Polar Medal

This article is about the medal awarded by the monarch of the United Kingdom. For information on the medal awarded by the monarch of Canada, see Polar Medal (Canada).
Polar Medal



Reverse of medal and ribbon
Awarded by United Kingdom
Type Medal
Awarded for extreme human endeavour against the appalling weather and conditions that exist in the Arctic and Antarctic
Statistics
Established 1857
Order of Wear
Next (higher) Campaign Medals and Stars[1]
Next (lower) Imperial Service Medal[1]

The Polar Medal is a medal awarded by the Sovereign of the United Kingdom. It was instituted in 1857 as the Arctic Medal and renamed the Polar Medal in 1904.

History

The first polar award was called the Arctic Medal which was presented twice in the 19th century. The Admiralty issued the medal in 1857 for several expeditions, including the expedition to discover the fate of Sir John Franklin and his crew who were lost while looking for the Northwest Passage in 1847.

HER Majesty having been graciously pleased to signify her commands that a Medal be granted to all persons, of every rank and class, who have been engaged in the several Expeditions to the Arctic Regions, whether of discovery or search, between the years 1818 and 1855, both inclusive. [2]

The second presentation of the Arctic Medal was to the crews of three ships exploring the Arctic in 187576.

In 1904, the Polar Medal was inaugurated for members of Captain Scott's first expedition to Antarctica.It was also awarded to the crews of both rescue ships, Terra Nova and Morning. Subsequent medals were also awarded to members of Ernest Shackleton's expeditions in 190709 and 191417.

Until 1968, the Polar Medal was presented to anyone who participated in a polar expedition endorsed by the governments of any Commonwealth realms. However since then the rules governing its presentation have been revised with greater emphasis placed on personal achievement.

The Medal may be conferred on those citizens of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland who have personally made conspicuous contributions to the knowledge of Polar regions or who have rendered prolonged service of outstanding quality in support of acquisition of such knowledge and who, in either case, have undergone the hazards and rigours imposed by the Polar environment. The Medal may also be awarded in recognition of individual service of outstanding quality in support of the objectives of Polar expeditions, due account being taken of the difficulties overcome.

A total of 880 silver and 245 bronze medals have been issued for Antarctic expeditions. Another 73 silver medals have been issued for service in the Arctic.

Several people have been awarded bars to the medal for earning the award again for polar expeditions. Both Frank Wild and Ernest Joyce hold the joint record of four bars on their Polar Medal.[3]

Design

The medal is octagonal in shape with a white ribbon.[4] The reverse of the original Arctic Medal showed a three-masted ship surrounded by ice floes.[4] The die for the medal was engraved by Leonard Charles Wyon. A new design by Ernest Gillick was used from 1904, showing RRS Discovery, with a sledging party in the foreground.[5] The obverse bears a portrait of the reigning monarch.

The medal was originally cast in both silver and bronze. Since 1939, all awarded medals have been silver.[4] Bronze medals were presented to personnel on relief ships for Antarctic expeditions, they were never awarded to participant of Arctic expeditions.

Australia

The Government of Australia replaced the Polar Medal with its own Australian Antarctic Medal in 1987.[6]

New Zealand

In 1996, when New Zealand revised its royal honours system, New Zealanders ceased to receive the Polar Medal. It was proposed that the medal would be preserved, with a new name, under New Zealand regulations: the New Zealand Antarctic Medal. The rationale for the renaming was that it is in relation to Antarctica that New Zealand’s endeavours and achievements have been made. The Report on honours that recommended the change contained the inaccurate claim that the medal was named after the North Pole. The new medal was formally instituted by the Queen of New Zealand on 1 September 2006.[7]

See also

References

Bibliography

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