling Germans under fire near Oldenburg; archival evidence points to a by senior officers and prejudice against irregular units as factors, though critics argue his actions did not strictly meet the VC's "signal act of valor" threshold. These cases highlight tensions between field assessments of gallantry and higher-level interpretations influenced by policy, unit rivalries, and institutional caution.

Instances of Forfeiture and Revocation

The Royal Warrant of 29 January 1856 establishing the Victoria Cross empowered the to forfeit the award and associated privileges for conduct "utterly unworthy of the high honour conferred upon him". Eight such forfeitures occurred between 1861 and 1908, primarily involving criminal convictions or serious military misconduct post-award. No restorations have been made, despite the warrant's provision for cancellation of forfeiture, and none have occurred since 1908. The following table enumerates the known instances:
RecipientRegiment/UnitConflict and Award DateForfeiture Year and Reason
Edward St. John DanielHMS Diamond, (Naval Brigade), 1854–18551861; unspecified offense leading to warrant deletion from rolls, possibly or enlistment irregularities.
Thomas Byrne3rd Bengal Native CavalryIndian Mutiny, 18571862; details limited, but warrant-issued for dishonorable conduct.
Henry Ramage9th LancersIndian Mutiny, 18571863; criminal conviction post-service.
Michael Murphy2nd Battalion, Military TrainIndian Mutiny, 18581865; conviction.
James McGuire1st Bengal FusiliersIndian Mutiny, 18581865; convicted of stealing livestock.
Valentine Bambrick1st Battalion, 60th RiflesIndian Mutiny, 18581865; repeated military offenses including .
Frederick Corbett3rd Battalion, 60th Rifles (), 18821884; for absence without leave, , and from an officer.
James Collis2nd Battalion, 24th Regiment, 18811895; convicted of .
In 1920, King George V directed that forfeited names not be struck from official rolls of recipients, a policy reaffirmed in subsequent lists, ensuring their inclusion despite the cancellations. This practice reflects a distinction between administrative forfeiture and historical recognition of the original .

Political and Bureaucratic Barriers to Awards

The process for recommending and approving Victoria Cross awards requires submissions from commanding officers to escalate through military hierarchies, culminating in review by the defence ministry and approval by the monarch, creating opportunities for bureaucratic intervention where recommendations may be downgraded, delayed, or rejected based on administrative criteria rather than solely on merit. Such denials have occurred when higher authorities in Whitehall or equivalent bodies overrode field commanders' assessments, as in the case of Lieutenant Colonel Robert Blair "Paddy" Mayne during World War II; Mayne, commander of the Special Air Service, received four Distinguished Service Orders for repeated acts of leadership and destruction of enemy targets, and in 1945, Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery endorsed a VC recommendation following Mayne's operations in Italy and Germany, yet faceless bureaucrats rejected it, possibly to avoid consecutive VCs shortly after Anders Lassen's award on 9 April 1945 or due to Mayne's documented disciplinary lapses like insubordination. Efforts to grant a posthumous VC, including parliamentary debates and reviews as recently as February 2025, have been dismissed by the UK Ministry of Defence, citing insufficient grounds to revisit historical decisions. Similar bureaucratic hurdles manifested in the case of Edward "Teddy" Sheean of the Royal Australian Navy, who on 1 December 1942 chained himself to an Oerlikon gun on the sinking HMAS Armidale amid Japanese air attacks, firing until killed and credited with downing two aircraft to protect survivors. Initial post-war considerations denied the VC, with a 2013 Australian inquiry deeming the actions insufficiently exceptional; the UK Ministry of Defence rejected eligibility in 2017, and despite a 2019 Defence Honours and Awards Tribunal recommendation affirming the VC based on eyewitness accounts from March hearings in , the Australian government under Prime Minister overturned it in May 2020, arguing no compelling new evidence or manifest injustice warranted override of prior rulings. Critics, including Senator , attributed the rejection to entrenched bureaucratic conservatism prioritizing precedent over valor. Political considerations have further impeded awards, particularly in Commonwealth nations seeking to assert independence from imperial honors systems. In Canada, the original British VC was effectively suspended in 1972 under Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau's overhaul of the honors system to reduce ties to the United Kingdom, leading to no imperial VCs recommended thereafter despite Canadian participation in Korea, peacekeeping, and Afghanistan where over 40,000 troops served from 2001 to 2014. A distinct Canadian VC was instituted in 1993, yet none has been awarded for post-World War II actions, with officials favoring lower-tier national decorations like the Star of Military Valour; for instance, Master Corporal Jess Larochelle's 2002 Afghanistan heroism, initially awarded the Star, faced upgrade barriers due to a 1950-imposed two-year nomination limit enforced by King George VI, blocking retrospective reviews. Government MPs rejected a 2022 proposal for a review board to examine historical cases, reflecting ongoing political aversion to imperial symbols amid efforts by figures like Justin Trudeau to excise British military traditions. These patterns underscore how nationalistic policies can prioritize sovereignty over recognition of qualifying valor, contrasting with the VC's original intent as a merit-based award transcending rank or origin.

Preservation, Misuse, and Public Handling

Notable Sales and Market Transactions

The Victoria Cross, as a unique and irreplaceable artifact of military valor, rarely enters the market, with sales governed by export restrictions that prioritize national retention; successful auctions often culminate in purchases by collectors or museums to avert overseas dispersal. By the early , over 260 VCs had been publicly auctioned, many multiple times, driving prices upward amid competition from dedicated collectors such as , whose acquisitions have preserved numerous examples in public view at the . Record prices underscore the medal's scarcity—fewer than 1,400 ever awarded—and its embodiment of extreme gallantry, though transactions remain infrequent due to familial retention and institutional policies. Successive auction benchmarks highlight escalating values. In 2001, the posthumous VC group to Major Edward Mannock, Royal Flying Corps, for World War I aerial feats, sold privately for £132,000, the highest such transaction at the time. Public sales escalated thereafter; for instance, in March 2024, the VC awarded posthumously to Able Seaman William Williams, Royal Naval Division, for World War I actions at Zeebrugge, fetched £220,000 at Noonans. A June 2021 auction at Dix Noonan Webb saw an exceptional British military VC realize £420,000, surpassing prior records for single medals of its category. The pinnacle arrived in September 2022, when the VC to Thomas Henry Kavanagh—awarded in 1858 for civilian gallantry during the Indian Mutiny's , the first such honor—sold at Noonans for £930,000 (including premium), more than double its estimate and establishing the world auction record for any single Victoria Cross. This outlier reflects Kavanagh's singular status and the medal's pristine provenance, outpacing even examples like a 2025 sale of a group including Cyril Barton’s VC, which reached £350,000 at Spink. Such transactions often spark debate over commodification, yet they affirm the VC's enduring , with buyers typically committing to public display rather than private hoarding.

Incidents of Theft and Recovery

One notable large-scale theft took place on 2 December 2007 at the Army Museum in , where burglars stole 96 medals, including nine Victoria Crosses awarded to New Zealand recipients, along with two George Crosses and one Albert Medal. The items were recovered intact in February 2008 after two businessmen offered a NZ$300,000 reward, with lawyer Chris Comeskey facilitating the anonymous return; the medals were blessed by an army chaplain before being redisplayed at the museum in the presence of 85 descendants of the recipients. Two men, Ronnie Van Wakeren and James Kapa, were convicted for the , receiving sentences of 11 years and 6 years, respectively. In September 2023, the original Victoria Crosses awarded to William McWheeney for actions during the Indian Mutiny in 1857 and to Francis Parsons for service in the Second Boer War in 1900 went missing from City Museum in , , during a routine inventory check. Museum officials initially found no evidence of theft, but the medals were returned anonymously and verified as authentic originals by May 2024, prompting an ongoing investigation into the disappearance. Replicas remain on public display pending resolution of the inquiry. The Victoria Cross of Corporal Herman James Good, awarded for gallantry at Hangard Wood, , on 8 August 1918, was stolen in 2003 from a family member in , , but recovered by police shortly thereafter. While many Victoria Crosses have been stolen without recovery of the originals—such as those of John O'Neill (1962), Francis Jefferson (1982), and William Faulds (1994)—the British government has issued replacement medals in verified cases dating back to the , including for Edward McKenna (stolen before 1868, replacement now in Auckland Museum), William Gordon (before 1892, replacement in Museum), Thomas Holmes (1935), (1940), Gian (1960), and Rambhadur Limbu (1967). These duplicates maintain the inscription and design but are not considered equivalent to the originals for historical .

Institutional Collections and Displays

The Lord Ashcroft Gallery at the in housed the world's largest collection of Victoria Crosses, comprising 235 VCs and associated groups acquired by since 1986, on long-term loan from the Michael A. Ashcroft Trust. Opened in 2010 as the Extraordinary Heroes exhibition, it displayed these medals alongside 52 George Crosses, portraits, and artifacts to contextualize recipients' acts of valor. The gallery closed permanently on September 30, 2025, to repurpose space for post-World War II exhibits, prompting criticism from Ashcroft for diminishing focus on gallantry awards; the stated it would integrate select VCs and George Crosses from its own holdings into thematic galleries across its UK sites. The Australian War Memorial in maintains the Hall of Valour, a dedicated space exhibiting all 67 Victoria Crosses awarded to Australians, including the four Victoria Crosses for Australia issued since 1991. These medals, held in the Memorial's national collection, are displayed with personal effects, diaries, and multimedia narratives of recipients' actions, such as those from and ; additional VCs have been added progressively, with three First World War examples installed in 2017 for centenary commemorations. Temporary loans and regional exhibitions, like a 2023 display of seven VCs at the Australian Army Infantry Museum, extend public access beyond . Other UK institutions hold notable collections: the National Maritime Museum in Greenwich preserves 15 Victoria Crosses awarded to naval personnel, focusing on recipients' naval careers and sea-based gallantry from conflicts like the onward. The National Army Museum in has featured Victoria Crosses in rotating displays alongside George Crosses, photographs, and regimental artifacts, as in a 2018 exhibition marking the award's history. Regimental museums, such as the Royal Logistic Corps Museum, exhibit unit-specific VCs, like those won by logistics personnel in . Internationally, the – Decorative Arts & History displays an Australian-owned VC on loan, awarded to Martin O'Meara for actions, marking a rare cross-national exhibit. These institutional holdings prioritize preservation and educational context, often restoring medals to original suspension bars for authenticity.

Legacy and Cultural Resonance

Monuments, Memorials, and Commemorations

Monuments and memorials to Victoria Cross recipients are located throughout the and nations, often situated in significant sites of national remembrance. In the , maintains a memorial stone in its honoring holders of the Victoria Cross alongside the , recognizing their exceptional gallantry. The Victoria Cross and George Cross Association has facilitated the restoration of recipients' graves and the erection of new memorials since 2003, preserving these sites as tributes to valor. The oversees the maintenance of graves for 379 Victoria Cross recipients interred in its cemeteries worldwide. In Canada, the Victoria Cross Monument in Victoria Cross Memorial Park provides a dedicated space with walkways, an assembly area, and educational panels detailing the awards' history and recipients' actions. Australia features several state-specific memorials, including the Victoria Cross Memorial near the Shrine of Remembrance in , which commemorates recipients linked to the state of Victoria and stands adjacent to Australian War Graves. Commemorative events reinforce the award's legacy. The holds an annual Victoria Cross Day on the last Monday of May, marked by church services at Up Park Camp to honor the medal's recipients. The Victoria Cross and Association organizes biennial reunions in , featuring ceremonies and gatherings for living holders and descendants. In 2014, a United Kingdom initiative restored gravestones of all British Victoria Cross recipients as enduring tributes to their sacrifices.

Representations in Art, Media, and Literature

The Victoria Cross has been depicted in numerous artworks, particularly paintings commemorating recipients' acts of valor. In the 19th century, artist Louis William Desanges produced a series of over 50 oil portraits of Victoria Cross recipients from the Crimean War, displayed in a dedicated gallery at the Alexandra Palace until its destruction by fire in 1873; these works emphasized heroic individualism and were commissioned to honor the award's prestige. A watercolour by an unknown artist from June 1857 illustrates Queen Victoria presenting the first Victoria Crosses to Crimean War veterans at Hyde Park, capturing the ceremonial significance of the institution's early days. Richard Caton Woodville's 1915 painting The First Victoria Cross of the European War, 1914 portrays Lieutenant Dease and Private Godley earning the award during the Battle of Mons, symbolizing British resilience in the opening of World War I. In film and television, the Victoria Cross features prominently in depictions of historical battles and individual heroism. The 1964 film Zulu dramatizes the defense of Rorke's Drift in 1879, where 11 Victoria Crosses were awarded, portraying officers John Chard and Gonville Bromhead, though recipient Henry Hook is inaccurately shown as dissolute contrary to historical accounts of his disciplined service. The 1954 British film Carrington V.C. stars David Niven as a major awarded the Victoria Cross who faces embezzlement charges, highlighting post-war tensions around military honor; Niven wore an actual Victoria Cross belonging to Kenneth Dagg, the most viewed in the award's history. Documentaries such as the BBC's 2003 The Victoria Cross: For Valour, presented by Jeremy Clarkson, trace the medal's history through recipient interviews and archival footage, while Men of Valor: Heroes of the Victoria Cross (2000) reenacts acts by nine Canadian recipients. The 1916 silent film The Victoria Cross, directed by Edward LeSaint, explores themes of sacrifice tied to the award during World War I. Representations in literature primarily appear in historical accounts and biographies rather than , focusing on factual narratives of valor. Compilations like those detailing specific campaigns, such as the Indian Mutiny or actions, recount Victoria Cross citations to preserve military lore, though fictional novels rarely center the award, reflecting its association with non-fictional heroism over dramatized tropes. Biographies of recipients, including those of figures like Lieutenant Charles Lucas—the first awarded in for boarding actions—emphasize empirical details of their deeds, contributing to the medal's cultural endurance in print media.

Enduring Role in Military Doctrine and Morale

The Victoria Cross embodies the British and military's commitment to recognizing acts of conspicuous bravery in the face of the enemy, serving as a tangible standard that sustains across generations of service members. Its rarity—only 1,358 awards conferred since its institution on January 29, 1856—amplifies its psychological impact, positioning it as an aspirational archetype of valor that motivates personnel to prioritize mission objectives and comrades over personal safety. Historical analyses indicate that VC citations often correlate with morale recovery in beleaguered units; for instance, during the First World War, the award to pilot Alan Arnett McLeod in 1918 was strategically leveraged to elevate spirits within the air service, Canada, and the broader amid high casualty rates and operational strains. Similarly, Lieutenant Milton Fowler Gregg's VC for actions at the Battle of Fresnoy in 1917 exemplified leadership under fire, providing a rallying point for Canadian facing . These instances demonstrate how the medal's conferral functions not merely as retrospective honor but as an immediate doctrinal tool for reinforcing resilience and . In , the VC reinforces core tenets of offensive initiative and personal accountability, embedding the expectation that individual gallantry can decisively influence outcomes in conventional and irregular conflicts. training manuals and leadership curricula frequently reference VC recipients' citations to illustrate principles of tactical audacity, as the medal's criteria—demanding valor "in the presence of the enemy" regardless of rank—align with doctrinal evolutions from the onward, where it countered perceptions of institutional rigidity by valorizing enlisted initiative. This enduring integration persists in forces, where the VC's prestige informs selection processes for elite units and sustains a culture of voluntary risk-taking; for example, post-1945 reforms in Australian and Canadian militaries retained the VC as the apex honor to preserve motivational continuity amid and modernization. Critics have noted potential overemphasis on singular heroism may undervalue collective efforts, yet empirical evidence from sustained award rates—66 to Australians in alone—suggests it bolsters doctrinal adherence by linking personal conduct to operational efficacy. The medal's relevance endures in contemporary operations, as evidenced by awards like that to in 2005 for actions in , which highlighted individual agency in urban combat and contributed to regimental amid evolving threats. By maintaining strict evidentiary thresholds for awards, including eyewitness corroboration and posthumous eligibility, the VC avoids dilution, ensuring its role as a doctrinal anchor for ethical decision-making under duress and a morale catalyst that transcends eras.

References

Add your contribution
Related Hubs
User Avatar
No comments yet.