WWII US Army Combat Medic Insignia -
The insignia featured here was issued to personnel performing the duties of a combat medic. Of
sterling silver
construction. The design consists of the caduce with a red cross above. a strecher is placed
in a horizontal position across the caduce. An oval wreath encompasses all components.
A pin is provided in the
back so the insignia can be attached above the pocket of the tunic.
The Combat Medical Badge is an award of the United States Army which was first created in January 1945. Any member of the Army
Medical Department, at the rank of Colonel or below, who is assigned or attached to a ground Combat Arms unit of brigade or
smaller size which provides medical support during any period in which the unit was engaged in active ground combat is eligible
for the CMB. According to the award criterion, the individual must be performing medical duties while simultaneously being
actively engaged by the enemy; strict adherence to this requirement and its interpretation (e.g., distant mortar rounds vs.
direct small arms fire) will vary by unit. As of 3 June 2005, Special Forces medics are no longer eligible for award, but may
now receive the Combat Infantryman Badge. A revision has allowed aviation medics to be eligible for the CMB. The non-combat
proficiency equivalent is the Expert Field Medical Badge.
The Combat Medical Badge is retroactive to 6 December 1941. The original decoration was considered a one-time decoration, however this directive was rescinded in 1951 allowing for multiple awards of the Combat Medical Badge denoted by stars encircling the decoration.[4] According to the US Army Medical Department Regiment, to date there have been only two Soldiers that have earned the Combat Medical Badge with two stars: Henry Jenkins and Wayne Slagel.[5] The directive was again altered in 1969 to specify that only one award of the Combat Medical Badge is authorized for service in Vietnam, Laos, the Dominican Republic, South Korea (subsequent to 4 January 1969), El Salvador, Grenada, Panama, Southwest Asia, Somalia, Iraq, and Afghanistan regardless of whether an individual has served in one or more of these areas.
In 1947, a policy was implemented that authorized the retroactive award of the Bronze Star to soldiers who had received the Combat Medical badge during the Second World War. The basis for doing this was that the Combat Medical Badge was awarded only to soldiers who had borne combat duties befitting the Bronze Star Medal and also that both awards required a recommendation by the commander and a citation in orders.
U.S. Army Combat Medical Badge, 2nd award
Second Award
U.S. Army Combat Medical Badge, 3rd Award
Third Award
The CMB is authorized for award for the following qualifying periods
This page is a recognition and identification guide for WWII US medals and awards. Multiple
detailed photos of a specific sample are provided. Descriptions point out clearly defined
points that should be noted.
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A price guide is included here to address this question. The value of the medals
is reviewed over a period of several years. A trend can be observed. The present worth
of US militaria in the collector's market is illustrated.
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This US medal or insignia is currently being
reproduced.
It is becoming more difficult to be able to tell the fake ones from the real ones because
the quality of the reproductions is improving. The collector must become familiarized with
the construction style and materials employed in the manufacturing of this medal/insignia.
Attention to the details is critical in order to be able to determine the authenticity of
the collectible.
If you have an interest is seeing other WWII medals or insignia, you can do so by
going to our
WWII US medals and insignia
identification guide. Where we cover Army, Navy, Army Air Force and other organizations.
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