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What is the Brevet Medal?
Prior to March 3, 1915 Marine Corps
officers were NOT eligible for the Medal of Honor. The Brevet Medal was
presented on a one-time basis in 1921 to living officers (or former officers)
of the U.S Marine Corps who had received a brevet commission issued by the
President and confirmed by the Senate for "distinguished conduct or public
service in the presence of the enemy" during the Civil War, Spanish-American
War, Philippine Insurrection, or the Boxer Rebellion.
The medal was
designed by Sergeant Joseph Alfred Burnett. The ribbon, in USMC scarlet,
closely mirrored the blue-and-white starred motif of the Medal of Honor. No
attached devices were ever authorized. The Brevet Medal is/was worn after the
Medal of Honor and before all other decorations.
In 1940, the Marine
Corps declared the Brevet Medal obsolete since all but one of the original
recipients were at that time deceased. The lone survivor, Major General John T.
Myers, USMC, had been brevetted for valor at the siege of the U.S. embassy at
Beijing, China, in 1900. He died in 1959. The medal was never again issued,
since the concept of brevet commissions was phased out of the United States
military to be replaced by temporary and field commissions which were awarded
much more frequently than brevet ranks.
Description:
- Authorized Marine Corps Order Number 26,
1921.
- The decoration was a one-time issuance and
retroactively recognized living Marine Corps officers who had received a brevet
rank.
- Brevet promotions were used by the United States
military in some capacity from 1775 until they were discontinued in 1900. The
Army was the only branch authorized to grant brevets until 1814, when the
Marine Corps was granted the same privilege. Over 86 years, the Marine Corps
awarded 121 brevet promotions to 100 Marine Corps officers. Captain Anthony
Gale was the first to receive a brevet promotion in 1814, and John Twiggs
Myers, who died in 1952, was the last surviving recipient.
- This decoration was justified on the grounds
that, until 1915, Marine Corps officers were not eligible for the Medal of
Honor.
- When Marine Corps Order Number 26 was released it
stated that the Brevet Medal should rank just behind the campaign medal for
which the Brevet Commission was given.
- Shortly after the inception of the medal, it was
elevated to a position just after the Navy's medal for distinguished service,
The Navy Cross Medal, although in precedence it ranks just behind the Medal of
Honor. Recipients of the medal had received field commissions as Marine Corps
officers, under combat conditions, and had performed feats of distinction and
gallant service.
- After the Brevet Medal was approved and created,
the decoration was given to the last 20 living Marine Corps officers who
received brevet promotions.
- The Brevet Medal was
not
authorized to be awarded posthumously.
- It is one of the rarest U.S. military medals
because only 20 were issued and issuance of Brevet Commissions had ceased in
1921.
- In 1940 the Marine Corps declared the Brevet
Medal obsolete; the medal was never issued again.
Background:
- The Brevet Medal was authorized for issue to any
officer holding a brevet commission for distinguished conduct and public
service in the presence of the enemy during the Mexican War, Civil War,
Spanish-American War, Philippine Insurrection, and the Boxer Hostilities of
1900.
- The Medal
- OBVERSE
The medal consists of a
bronze cross pattée, with the center of each arm extended in a
semi-circular shape and in the center of the front is the word "BREVET",
encircled by the words "UNITED STATES MARINE CORPS". A small five-pointed
star, point-up, is at the bottom center of the circle formed by the
inscription. A small Marine Corps insignia (eagle, globe and anchor)
attaches the medal to its suspension ring.
- REVERSE
The back of the medal
is plain except for its center, which contains the inscription "FOR
DISTINGUISHED CONDUCT" in a circle, and the words "IN PRESENCE OF ENEMY" in the
center. The original medals were neither named nor numbered.
- RIBBON
The ribbon is USMC
scarlet with 13 white stars in 6 rows (rows are 2,3,2,3,2,1), closely
resembling the blue-and-white starred pattern of the Medal of
Honor.
- DEVICES
No attached devices for
the Brevet Medal were authorized.
- Around 1973 the Brevet Medal dies were retired
and placed in the custody of the Marine Corps History and Museums Division, and
no official restrike is contemplated.
- Information from
Navy and Marine Corps Awards
Manual [Rev. 1953] Marine Corps Legacy Museum The Call of Duty : Military
Awards and Decorations of the United States of America by John E.
Strandberg
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