The Distinguished Service Medal (DSM) was a military decoration awarded until 1993 to personnel of the Royal Navy and members of the other services, and formerly to personnel of other Commonwealth countries, up to and including the rank of Chief Petty Officer, for bravery and resourcefulness on active service at sea.
The DSM was intended to reward bravery at sea. For example, members of the Royal Naval Division, who served alongside the Army in France in the First World War, were eligible for Army decorations, including the Distinguished Conduct Medal and the Military Medal.[4]
From 1916, ribbon bars could be authorised for subsequent awards of the DSM.[5]
In 1940 the award was extended to Royal Air Force personnel serving with the Fleet and, in 1942, to members of the Merchant Navy, and Army personnel serving afloat, for example manning a merchant ship's anti-aircraft guns.[5] A number of awards were also made to civilians, including two for ferrying troops from the beaches during the 1940 Dunkirk evacuation.[6]
In 1979 eligibility for a number of awards, including the DSM, was extended to permit posthumous awards.[7] Until that time, only the Victoria Cross and a mention in dispatches could be awarded posthumously.
The Distinguished Service Medal was discontinued in 1993, as part of the review of the British honours system which recommended removing distinctions of rank in respect of awards for bravery. Since then the Distinguished Service Cross, previously only open to Commissioned and Warrant Officers, has been awarded to all ranks.[5]
The DSM had also been awarded by Commonwealth countries but by the 1990s most, including Canada, Australia and New Zealand, were establishing their own honours systems and no longer recommended British honours.[8]
Description
The DSM is a circular silver medal, 36 millimetres (1.4 inches) in diameter, with the following design:[3]
The obverse bears the effigy and titles of the reigning monarch.
The reverse has the inscription 'FOR DISTINGUISHED SERVICE' on three lines, within a laurel wreath surmounted by an Imperial crown.
The suspender is plain and straight.
The name, rank, service number and ship of the recipient are engraved or impressed on the rim of the medal.
The ribbon is 32 millimetres (1.25 inches) wide and consists of three equal stripes: dark blue, white, and dark blue, with a thin dark blue stripe down the centre of the white.
Ribbon bars, indicating a further award, are silver and ornamented with laurel leaves. Bars issued during the First World War were dated on the reverse, while those awarded during the Second World War were undated. When the ribbon alone is worn, a silver rosette denotes the award of each bar.
Obverse variations
The medal was awarded with one of five obverse designs:[3]
George V (1914–36)
George VI (1st type) 'INDIAE IMP' (1938–49)
George VI (2nd type) without 'INDIAE IMP' (1949–52)
Elizabeth II (1st type) 'BR OMN' (1952–57)
Elizabeth II (2nd type) 'DEI GRATIA' (1957–93)
Numbers of awards
Between 1914 and 1993, approximately 11,311 medals and 227 bars were awarded.[3]
^Precise estimates vary. 4,100 is a rounded figure from: John W. Mussell. Medal Yearbook 2015. p. 98. Token Publishing Ltd, Honiton, Devon.ISBN978-1-908-828-16-3