Navy Cross
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Navy Cross | |
---|---|
Awarded by United States Navy | |
Type | Medal |
Awarded for | Extreme gallantry and risk of life in actual combat with an armed enemy force. |
Status | Currently awarded |
Statistics | |
First awarded | 1917 |
Precedence | |
Next (higher) | Medal of Honor |
Same | Army - Distinguished Service Cross Navy - Navy Cross Air Force - Air Force Cross |
Next (lower) | Distinguished Service Medals: Defense, Army, Navy, Air Force, Coast Guard |
The Navy Cross is the second highest medal that can be awarded by the Department of the Navy and the second highest award given for valor. It is normally only awarded to members of the United States Navy, Marine Corps and Coast Guard but could be awarded to all branches of United States military. It was established by Act of Congress (Public Law 253, 65th Congress) and approved on February 4, 1919. The Navy Cross is equivalent to the Distinguished Service Cross (Army) and the Air Force Cross (Air Force).
Contents |
[edit] Effective Dates
The Navy Cross has been in effect since April 6, 1917.
[edit] Criteria
The Navy Cross may be awarded to any member of the armed forces while serving with the Marine Corps, Navy, or Coast Guard (in time of war only) that distinguishes himself in action by extraordinary heroism not justifying an award of the Medal of Honor. The action must take place under one of three circumstances:
1. While engaged in action against an enemy of the United States
2. While engaged in military operations involving conflict with an opposing foreign force
3. While serving with friendly foreign forces engaged in an armed conflict in which the United States is not a belligerent party.
To earn a Navy Cross the act to be commended must be performed in the presence of great danger or at great personal risk and must be performed in such a manner as to render the individual highly conspicuous among others of equal grade, rate, experience, or position of responsibility. An accumulation of minor acts of heroism does not justify an award of the Navy Cross. As originally authorized, the Navy Cross could be awarded for distinguished non-combat acts, but legislation of August 7, 1942 limited the award to acts of combat heroism.
[edit] Order of Precedence
Originally the Navy Cross was the Navy's third-highest decoration, after the Medal of Honor and the Navy Distinguished Service Medal. In August 1942 Congress revised the precedence, making the Navy Cross senior to the Distinguished Service Medal. Since that time the Navy Cross has been worn after the Medal of Honor and before all other decorations.
[edit] Devices
Additional awards of the Navy Cross are denoted by gold stars five-sixteenths of an inch in diameter.
[edit] Designer
The Navy Cross was designed by James Earl Fraser (1876-1953).
[edit] First/Last Recipient
The first actual recipient of the Navy Cross is unknown because initial awards were made from a lengthy list published after the First World War.
The latest award of the Navy Cross was presented posthumously to both GM2(SEAL) Danny P. Dietz, US Navy, and STG2(SEAL) Matthew G. Axelson, US Navy, on September 13, 2005. They were part of a four man Special Reconnaissance element with Naval Special Warfare Task Unit, Afghanistan. They were killed in action on June 28, 2005.
[edit] Description and Symbolism
[edit] Obverse
The Navy Cross is a modified cross patée one and a half inches wide (the ends of its arms are rounded whereas a conventional cross patée has arms that are straight on the end). There are four laurel leaves with berries in each of the re-entrant arms of the cross. In the center of the cross a sailing vessel is depicted on waves, sailing to the viewer's left. The vessel is a symbolic caravel of the type used between 1480 and 1500. Fraser selected the caravel because it was a symbol often used by the Naval Academy and because it represented both naval service and the tradition of the sea. The laurel leaves with berries refer to achievement.
[edit] Reverse
In the center of a bronze cross patée one and a half inches wide, crossed anchors from the pre-1850 period, with cables attached. The letters USN appear amid the anchors.
[edit] Ribbon
The ribbon is navy blue with a center stripe of white. The blue alludes to Navy service and the white represents the purity of selflessness.
[edit] Notable Recipients
- Barry K. Atkins
- Frederick C. Billard
- Gregory "Pappy" Boyington
- John "Jack" "Doc" Bradley
- John D. Bulkeley
- Gordon Pai'ea Chung-Hoon
- Randy "Duke" Cunningham
- Daniel Joseph "Dan" Daly
- Roy Milton Davenport (five awards)
- Albert David (two awards)
- Samuel D. Dealey (four awards)
- William P. Driscoll
- Merritt A. "Red Mike" Edson (two awards)
- Eugene B. Fluckey (four awards)
- James Shepherd Freeman
- Guy Gabaldon
- William "Bull" Halsey, Jr.
- John Howard
- Joseph P. Kennedy, Jr.
- William Edward Campbell March
- Doris "Dorie" Miller (first African American recipient)
- Marc Mitscher (two awards)
- Edward "Butch" O'Hare
- Richard H. "Dick" O'Kane (three awards)
- Edwin Taylor Pollock
- Lewis B. "Chesty" Puller (five awards)
- Dean Rockwell, Olympics greco-Roman wrestling coach
- Harry Schmidt
- Rodger W. Simpson (two awards)
- John Ripley
- Jason Robards
- Lew Walt (two awards)
- Corydon M. Wassell
- James H. Webb
- Alexander Vandegrift
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- Navy Cross. Service Medals and Campaign Credits of the United States. United States Navy. Retrieved on December 12, 2006.