Victoria Cross & Bar ONLY three have ever been awarded & here are the three recipients

Britain’s highest military honor is the Victoria Cross for conspicuous acts of gallantry. Created in January 1856, only 1,357 have been awarded.

One three men in the history of the award have received more than one Victoria Cross. Receiving a second Victoria Cross enables the recipient to add a bar to the ribbon of the medal.

Bars, or clasps, are typically awarded either for receiving the same award more than once or for battles or campaigns if the medal is for a particular war.

As an example of the latter case, the Crimea Medal had multiple bars available to those who fought in particular battles during the Crimean War.

Lt. Col. Arthur Martin-Leake

Lieutenant Colonel Arthur Martin-Leake, before being awarded his second VC

Lt. Col. Arthur Martin-Leake of the Imperial Yeomanry was the first to receive a second Victoria Cross. The first was from his actions in the Boer War in 1902. Martin-Leake went to help several wounded soldiers during a battle at Vlakfontein.

While aiding a wounded officer, he was shot three times. He refused aid for himself until others had been treated. Due to his injuries, he was sent back to Britain where he continued his medical studies.

In 1914, at 40 years of age, Martin-Leake signed up for the Royal Army Medical Corps in World War I.

He rescued a number of injured soldiers in Zonnebeke during fighting there. He received the bar for his actions. He survived the war, and died in 1953.

Capt. Noel Godfrey Chavasse

Captain Noel Chavasse, RAMC

Capt. Noel Godfrey Chavasse also joined the Royal Army Medical Corps.

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He received his first Victoria Cross in 1916 for saving 20 wounded men in the line of fire in No Man’s Land by Guillemont, France. He carried several of the men 500 yards under enemy fire.

One year later, Chavasse was wounded in action at Wieltie, Belgium. He continued to treat wounded men and search No Man’s Land for more injured troops until he was exhausted from his own wounds.

He died in August 1917. He is the only recipient to receive two Victoria Crosses for actions in World War I.

Captain Charles Upham, 20th Infantry Battalion (New Zealand)

When you have thrown on your first Victoria Cross, you have entered an elite fraternity in the history of war that commands the respect of all those to ever wear a uniform.  When you have earned your second and lived to tell about it, you are suddenly the only combat soldier to have ever done so.  Only three men in history have earned a second VC. The other two who managed this feat were medical officers: Col A Martin-Leake, who received the decoration in the Boer War and the First World War; and Capt N G Chavasse, who was killed in France in 1917. Chavasse’s family was related to Upham’s.

As such, the world should pause for a moment and take in the unsurpassed gallantry displayed by the man from New Zealand that the Germans couldn’t seem to keep down.  Charles Upham picked up his first Victoria Cross in Crete in 1941 where his citation contained so many individual acts of gallantry it is hard to pick out the one that put him over the top.

His second Victoria Cross would come during the First Battle of El Alamein in 1942 that would end with him bleeding out, unable to move, and subsequently captured by the Germans.  As a POW, he made so many attempts to escape that he was finally interned at Colditz Castle for the remainder of the war.  When he would emerge in 1945, he would do so as the only man to receive two Victoria Crosses in the war – a source of great pride for New Zealand .

 

Jack Beckett: Jack Beckett has been editor since 2012. Huge fan of war history and rural history and a motorbike rider.
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