Texas Adjutant General's Individual Award

The Adjutant General's Individual Award is the eighth highest military decoration that can be conferred to a service member of the Texas Military Forces.[1] Subsequent decorations are conferred by a white enameled five-pointed star trimmed in gold device.[2]

Texas Adjutant General's Individual Award
Awarded by Texas Military Department
TypeMilitary decoration
EligibilityTexas Military Forces
Awarded forExceptional service or achievement
StatusCurrently issued
DescriptionThe ribbon is green with a white star
Statistics
EstablishedNovember 1, 1968
Precedence
Next (higher)Texas Medal of Merit
Next (lower)Texas Meritorious Service Ribbon

Decoration device

Eligibility

The Adjutant General’s Individual Award is conferred to any service member of the Texas Military Forces who, while serving in any capacity with the Texas Military Forces, shall have distinguished themselves by meritorious achievement or outstanding service, when such action or duty is extremely noteworthy but of a lesser degree than required for award of a higher decoration.[2]

Authority

The Adjutant General’s Individual Award was approved by the Adjutant General Major General Thomas S. Bishop on 1 November 1968.[2]

Description

Ribbon

The award is a green moiré silk ribbon, 1-3/8 of an inch wide and 3/8 of an inch high, behind a large white enameled five-pointed star, trimmed in gold, 3/8 of an inch in circumscribing diameter and mounted in the center of the ribbon, one point up. The green color is the same as the green color used in the ribbon of the United States Armed Forces Mexican Border Service Medal.[2]

Device

A white enameled five-pointed star, trimmed in gold, 3/8th of an inch in circumscribing diameter, is conferred for second and successive awards. "Stars will be worn centered on the ribbon, with one point up, in conjunction with the star that is part of the original decoration. A maximum of four stars, to include the star that is part of the original decoration, will be worn".[2]

Notable recipients

Date Service Member Citation Reference
gollark: Lightweight Messaging System.
gollark: This sounds literally as secure as LMS.
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gollark: Sounds spoofable.
gollark: So any system using them is susceptible to spoofing.

See also

References

  1. "State Awards". TMD.
  2. "Joint Force Texas Regulation (1-07)" (PDF). Texas Military Department.
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