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Women Medal Recipients - Military and Civilian


Ricardo
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Hi,

 

Information from: http://userpages.aug.com/captbarb/medals.html

 

The Medal of Honor - the nation's highest award.

 

Dr Mary Walker, a surgeon in the Civil War, was awarded the nation's highest honor by President Andrew Johnson. The citation reads, in part:

"Whereas it appears from official reports that Dr. Mary E. Walker, a graduate of medicine, has rendered valuable service to the government, and her efforts have been earnest and untiring in a variety of ways, and that she was assigned to duty and served as an assistant surgeon in charge of female prisoners at Louisville, KY., under the recommendation of Major-Generals Sherman and Thomas, and faithfully served as contract surgeon in the service of the United states, and has devoted herself with much patriotic zeal to the sick and wounded soldiers, both in the field and hospitals, to the detriment of her own health, and has endured hardships as a prisoner of war four months in a southern prison while acting as contract surgeon....

 

Dr. Walker's Medal of Honor was rescinded in 1917, along with some 900 others. Some believed her medal was rescinded because of her involvement as a suffragette. Others discredit that opinion as 909 other medals rescinded were awarded to men. The stated reason was to ". . . increase the prestige of the grant."

 

For whatever reason, she refused to return the Medal of Honor and wore it until her death in 1919. Fifty-eight years later, the U.S. Congress posthumously reinstated her medal, and it was restored by President Carter on June 10, 1977.

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The Distinguished Service Cross

 

Women who received the Distinguished Service Cross - WWI

 

Jane Jeffery: A nurse serving with the American Red Cross: severely wounded during an air raid, refused to leave her post and continued to help others.

 

Beatrice M. MacDonald: wounded in Belgium during an air raid at a casualty clearing station and lost sight in her right eye.

 

Helen Grace McClelland: also on duty with the surgical team at the British casualty clearing station and cared for Beatrice MacDonald during the air raid.

 

Eva Jean Parmelee: although wounded in air raid she continued to serve throughout the emergency.

 

Isabelle Stambaugh: seriously wounded in an air raid at a British casualty clearing station in Amiens, while working in the operating room with a surgical team.

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The Navy Cross

 

Lenah S. Higbee, Superintendent, Navy Nurse Corps

Marie Louise Hidell (posthumously)

Lillian M. Murphy (posthumously)

Edna S. Pierce (posthumously)

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The Silver Star

 

Mary Roberts Wilson was the first woman to be awarded the Silver Star for gallantry in combat for her action during the battle of Anzio during World War II. With her Army evacuation hospital under German shellfire, Wilson continued supervising her nursing staff of 50, allowing the hospital to continue functioning. Tom Brokaw devoted an entire chapter to Wilson's exploits in his best-selling paean to World War II-era Americans, The Greatest Generation.

 

When the Germans bombed the field hospital at Anzio beach, Italy during WWII medical personnel evacuated forty-two patients by flashlight without incident, and for their bravery four nurses:1st Lt. Mary Roberts, 2d Lt. Elaine Roe, 2d Lt. Rita Virginia Rourke, and 2d Lt. Ellen Ainsworth, received the first Silver Star medals awarded to women in the U.S. Army. Ainsworth, who was killed during the attack, was awarded the medal posthumously.

 

Sgt. Leigh Ann Hester, vehicle commander, 617th Military Police Company, Richmond, Ky., stands at attention before receiving the Silver Star at an awards ceremony at Camp Liberty, Iraq, June 16 2005.

 

Sgt. Hester is the first woman soldier since World War II to receive the Silver Star.

 

Spec. Monica Brown from the 782nd Brigade Support Battalion, 4th Brigade Combat Team, 82nd Airborne Division, stands over Forward Operating Base Salerno in Khowst province, Afghanistan. Brown is the second woman since World War II to earn a Silver Star for gallantry in combat. (Photo by Spc. Micah E. Clare, USAÊ)

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The Air Medal

 

The first woman to receive The Air Medal was Lt Elsie S. Ott, Army Nurse Corps, awarded for her actions in 1943 as an air evac nurse en route from India to the U.S..

 

Lt Reba Whittle, (later Tobiason), Army Nurse Corps, was flying on an air evac mission when the plane was shot down by the Germans. She and her crew were captured and imprisoned. Lt Whittle was wounded yet performed nursing duties for the prisoners in the camp. They were repatriated to Switzerland. Lt Whittle was awarded the Air Medal and the Purple Heart.

 

F. Rosalind Westfall was a Red Cross nurse and was drafted in 1942. She elected to go into flight training and was trained at Harding Field, LA. and Bowman Field, KY. She started actively flying in May 1944 from Newfoundland to NY and then the Azores. She flew into Prestwick, Scotland, Iceland, Bermuda, Bangor ME, London, Paris and Miami. She flew a total of 1,299 hours and was awarded the Air Medal April 6, 1946 at Keesler Field, Mississippi.

 

Her service record was in the name: F. Rosalind Westfall. After the war she married Dr. George W. Sellmer, a B-24 pilot, and currently resides in Indianapolis.

 

Crewmembers of the EP-3E Aries II Surveillance Plane who were detained in China received the Air Medal. Three are military women.

 

They are:

 

Lt. j.g. Regina Kauffman, USN, Warminster, Pennsylvania

Lieutenant Marcia Sonon, USN, Lenharstville, Pennsylvania

Aviation Machinist Wendy Westbrook, USN, Rock Creek, Ohio

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Colonel Ruby Bradley is America's most decorated military woman.

 

ruby-bradley-photo-03.jpg

 

She served in WWII - and was a POW for 37 months in a Japanese prison camp. Later she was a frontline U.S. Army nurse in Korea on the day 100,000 Chinese soldiers overran American troops and started closing in on her hospital tent. Col. Bradley has earned 34 medals and citations for bravery, including two Bronze stars. She retired from the Army in 1963, but remained a nurse all her working life.

 

According to Arlington National Cemetery upon the death of Col. Bradley in 2002 at age 94 - "On December 1, 1999, then 91 years of age, Col. Ruby Bradley received more than a dozen military awards to replace those she had lost over the years. She is the nation's most highly-decorated female veteran. Senator Rockefeller presented the medals and ribbons to Bradley, a veteran of World War II and the Korean War, who lives in Spencer, West Virginia. She was a U.S. Army nurse and a POW for two years in the Philippines and was known as the "Angel in Fatigues" at Santo Tomas Internment Camp in Manila.

 

The replacement awards reportedly included the Legion of Merit medals, the Bronze Star, two Presidential Emblems, the Meritorious Unit Emblem, The American Defense Service Medal, the American Campaign Medal, the Asiatic-Pacific Campaign Medal, the World War II Victory Medal, the Army Occupational Medal with Japan clasp, three Korea Service medals, the Philippine Liberation Medal, the Philippine Independence Ribbon and the United Nations Service Medal.

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The Bronze Star

 

One of the first women to receive The Bronze Star was 1Lt Cordelia E. Cook, Army Nurse Corps, during WWII in Italy. Lt Cook was also awarded The Purple Heart.

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The Purple Heart

 

The first woman to receive The Purple Heart as a result of combat was 1Lt Annie G. Fox, while serving at Hickam Field during the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, Dec 7 1941. Lt Fox was later awarded the Bronze Star.

 

Two nurses were awarded the Purple Heart for wounds received when the Japanese bombed their hospital on Bataan Rita Palmer, Hampton, New Hampshire, and Rosemary Hogan, Chattanooga, Oklahoma. Army Nurse Mary Brown Menzie received the Purple Heart as a result of injuries on Corregidor. Several other military women were awarded the Purple Heart during WWII. Over 1600 women were awarded medals including the DSM, Air Medal, DFC, Silver Star, Bronze Star, Soldiers Medal, Legion of Merit and the Purple Heart.

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The Soldiers Medal

 

On March 22, 1989, Staff Sergeant Joan J. Hahnenberg, United States Army, was awarded The Soldiers Medal for heroism.

On 17 November 1988, Staff Sergeant Joan Jerilynn Hahnenberg saved the life of a fellow crewmember following an accident aboard the United States Army vessel, LT-981, near Lajes Field in the Azores. Placing herself in a position of extreme peril outside the bulwark of her vessel, Staff Sergeant Hahnenberg was able to grab onto and maintain a hold on a crewmember while he was in the water. She held this position for several minutes until futher assistance arrived. During this time, Sergeant Hahnenberg was in danger of being injured and tossed into the sea by the tow cable. Her prompt action, unselfish dedication and personal courage are in keeping with the highest tradition of the United States Army and the Non-commissioned Officer Corps.

 

On Sept. 1, 1999, Sgt. 1st Class Jeanne M. Balcombe, of the 1st Platoon, 55th Military Police Company, was posthumously awarded the Soldiers Medal for heroism in the face of danger. While on duty on Aug. 21st 1999, Balcombe's quick thinking and selfless response safeguarded and protected others at the Troop Medical Clinic at Camp Red Cloud, Korea. She placed herself in harm's way between three soldiers and an armed gunman.

 

On 24 January 1970 in Vietnam then SP5 Karen L. Offutt, WAC, U.S. Army, risked her life to rescue Vietnamese adults and children from burning structures. Without regard for her personal safety and in danger from smoke, flames and falling debris she repeatedly entered the buildings to rescue children who had reentered their homes. She was to have received the Soldiers Medal but instead was given a certificate and told that women do not receive the Soldiers Medal.

 

On 7 April 2001, Karen Offutt, now a mother of 3, and grandmother of 2, was awarded The Soldiers Medal for her heroism in Vietnam of over thirty years ago.

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The Distinguished Flying Cross

 

The first woman to receive the DFC was Amelia Earhart which sparked controversy and later it was changed to exclude civilians.

 

On December 28, 1944, the Distinguished Flying Cross was posthumously awarded to 1st Lieutenant Aleda E. Lutz. Lt. Lutz had flown over 800 hours when the C47 hospital plane evacuating wounded soldiers from the battlefront near Lyons, Italy, crashed killing all aboard.

 

As an Army Flight Nurse she flew 196 missions evacuating over 3,500 men. She earned six battle stars and was the first military woman to die in a combat zone in World War Two. Lt. Lutz was awarded the Air Medal four times, the Oak Leaf Cluster, The Red Cross Medal, and the Purple Heart. She was the first woman awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross in a World War.

 

A VA Medical facility located in her home state of Michigan has been named after her - ironically it was built in 1950 and not so named until 1990 - the first VA facility to be named for a military woman. An Army Hospital Ship and a C-47 plane have also been named in her honor.

 

During World War II, Roberta Schilbach Ross served as a 1st Lieutenant Army Flight Nurse, flew over 100 missions, over the Himalayas, and was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross and the Air Medal with Oak Leaf Cluster.

 

AF Pilot and sound barrier breaker Jacqueline Cochran was awarded the DFC.

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The Distinguished Service Medal

 

World War One Nurses Awarded the DSM:

 

Lillian Aubert, as Assistant Superintendent of the Army Nurse Corps, in the office of the Surgeon General. She died as the result of overwork; Residence, Shreveport, La.

 

Celia Brennan, Chief Nurse at the Toul Hospital Centre, France. Philadelphia, Pa

 

Katharine Brown, Chief Nurse of the Nantes Hospital Centre, France. Bryn Mawr, Pa.

 

Sophy Mary Burns, First Lieutenant, Chief Nurse of Base Hospital No. 16 at Bazoilles-sur-Meuse, France, and later of Mobile Hospital No. 9. Fort Sam Houston, Tex.

 

Reba G. Cameron, First Lieutenant, Chief Nurse at Plattsburgh Barracks, N.Y., and later of the General Hospital at Hampton, Va. San Francisco, Cal.

 

Edna M. Coughlin, Base Hospital No. 22, emergency medical team in an advanced area under fire.

 

Jane A. Delano, director, Dept. of Nursing, ARC

 

Alice H. Flash, Chief Nurse of the Meaves Hospital Centre, France. Hollywood, Cal.

 

Annie W. Goodrich, contract Nurse, organizer and first dean of the Army School of Nursing. New York City.

 

Carrie L. Howard, First Lieutenant, Chief Nurse at the Port of Embarkation, Hoboken, New Jersey. Washington, D.C.

 

Grace E. Leonard, First Lieutenant, assistant director of the Nursing Service, A.E.F. Fort Sheridan, Ill.

 

Beatrice Mary MacDonald, Chief Nurse, Presbyterian Hospital Unit.

 

Helen Grace McClelland, Base Hospital No. 10.

 

Sayres Louise Milliken, Captain, Chief Nurse of the base hospital at Camp Sevier, S.C., and later as assistant superintendent of Army Nurse Corps in office of Surgeon General. Washington, D.C.

 

Jane G. Malloy, First Lieutanant, Chief Nurse at the base hospital at Fort Devens, Mass. Fort Benjamin Harrison, Ind.

 

Edith A. Mury, (Mrs. Edith A. Kershaw), Chief Nurse at the Nurses Mobilization Station, Ellis Island, New York, and later as assistant superintendent in the Surgeon General's Office. Oakland, Calif.

 

Adele S. Posten, Chief Nurse at Base Hospital No. 117 (Psychiatric unit) at La Fauche, France. White Plains, N. Y.

 

Maria B. Rhodes (Mrs. Clarence Cash), Chief of the Nurses Equipment Bureau of the Military Department. American Red Cross in Paris. San Benit, Tex.

 

Blance S. Rulon, Captain, Chief Nurse of Base Hospital No. 27, at Angers, France, and later as assistant to the Director of the Nursing Corps, A.E.F., at Tours, France, also in charge of the Claim Department of the Army Nurse Corps. Washington, DC.

 

Lillian J. Ryan, First Lieutenant, Chief Nurse at the Base Hospital Camp Merritt, N. J. Denver, Col.

 

Mary E. Sheehan, First Lieutenant, Chief Nurse of the Vichy Hospital Centre, France. El Paso, Tex.

 

Neena Shelton, First Lieutanant, assistant to the Director of Nursing Services, A.E.F., in Paris. Washington, D.C.

 

Catherine Glynn Sinnott, Second Lieutanant, Chief Nurse of Camp Hospital No. 28, France. Washington, D.C.

 

Ethel E. Sweet, (Mrs. Theodore Falconer), Chief Nurse of the Nurses Mobilization Station in New York City. Marlin, Tex.

 

Dora E. Thompson, superintendent, ANC.

 

Lynette L. Vandervort, Chief Nurse of the Mars Hospital Centre, France, also as Chief Nurse at the Nurses Embarkation Centre at Cannes, France. Fond du Lac, Wis.

 

During WWI several nurses were wounded as a result of enemy action. There were more than two hundred deaths largely caused by influenza and pneumonia, and even mustard gas exposure. The Distinguished Service Cross (second in rank only to the Medal of Honor, the highest decoration in combat) was awarded to 3 Army nurses. The Distinguished Service Medal (highest decoration in noncombat) was awarded to 23 Army nurses. In addition to other United States Army decorations, 28 Army nurses were awarded the French Croix de Guerre, 69 the British Royal Red Cross, and 2 the British Military Medal. Many Army nurses were named in British Army dispatches for their meritorious service.

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  • 11 years later...

Just found this picture on the internet, and thought I would add it. I know she was already mentioned in this thread, but I like pictures to go with the description.  

 

In March 2005, Sergeant Leigh Ann Hester, a military policewoman with the 617th Military Police Company, helped defend a convoy from an insurgent ambush near Salman Pak, Iraq. Her actions earned her the Silver Star, making her the first woman since World War II awarded that medal and the first to receive it for close-quarters combat.

10-1-768x1214.jpg

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On 12/3/2010 at 12:06 PM, Ricardo said:

Hi,

 

Information from: http://userpages.aug.com/captbarb/medals.html

 

The Medal of Honor - the nation's highest award.

 

Dr Mary Walker, a surgeon in the Civil War, was awarded the nation's highest honor by President Andrew Johnson. The citation reads, in part:

"Whereas it appears from official reports that Dr. Mary E. Walker, a graduate of medicine, has rendered valuable service to the government, and her efforts have been earnest and untiring in a variety of ways, and that she was assigned to duty and served as an assistant surgeon in charge of female prisoners at Louisville, KY., under the recommendation of Major-Generals Sherman and Thomas, and faithfully served as contract surgeon in the service of the United states, and has devoted herself with much patriotic zeal to the sick and wounded soldiers, both in the field and hospitals, to the detriment of her own health, and has endured hardships as a prisoner of war four months in a southern prison while acting as contract surgeon....

 

Dr. Walker's Medal of Honor was rescinded in 1917, along with some 900 others. Some believed her medal was rescinded because of her involvement as a suffragette. Others discredit that opinion as 909 other medals rescinded were awarded to men. The stated reason was to ". . . increase the prestige of the grant."

 

For whatever reason, she refused to return the Medal of Honor and wore it until her death in 1919. Fifty-eight years later, the U.S. Congress posthumously reinstated her medal, and it was restored by President Carter on June 10, 1977.

The thing to remember about pre-1917 MoH is that it was the ONLY medal the US had. So, it was awarded for everything. Not to diminish any act, but there were no other medals or awards available.   Many Medals of Honor were awarded at that time for actions, that today would receive a Commendation or Achievement Medal. 

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Thanks Steve,  I have a book on the medal of honor and always wondered about all the MOHs citations during Civil War, etc. which seemed to described acts that would not merit the award.  Never new the MOH was the only decoration available. 

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2 hours ago, busternfo said:

Thanks Steve,  I have a book on the medal of honor and always wondered about all the MOHs citations during Civil War, etc. which seemed to described acts that would not merit the award.  Never new the MOH was the only decoration available. 

The US chose to NOT award medals or decorations early on. They felt it was too “EUROPEAN”, and smelled too much of a professional Army, which they had no wish for. But realized they needed to recognize special deeds with something besides a letter. So, they created a medal to award those who deserved recognition. 

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aerialbridge
2 hours ago, busternfo said:

Thanks Steve,  I have a book on the medal of honor and always wondered about all the MOHs citations during Civil War, etc. which seemed to described acts that would not merit the award.  Never new the MOH was the only decoration available. 

 The Navy good conduct medal is the second oldest US military award after the MoH, and was auth.  1869.   The third oldest is the USMC good conduct, auth. 1896.   The fourth oldest is the Dewey Medal,  auth.  1898.      

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2 hours ago, aerialbridge said:

 The Navy good conduct medal is the second oldest US military award after the MoH, and was auth.  1869.   The third oldest is the USMC good conduct, auth. 1896.   The fourth oldest is the Dewey Medal,  auth.  1898.      

  But, nothing for extraordinary action/achievement. I always thought it humorous that Enlisted got a medal for Good Conduct 🤣👍🏻

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collectsmedals

Mary Walker is buried in the Oswego Rural Cemetery just West of Oswego New York, not far from where I live, . I make it a habit of visiting every Medal of Honor grave in Oswego and Onondaga Counties New York every Memorial Day. These are pictures I took last year of Dr. Walker's grave with her Medal of Honor plaque.

P8030348.jpg

P8030351.jpg

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aerialbridge
On 3/7/2022 at 12:01 PM, sigsaye said:

The US chose to NOT award medals or decorations early on. They felt it was too “EUROPEAN”, and smelled too much of a professional Army, which they had no wish for. But realized they needed to recognize special deeds with something besides a letter. So, they created a medal to award those who deserved recognition. 

 Good point, not only did the US for years apparently  regard awarding medals as too European and reject it, the US has also consistently rejected the fancy, enameled, sterling and gilt bling of European awards (and the concept of "Orders:"- Commander, Knight, Officer, etc), in favor of generally plain,  round (or star, cross, polygon) bronze medals with the exception of the Legion of Merit that IMO is the only official US military medal that could be described as "European looking". 

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2 hours ago, aerialbridge said:

 Good point, not only did the US for years apparently  regard awarding medals as too European and reject it, the US has also consistently rejected the fancy, enameled, sterling and gilt bling of European awards (and the concept of "Orders:"- Commander, Knight, Officer, etc), in favor of generally plain,  round (or star, cross, polygon) bronze medals with the exception of the Legion of Merit that IMO is the only official US military medal that could be described as "European looking". 

The US was very Leary of a “Professional Military”, preferring to rely on Militias. Called up when needed, and then disbanded when they were not needed. Each state had their own militias, which were organized by County. This way, the central government didn’t have to pay to support a standing Army. So, no need for decorations. When it was finally determined that a standing Army was indeed needed (along with a Navy), they continued with the plain tradition. 

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