Air Force Medal

{{Use dmy dates|date=June 2020}}

{{Use British English|date=May 2013}}

{{Infobox military award

|name= Air Force Medal

|image=180px

|caption= Reverse of medal

|image2=105px

|caption2= Ribbon bar

|presenter= UK and Commonwealth

|type= Military decoration.

|eligibility= British, Commonwealth, and allied forces non-commissioned officers and men

|awarded_for= ...acts of courage or devotion to duty whilst flying, though not in active operations against the enemy.{{cite web|url=http://www.operations.mod.uk/honours/honours.htm |title=Military Honours and Awards |access-date=2007-09-12 |publisher=UK Ministry of Defence |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070927210734/http://www.operations.mod.uk/honours/honours.htm |archive-date=27 September 2007 |url-status=dead }}

|campaign=

|status= Discontinued in 1993.

|description=

|clasps=

|established= 3 June 1918

|firstawarded=

|lastawarded=

|total_awarded=

|total_awarded_posthumously=

|total_recipients=

|individual=

|precedence_label=Order of Wear

|higher= Distinguished Flying Medal{{London Gazette|issue=56878|page=3352|date=17 March 2003|supp=y}}

|same=

|lower= Constabulary Medal (de jure)
Queen's Gallantry Medal (de facto){{cite web |title=JSP 761 Honours and Awards in the Armed Forces |url=http://ndm-pr.webs.com/jsp761%5B1%5D.pdf |page=12A-1 |access-date=7 November 2014 |archive-date=2 August 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200802165525/https://ndm-pr.webs.com/jsp761%5B1%5D.pdf |url-status=dead }}

|related=

}}

The Air Force Medal (AFM) was a military decoration, awarded to personnel of the Royal Air Force and other British Armed Forces, and formerly to personnel of other Commonwealth countries, below commissioned rank, for "an act or acts of valour, courage or devotion to duty whilst flying, though not in active operations against the enemy". The award was discontinued in 1993 when all ranks became eligible for the Air Force Cross (AFC) as part of the reform of the British honours system.Duckers (2001), pp 49.

History

The medal was established on 3 June 1918. It was the other ranks' equivalent to the Air Force Cross (AFC), which was awarded to commissioned officers and Warrant Officers, although the latter could also be awarded the AFC. It ranked below the AFC in order of precedence, between the Distinguished Flying Medal and the Queen's Gallantry Medal.

Although the new award was announced in the London Gazette on 3 June 1918,{{London Gazette |issue=30723 |supp=y |date=31 May 1918 |pages=6533–6534 }} the actual Royal Warrants were not published in the London Gazette until 5 December 1919.{{London Gazette |issue=31674|date=5 December 1919 |pages=15049–15050 }}

A bar, worn on the ribbon, could be awarded to recognise a second award of the Air Force Medal.

Recipients are entitled to use the post-nominal letters "AFM".

The first two awards appeared in the London Gazette on 3 June 1918, to:{{London Gazette |issue=30722 |supp=y|date=31 May 1918|pages=6520–6521}}

  • 11680 Serjeant Samuel James Mitchell (of Handsworth, Birmingham).
  • 106100 Serjeant Frederick Charles Tucker (of Birtley, Durham).

Twenty-nine awards appeared in a supplement to the London Gazette of 8 February 1919.{{London Gazette|issue=31170|date=7 February 1919|page=2049}}Also listed in Flight Magazine, 20 February 1919 at page 243.

The first awards of a bar to the Air Force Medal were announced on 26 December 1919, to two sergeants in the Australian Flying Corps, for providing support to a pioneering flight from London to Australia:[https://www.thegazette.co.uk/Edinburgh/issue/13544/page/4145 Edinburgh Gazette, 30 December 1919 page 4145.]

  • 275 Sergeant James Mallett Bennett, A.F.M.[http://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/bennett-james-mallett-5211 Australian Dictionary of Biography - J M Bennett AFM*]
  • 8974 Sergeant Walter Henry Shiers, A.F.M.[http://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/shiers-walter-henry-8419 Australian Dictionary of Biography - W H Shiers AFM*]

In 1979 eligibility for a number of British awards, including the AFM, was extended to permit posthumous awards.Abbott & Tamplin (1981), page xx. Until that time, only the Victoria Cross and a mention in dispatches could be awarded posthumously.

In 1993, the AFM was discontinued, as part of the review of the British honours system, which recommended removing distinctions of rank in respect of awards for bravery. Since then, the Air Force Cross, previously only open to Commissioned and Warrant Officers, has been awarded to personnel of all ranks.

The AFM had also been awarded by Commonwealth countries but by the 1990s most, including Canada, Australia and New Zealand, had established their own honours systems and no longer recommended British honours.Mussell (2015), pp 390, 429, 459.

Numbers of awards

Between 1918 and 1993 approximately 942 medals and ten second award bar were awarded.

class="wikitable" border="1"

! Period.

Medals.Bars.
align=center| 1918–1919align=center| 102align=center| 2
align=center| 1920–1929align=center| 48align=center| 3
align=center| 1930–1937align=center| 20 Including Flight Lieutenant Dominic Bruce, the only recipient of both the Military Cross and AFM.align=center| –
align=center| 1938–1939align=center| 38align=center| –
align=center| 1940–1945align=center| 259align=center| –
align=center| 1946–1952align=center| 175align=center| –
align=center| 1953–1993align=center| 300 Abbott page 14 indicates 209 AFM awards 1953-79. Approx 90 further awarded 1980-93.align=center| 5 Abbott page 14 lists nine bar recipients, including 4 since 1953. One more is listed in London Gazette: [https://www.thegazette.co.uk/London/issue/48041/supplement/14 31 Dec 79. F/Sgt J D Robertson, RAF]
align=center| Totalalign=center| 942align=center| 10

Awards include several to the Royal Navy and the Army Air Corps. Fifteen honorary awards were made to aircrew from foreign countries, one in 1919 and 14 for service during the Second World War. Civilians were eligible for the AFM from 1919 to 1932, three awards being made.

Description

File:Bar to the Air Force Cross.png

  • The AFM is an oval silver medal, {{convert|1+3/8|in|mm|0|abbr=off}} wide with a height of {{convert|1+5/8|in|mm|0|abbr=off}}, with the following design:Abbott & Tamplin (1981), AFM chapter, pp. 11–15
  • The obverse shows the effigy and titles of the reigning sovereign:

:* King George V bare headed (1918-29)

:* King George V in crown and robes (1930–1937)

:* King George VI with 'IND: IMP:' (Indian Emperor) in the inscription (1938–1949)

:* King George VI without 'IND: IMP:' in the inscription (1949–1953)

:* Queen Elizabeth II (1953–1993)

:The three most common obverse designs were:

File:Distinguished Flying Medal, George V obverse.jpg|George V 1918-30

File:Distinguished Flying Medal, George VI obverse.jpg|George VI 1938-49

File:Distinguished Flying Medal. Elizabeth II obverse.jpg|Elizabeth II 1953-93

  • The reverse shows Hermes (facing right), mounted on a hawk in flight and bestowing a wreath, all contained within a narrow laurel wreath band. The date "1918" appears behind Hermes on the King George VI and Queen Elizabeth II versions of the medal.
  • The suspension consists of two outstretched wings.
  • Further awards are signified by a straight slip-on silver bar with an eagle in the centre.
  • All awards have the name and service details of the recipient engraved or impressed on the rim.
  • The ribbon is {{convert|1+1/4|in|mm|0|abbr=off}} wide, and consists of alternate red and white stripes, {{convert|1/16|in|mm|0|abbr=off}} wide, leaning 45 degrees to the left. A red stripe is to appear in the bottom left and upper right corners when viewed on the wearer's chest. Until 1919, the stripes were horizontal.

align=center class=wikitable width=50%

!colspan=4|Air Force Medal ribbon bars

width=10% valign=center align=center|

!width=20% valign=center align=center|AFM

!width=20% valign=center align=center|AFM and Bar

width=10% valign=center align=center|1918–1919

|width=20% valign=center align=center|File:UK AFM 1918 ribbon.svg

|width=20% valign=center align=center|File:UK AFM 1918 w Bar ribbon.svg

width=10% valign=center align=center|1919–1993

|width=20% valign=center align=center|File:UK AFM ribbon.svg

|width=20% valign=center align=center|File:UK AFM w Bar ribbon.svg

See also

Bibliography

  • {{cite book|last=Abbott and Tamplin|title=British Gallantry Awards|publisher=Nimrod Dix & Co|year=1981|isbn=0902633740}}
  • {{cite book|last=Duckers|first=Peter|title=British Gallantry Awards, 1855–2000|publisher=Osprey Publishing|location=London|year=2001|isbn=978-0-7478-0516-8}}
  • {{Cite book|last=Mussell|first=John (ed).|title=Medal Yearbook 2015.|publisher=Token Publishing|location=Honiton, Devon|year=2015|isbn=978-1-908-828-16-3}}

References

{{Reflist|30em}}

{{Decorations of the United Kingdom}}

{{Former Australian Honours}}

{{South African military decorations and medals}}

Category:Military awards and decorations of the United Kingdom

Category:Courage awards