Medal, 1939-45 Star

Historical information

The 1939-45 Star may be awarded for those who undertook operational service during World War II.

Eligibility

The 1939-45 Star is awarded for service between 3 September 1939 and 2 September 1945 for:

a period of six months (180 days) operational service for RAN and Army personnel and RAAF non-air crew personnel
a period of two months operational service for air crew personnel
a period of six months service at sea for Merchant Navy provided at least one voyage was made through one of the specified areas of active operations
The 1939-45 Star is awarded to Australian Civilian Personnel who served afloat with the United States Army Small Ships Section between 8 December 1941 and 2 September 1945. Eligibility is the same as that for Merchant Navy personnel. See required evidence to support a claim.

The Medal

The 1939-45 Star is a six–pointed star of yellow copper zinc alloy. The obverse has a central design of the Royal and Imperial cypher, surmounted by a crown. The cypher is surrounded by a circlet containing the words ‘The 1939-45 Star'. Stars issued to Australian personnel have recipient names engraved on the plain reverse.

The Ribbon

The 1939-45 Star ribbon has three vertical stripes of dark blue, red and light blue. The dark blue stripe represents the Naval Forces and the Merchant Navy, the red stripe the Armies and the light blue stripe the Air Forces.

Clasps

The ‘BATTLE OF BRITAIN' clasp was awarded to eligible air crew involved in the Battle of Britain. When the ribbon is worn alone a gilt rosette ribbon emblem is worn to denote the award of the ‘BATTLE OF BRITAIN' clasp.

The ‘BOMBER COMMAND’ clasp was introduced in 2012 and is awarded to eligible Bomber Command aircrew. When the ribbon is worn alone the standard silver rosette ribbon emblem is worn to denote the award of the ‘BOMBER COMMAND’ clasp.

Physical description

Full size and miniature medals with ribbons.
Miniature has clasp : Battle of Britain

Inscriptions & markings

nil

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