Award for Heroism

Award for Heroism
Awarded by United States Department of State
Type Medal
Eligibility Foreign Service, Civil Service, US Military
Awarded for "Acts of courage or outstanding performance under unusually difficult or dangerous circumstances"
Status Currently awarded
Precedence
Next (higher) Secretary’s Award
Next (lower) Thomas Jefferson Star for Foreign Service
Award for Valor (obsolete)

Ribbon

The Award for Heroism is an award of the United States Department of State. It is presented to employees of State, USAID and Marine guards assigned to diplomatic and consular facilities in recognition of acts of courage or outstanding performance under unusually difficult or dangerous circumstances, whether or not in connection with the performance of assigned duties.[1]

The award consists of a silver medal set and a certificate signed by an assistant secretary, an official of equivalent rank or the Chief of Mission. Due to the location and dangerous nature of their work, the majority of the recipients have been Foreign Service Special Agents of the Diplomatic Security Service.

The Award for Heroism is a replacement for the former Award for Valor. The basic difference between the two medals is that the Valor Award was issued in 10K gold whereas the Heroism Award is issued in sterling silver. The ribbon reflects this; the designs are almost identical, but the color scheme indicates the precious metal issued with the respective awards.

Criteria

The following criteria are applicable to granting an Award for Heroism:

Nominating and Approval Procedures

Nominations for State and USAID employees are submitted on Form JF-66, Nomination for Award, through supervisory channels to the Joint Country Awards Committee for review and recommendation to the Chief of Mission for final action.

Nominations initiated in Washington are submitted to the appropriate area awards committee for final action. For USAID, nominations initiated in Washington are reviewed by the USAID bureau/office with final approval by the appropriate assistant administrator or office head.

Military Use

Upon authorization, members of the U.S. military may wear the medal and ribbon in the appropriate order of precedence as a U.S. non-military personal decoration.

Notable Recipients

Secretary Hillary Clinton presents the Department of State Award for Heroism to Matthew T. Sherman, November 18, 2009
Secretary Clinton pins Award for Heroism on Principal Officer Lynne Tracy

Full List of Diplomatic Security Service Special Agents who have received the Award for Heroism on the Diplomatic Security Wiki

References

See also