• Thanks for stopping by. Logging in to a registered account will remove all generic ads. Please reach out with any questions or concerns.

GG to Unveil CAN VC This Week

And here we be - with a pretty slick booklet (.pdf) on how the things are made - highlights mine....

Governor General and Prime Minister unveil Canada’s Victoria Cross
PM hails nation’s highest military decoration as now ‘truly Canadian’

16 May 2008


Prime Minister Stephen Harper and Governor General Michaëlle Jean today unveiled Canada’s newly minted Victoria Cross medal at a formal ceremony at Rideau Hall.

Until now the Victoria Cross, Canada’s highest military decoration, was minted in Britain. All future medals awarded to Canadians will be minted in Canada. Though the design is faithful to the original design commissioned by Queen Victoria in 1856, Canada’s Victoria Cross includes a number of small but significant Canadian design and content features. “Today the Victoria Cross becomes fully, truly Canadian,” Prime Minister Harper said.

The original inscription, “For Valour,” has been changed to the Latin “Pro Valore,” on Canada’s Victoria Cross. “We are using the ancient language employed by our English and French ancestors to express the universal ideal that they shared,” said the Prime Minister. Other uniquely Canadian elements include metal from the 1867 Confederation medal, as well as metals from each of Canada’s regions.

Ninety-four Canadians have won the Victoria Cross for displaying extraordinary courage, endurance and sacrifice in battle. The last living recipient, Second World War veteran Smoky Smith, died just over a year ago.

Every day, in military missions at home and abroad, Canadian soldiers, sailors and airmen are putting their lives on the line for us”, said Prime Minister Harper.  “Someday, somewhere, one of those men or women will do something so brave, so gallant, so exceptional, that he or she will join the legendary cadre of the Canadian Forces who wear the pride of a nation on their chests”.

Canada’s Victoria Cross was produced through a collaboration of the Departments of National Defence, Veterans Affairs, and Natural Resources, the Royal Canadian Mint and Rideau Hall. 

 
and also this



Canada unveils a new, top medal for battlefield bravery
THE CANADIAN PRESS at 11:18 on May 16, 2008, EDT.
Article Link

Canada's Governor General Michaelle Jean gestures, May 9, 2008. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS/Bob Edme"
OTTAWA - Gov.-Gen. Michaelle Jean has formally unveiled the new, Canadian Victoria Cross, or VC - the highest possible award for battlefield bravery.

The modest bronze alloy cross and its crimson ribbon is almost identical to the original Victoria Cross, instituted by Queen Victoria in 1856 and awarded to Canadians for almost a century. The new cross has a slightly modified design, adding fleurs de lis and changing the original English inscription, For Valour, to a Latin motto, Pro Valore.

It can only be awarded for the most conspicuous bravery, or a pre-eminent act of valour or self-sacrifice in the presence of an enemy.

Of the 1,353 crosses (and three repeat winners) awarded since 1856, 81 went to members of the Canadian military.

The last Canadian to win the VC was Hampton Gray, a Canadian navy pilot who was honoured posthumously after sinking a Japanese destroyer in the dying days of the Second World War.

The last surviving Canadian holder of the VC, Ernest (Smokey) Smith, died in 2005.
End of article
 
Quick question, does Canada have its own version of the George Cross? Can that still be awarded within Canada?
 
ClaytonD said:
Quick question, does Canada have its own version of the George Cross? Can that still be awarded within Canada?

The Cross of Valour is probably the most adequate equivalent : http://www.vac-acc.gc.ca/remembers/sub.cfm?source=collections/cmdp/mainmenu/group02/cv
 
40below said:
I don't see any problem using Latin on a military decoration. Not only does it sidestep the problem of having to forge a bilingual medal (anyone care to speculate on how the French press would react to a Quebec soldier being awarded an English-only medal?) but Latin is already widely used in unit mottos, far more prevalent than either English or French.

But not as important as Gaelic, the true language of the Canadian warrior class  ;D
 
“We are using the ancient language [Latin] employed by our English and French ancestors to express the universal ideal that they shared,”
So it's not a language-police issue, but rather to honour the universal ideal that Christians should be thrown to lions. Sweet. ;D
 
Just out of curiosity...what is the Gaelic for "Pro Valore"/ "For Valor" ??

Cheers
Gene
 
Back
Top