Special Reserve Long Service and Good Conduct Medal

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TypeLong service and good conduct medal
Awarded forAwarded for 15 years service and attending 15 annual camps.
Presented bythe United Kingdom
EligibilityEfficient and irreproachable service in the Special Reserve
Special Reserve Long Service and Good Conduct Medal
Obverse and reverse of the medal
TypeLong service and good conduct medal
Awarded forAwarded for 15 years service and attending 15 annual camps.
Presented bythe United Kingdom
EligibilityEfficient and irreproachable service in the Special Reserve
StatusSuperseded by the Efficiency Medal
Established1908
Final award1930
Total1,078
Ribbon bar
Order of Wear
Next (higher)Efficiency Medal[1]
Next (lower)Decoration for Officers of the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve[1]
RelatedMilitia Long Service Medal

The Special Reserve Long Service and Good Conduct Medal was a long service medal awarded by the United Kingdom. The medal was awarded for service in the Army Special Reserve, or a combination of service in the Special Reserve and other part-time military forces. Awarded between 1908 and 1930, the medal was only awarded 1,078 times.[2]

Obverse 1911-1930

The medal was established in June 1908 by King Edward VII after, as part of the Haldane Reforms, the Special Reserve replaced the Militia,[3] the new medal superseding the Militia Long Service Medal. It was awarded to privates and non-commissioned officers for 15 years efficient and irreproachable service in the Special Reserve and attending 15 annual trainings, although members of the two Irish Yeomanry regiments qualified with 10 years service and 10 annual trainings.[4][5] Qualifying service for the medal could come from service in the Militia, Imperial Yeomanry, Volunteer Force, or Territorial Force, but not the Regular Army, as long as the last five years was in the Militia or Special Reserve.[4][6] The medal was superseded by the Efficiency Medal in 1930.[7]

No recipient could receive both this and the concurrently awarded Territorial Force Efficiency Medal.[4]

Awards were published in Army Orders, with a total of 1,078 medals awarded: 428 bearing the effigy of King Edward VII and 650 with that of George V. In terms of unit, the following were conferred: Royal Artillery: 164; Royal Engineers: 9; Anglesey Royal Engineers: 3; Monmouthshire Regiment: 5; RAMC: 4; Labour Corps: 4; Machine Gun Corps: 1; North Irish Horse: 16; South Irish Horse: 30; King Edward's Horse: 14; Infantry: 823; Channel Islands (Jersey and Guernsey): 5.[8][9]

Appearance

References

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