The Naval General Service Medal (1915 NGSM) was instituted in 1915 to recognise service by the Royal Navy and Royal Marines in minor campaigns that would not otherwise earn a specific campaign medal. The Army/Air Force equivalent was the General Service Medal (1918). Both these medals were replaced by the General Service Medal in 1962.
Description
- The medal is silver and is in diameter. The obverse bears the image of one of three successive Sovereigns, King George V, King George VI and Queen Elizabeth II.
- The reverse, designed by Margaret Winser, shows a mounted figure of Britannia in a chariot pulled by two sea-horses, her left hand resting on a union shield.
- The name and details of the recipient were impressed on the edge of the medal.
- The wide ribbon is crimson-coloured with three white stripes.
- From 1920 a bronze oak leaf emblem is worn on the ribbon of the medal to signify a mention in dispatches for a campaign for which the NGSM was awarded.
Obverse variations
The medal was awarded with one of five obverse designs:
Clasps
The 1915 NGSM was never awarded without a clasp. The seventeen clasps authorised are listed below, the figures in brackets denoting the number awarded.
- Persian Gulf 1909âÂÂ1914 (7,164, including 37 to the Indian Army, travelling aboard H.M.S. Pelorus). For operations against pirates, gun-runners and slavers.
- Iraq 1919âÂÂ1920 (116). For river gunboat service during the Arab revolt.
- N.W. Persia 1920 (4). Awarded to the four members of the Naval Mission to the Caspian Sea.
- Palestine 1936âÂÂ39 (13,600). For service during the uprising by Palestinian Arabs.
- S.E. Asia 1945-46 (2,000). For operations in Java, Sumatra and French Indochina, prior to handover to the pre-war colonial power.
- Minesweeping 1945âÂÂ51 (4,750). For 6 months minesweeping service in specified areas across the world.
- Palestine 1945âÂÂ48 (7,900). For service during the post-war Jewish insurgency, including coastal patrols against illegal Jewish immigration.
- Malaya (7,800). For service in Malaya and Singapore between 1948-60 during the state of emergency.
- Yangtze 1949 (1,450). For the attack on and other vessels by Communist Chinese forces.
- Bomb and Mine Clearance 1945âÂÂ46. For operations by the Royal Australian Navy, very few clasps with these dates being awarded.
- Bomb and Mine Clearance 1945âÂÂ53 (145). For 6 months spent in clearance operations in specified areas across the world.
- B & M Clearance Mediterranean (60). For bomb and mine clearance between 1953-60 by divers, and to seamen who moved recovered bombs, mostly in Valletta harbour.
- Canal Zone For service in the Suez Canal Zone between October 1951 and October 1954. (Authorised 2003).
- Cyprus (4,300). For operations against EOKA insurgents, 1955âÂÂ59.
- Near East (17,800). For operations during the Suez Crisis of 1956.
- Arabian Peninsula (1,200). For service against dissidents and cross-border raids between 1957âÂÂ60.
- Brunei (900). For service in Brunei, North Borneo and Sarawak in December 1962, a large proportion awarded to Royal Marines of 42 Commando.
References
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