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Croix de Guerre

 
Dictionary: Croix de Guerre   (krwä' də gâr') pronunciation
 
n.

A French military decoration for bravery in combat.

[French : croix, cross + de, of + guerre, war.]


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WordNet: Croix de Guerre
 
Note: click on a word meaning below to see its connections and related words.

The noun has one meaning:

Meaning #1: a French military decoration for gallantry


 
Wikipedia: Croix de guerre
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Croix de guerre or Oorlogskruis

A 1914-1918 croix de guerre. Only the ribbon differs with other croix
Awarded by  France and  Belgium
Type
Eligibility Military personnel only, often bestowed to members of allied countries
Awarded for individuals who distinguish themselves by acts of heroism involving combat with enemy forces.
Campaign World War I
World War II
Other wars not fought on French soil
Status Active
Description A bronze cross with swords
Statistics
Established April 2, 1915

Croix de guerre 1914-1918 & 1939-1945 ribbons with palm

The croix de guerre (English translation: Cross of War) is a military decoration of both France and Belgium, where it is also known as the Oorlogskruis (Dutch). It was first created in 1915 in both countries and consists of a square-cross medal on two crossed swords, hanging from a ribbon with various degree pins. The decoration was awarded during World War I, again in World War II, and in other conflicts. The croix de guerre was also commonly bestowed to foreign military forces allied to France and Belgium.

The croix de guerre may either be bestowed as a unit award or to individuals who distinguish themselves by acts of heroism involving combat with enemy forces. The medal is also awarded to those who have been "mentioned in despatches", meaning a heroic deed was performed meriting a citation from an individual's headquarters unit. The unit award of the croix de guerre was issued to military commands who performed heroic deeds in combat and were subsequently recognized by headquarters.

Contents

Appearance

The croix de guerre medal varies depending on which country is bestowing the award and for what conflict. Separate French medals exist for the First and Second World War, and the French medals are different in appearance from the Belgian design.

For the unit decoration of the croix de guerre, a fourragère is awarded which is suspended from the shoulder of an individual's uniform.

Because the croix de guerre is issued as several different medals, and as a unit decoration, situations typically arose where an individual was awarded the decoration several times, for different actions, and from different sources. Regulations also permitted the wearing of multiple croix de guerre, meaning that such medals were differentiated in service records by specifying French croix de guerre, Belgian croix de guerre, French croix de guerre (WWI), etc.

Croix de guerre

There are four distinct croix de guerre medals in the French & Belgian system of honours :

Ribbon Awards
Croix de guerre 1914-1918 (for World War I service)
Croix de guerre 1939-1945 (for World War II service)
Croix de guerre des théâtres d'opérations extérieures (TOE) for wars other than World War I and World War II not fought on French soil[1]
Belgian croix de guerre (for World War I & World War II service)

The croix was created by a law of April 2, 1915, proposed by deputy Émile Briant. The croix reinstated an older system of mentions in dispatches, which were only administrative honours with no medal. The sculptor Paul-André Bartholomé created the medal, a bronze cross with swords, showing the effigy of the republic.

The French croix represents a mention in dispatches awarded by a commanding officer, at least a regimental commander. Depending on the officer who issued the mention, the ribbon of the croix is marked with extra pins.

  • Mentioned in Despatches :
    • a bronze star for those who had been mentioned at the regiment or brigade level.
    • a silver star, for those who had been mentioned at the division level.
    • a silver gilt star for those who had been mentioned at the corps level.
    • a bronze palm for those who had been mentioned at the army level.
    • a silver palm stands for five bronze ones.
    • a silver gilt palm for those who had been mentioned at the Free French Forces level (World War II only).

The croix des guerres des TOE was created in 1921 for overseas wars. It was awarded during Indochina War, Korean War, and up to Kosovo War in 1999.

In 1939 a new croix de guerre was created by Édouard Daladier. It was abolished by Vichy Government in 1941, which created a new croix de guerre. In 1943 General Giraud in Algiers created another croix de guerre. Both Vichy and Giraud croix were abolished by General de Gaulle in 1944, who reinstated the 1939 croix.

The croix de guerre takes precedence between the ordre national du Mérite and the croix de la valeur militaire, the World War I croix being senior to the World War II one, itself senior to TOE croix.

  1. ^ At the time of the Algerian War, Algeria was considered part of France and war actions labelled "law enforcement operations", so soldiers were awarded the croix de la valeur militaire instead of the Croix de guerre des TOE.

Belgian croix de guerre or Oorlogskruis

Belgian croix de guerre (WWII), or Oorlogskruis
Belgian croix de guerre (WWII), or Oorlogskruis with Palm

The Belgian croix de guerre also included attachments, pinned into the ribbon, to designate the degree of citation:

  • a bronze lion for those who had been cited at the regiment level
  • a silver lion for those who had been cited at the brigade level
  • a gold lion for those who had been cited at the division level
  • a bronze palm for those who had been cited at the army level. A silver palm is used for five bronze ones and a gold one for five silver ones.

The croix de guerre or Oorlogskruis would be referred with the different type of attachment, such as the croix de guerre avec palme et étoile (War Cross with palm and star) or the croix de guerre avec palme et lion (War Cross with palm and lion).

The multiple attached pins can also designate the number of croix de guerre citations earned, but displayed with only one medal. Some soldiers earned more than 10 or 20 croix de guerre citations.[citation needed]

Unit Award

The coat of arms of Leuven, featuring a French croix de guerre. Presumably to commemorate the sacking of Leuven by the Germans in 1914.

The croix can be awarded to military units, as a manifestation of a collective Mention in Despatches. It is then displayed on the unit's flag. A unit, usually a regiment or a battalion, is always mentioned at the army level. The croix is then a croix de guerre with palm. Other communities, such as cities or companies can be also awarded the croix.

When a unit is mentioned twice, it is awarded the fourragère of the croix de guerre. This fourragère is worn by all men in the unit, but it can be worn on a personal basis: those permanently assigned to a unit, at the time of the mentions, were entitled to wear the fourragère for the remainder of service in the military.

Temporary personnel, or those who had joined a unit after the actions which had been mentioned, were authorized to wear the award while a member of the unit but would surrender the decoration upon transfer. This temporary wearing of the fourragère only applied to the French version of the croix de guerre.

United States issuance

In the United States military, the croix de guerre was commonly accepted as a foreign decoration. In the modern age, however, it remains one of the most difficult foreign awards to verify entitlement. This is since the croix de guerre was often presented with original orders, only, and rarely entered into a permanent service record. The unit award was virtually never entered into U.S. records, especially since in most cases it was considered a temporary decoration which was surrendered when an individual departed a unit. An added complication is that the 1973 National Archives Fire destroyed a large number of World War II personnel records, meaning that there are very few sources from which to verify a veteran's entitlement to the croix de guerre.

Today, members of United States 5th Marine Regiment and 6th Marine Regiment, the Army's 2nd Infantry Division, the Army's 3rd Squadron, 4th Cavalry Regiment, and the 1st BN U.S. 28th Infantry Regiment, are authorized to wear a fourragère signifying that brigade's award of three croix de guerre during the World War I, but only while that individual is assigned to the unit. The wearing of the decoration is considered ceremonial and the fourragère is not entered as an official military award in permanent service records.

Notable recipients

Individuals in World War I

  • Lieutenant (later Temporary Captain) Harold Llewellyn Bassett, Royal Engineers, French Bronze with Palm, Jan 1916? (London Gazette 28 January 1919).
  • William Birdwood, awarded the first croix de guerre on 22 February 1916 by the French President, the 2nd by HM the King of Belgium on 11 March 1918.
  • Stanley Melbourne Bruce, 1st Viscount Melbourne and later Prime Minister of Australia, during the First World War in 1917.
  • Eugene Bullard, wounded in the 1916 battles around Verdun, was awarded the croix de guerre for his heroism.
  • Father John B. DeValles, A chaplain with the Yankee Division, he was known as the "Angel of the Trenches" for his valiant deeds in caring for both Allied and German soldiers on the battlefields of France. Fr. DeValles was injured in a mustard gas attack while attending to a fallen soldier and died two years later.
  • T/Lieutenant Hugh Ravensford Dixon, 121st Field Company R.E. was awarded the croix de guerre with palm for his part in the bridging of the River Lys on 19 October 1918.
  • Thomas J. Evans, part of the 1st Battalion Welsh Guards. He was awarded the cross on 31 July 1917 after the attack on Pilkem Ridge near Ypres.
  • George L. Fox, awarded the croix de guerre for his service on the Western Front during World War I. He was also one of the Four Chaplains who gave their lives when the troopships USAT Dorchester was hit by a torpedo and sank on February 3, 1943, during World War II.
  • George Hedges No.9540,1st Battalion East Surrey Regiment,1914-1918.
  • Frank H. Hullinger, awarded Croix de Guerre for bravery. Also awarded with Hullinger was Earl Sleeth. Both "volunteered under violent bombardment to insure liaison of its advance post, which was attacked by a strong enemy detachment." - cited from The Chicago Tribune, along with the book WITH THE HELP OF GOD AND A FEW MARINES (p.48-49)
  • American poet Joyce Kilmer (1886-1918), a sergeant and intelligence observer with the 69th Volunteer Infantry, 42nd Rainbow Division, was posthumously awarded the croix de guerre for service during World War I.
  • William March, American writer, awarded the croix de guerre with palm.
  • Joseph Edny Powell, awarded the croix de guerre in 1918 by then CIC, later Marshal Pétain, for valor. His company "Le Terrible" was H Company, the first to occupy Germany after breaking the Hindenberg Line in September, 1918.
  • Milunka Savić, was awarded the French croix de guerre with palm. She is the only woman in the world awarded with this medal.
  • Leslie R. Taber, an American pilot in the Laffeyette Flying corp who flew in 1917 as a fighter and bomber pilot. He also served in the US Navy as a Naval Aviator after the US entered the war and won the Navy Cross.
  • Major Frederick Lawrence Wall, Australian Army Medical Corps, served in France during WWI.
  • Samuel Woodfill, an American Major in WWI who disabled several German machine-gun nests and killed many enemy combatants with rifle, pistol and pickaxe. He was awarded the French croix de guerre.

Individuals in World War II

  • Marcel Bigeard, highly decorated French general and veteran of World War II, French Indochina and Algeria; received both the croix de guerre 1939-1945 and the croix de guerre TOE with a total of 25 citations, including 17 palms.
  • Thomas A. Cassilly, was awarded the French croix de guerre during WWII while in the US Army, retired from the US Foreign Service in 1972 and taught at Montclair State University and Manhattanville College.
  • Lionel Guy D'Artois, a Canadian Army officer and SOE agent. Awarded the croix de guerre for service with the Interior French Forces in occupied France, during World War II.
  • Guy de Rothschild, awarded the croix de guerre for his military valor during World War II.
  • Ben F. Ellis, Georgia recipient for gallant and heroic action in battle.
  • John Howard (American actor), awarded the croix de guerre in 1944 for his valor in World War II. When his ship struck a mine off the French coast, killing the captain, Howard took over command and fought valiantly to save his ship and crew, even jumping into the sea to rescue wounded sailors.
  • Agnès Humbert, art historian, was awarded the croix de guerre with silver gilt palm, for heroism in her work for the French Resistance during World War II.
  • Arthur Jessup, a Canadian major with the Governor General's Foot Guards received the Belgian cross de guerre with bronze palm during the campaign to liberate Belgium in World War II. Major Jessup would return to Canada after the War and eventually become an Ontario Supreme Court Justice.
  • Curtis E. LeMay, was awarded the French croix de guerre with palm; Belgium croix de guerre with palm.
  • General Dragoljub Mihailovic, Serbian Chetnik leader, awarded by Charles de Gaulle during World War II.
  • Audie Murphy, the most decorated U.S. Army soldier during WWII, received the French croix de guerre twice (with palm) and the Belgian croix de guerre once, as well as the Medal of Honor.
  • John B. Oakes, future editor of the editorial page of the New York Times, awarded for his counter-espionage activities with the O.S.S. during World War II.
  • Harry Peulevé, a wireless operator and organiser in the French Section of the SOE.
  • Abbé Pierre (1912-2007), French priest and founder of Emmaus.
  • Col. William Wilson Quinn, G2 Officer of the U.S. 7th Army during WWII. Awarded the croix de guerre with palm for participating in the battle of France, and later retired as Lt. Gen. William Wilson "Buffolo Bill" Quinn. He planned the invasion of Southern France and also predicted a battle of the Battle of the Bulge.
Col. Jimmy Stewart being awarded the croix de guerre with palm, in 1944.
  • Desmond J. Scott, a New Zealand fighter pilot and Group Captain who flew for the RAF during the Second World War. He was awarded both the Belgian and the French croix de guerre.
  • Jan Smuts, South African Prime Minister during World War II.
  • James Stewart, American actor awarded the croix de guerre with palm in 1944 by Lt. Gen. Henri Valin, Chief of Staff of the French Air Force, for his role in the liberation of France. He retired from the United States Air Force Reserve a Brigadier General.
  • Violette Szabo, a British SOE that underwent intense training and eventually was sent into the field. Her first mission was a success, but during her second mission she was captured. Eventually sent to a concentration camp she was brutally tortured for information and finally executed.
  • Fernand Van Geert, ship’s officer, rescued 12 passengers from a torpedoed Belgian freighter in the North Atlantic. He secured a compass from the burning ship before returning to the lifeboat which he then commanded for 9 days in open waters. His actions and moral leadership were commended.
  • Nancy Wake of the SOE was the highest decorated Allied servicewoman of World War II. Awarded the croix de guerre three times for service with the French maquis.
  • Cpl. Edwin Allison Hosford, a rifleman of the North Shore Regiment (New Brunswick), Canadian Infantry, for heroism at Carpiquet, France in July 1944 during World War II.

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Dictionary. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2007. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
WordNet. WordNet 1.7.1 Copyright © 2001 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Croix de guerre" Read more