Texas Legislative Medal of Honor
The Texas Legislative Medal of Honor, commonly referred to as the Texas Medal of Honor, is the highest military decoration that can be conferred to a service member of the Texas Military Forces.[1] It can also be conferred to service members of the United States Armed Forces.[2] Subsequent decorations are conferred by a gold twig of four oak leaves with three acorns on the stem device.[2] A lapel button is also conferred with this decoration.[2]
Texas Legislative Medal of Honor | |
---|---|
Awarded by Texas Legislature and Texas Military Department | |
Type | Military decoration |
Eligibility | Texas Military Forces and United States Armed Forces |
Awarded for | Gallantry |
Status | Currently issued |
Description | The neck ribbon is green with white stars, and the medal features an image of the reverse of the Seal of Texas, including Vince's Bridge, cannon of the Battle of Gonzales, Alamo Mission in San Antonio and the six historical flags of Texas. |
Statistics | |
Established | May 3, 1963 |
First awarded | 1997 |
Last awarded | 2018 |
Total awarded | 13 |
Precedence | |
Next (higher) | None (highest) |
Next (lower) | Lone Star Medal of Valor |
Texas Legislative Medal of Honor medal ribbon |
Eligibility
The Texas Legislative Medal of Honor shall be conferred to a member of the Texas Military Forces or United States Armed Forces (effective June 20, 2003) designated by concurrent resolution of the legislature who voluntarily performs a deed of personal bravery or self-sacrifice involving risk of life that is so conspicuous as to clearly distinguish the person for gallantry and intrepidity above the person's comrades. Decoration shall be considered on the standard of extraordinary merit. Decoration is only conferred on incontestable proof of performance of the deed.[2]
Initially, the law permitted one person to be selected from various nominees for the decoration by a 5-member nominating committee (effective June 20, 2003) every two years since 1997. The nominating committee consist of the Lieutenant Governor, the Speaker of the House, the Adjutant General of the Texas Military Forces and the heads of the defense and veterans affairs committee in both chambers of the legislature or their designated representative. The person selected must then be approved by the governor to receive the decoration:
(d) The legislature by concurrent resolution may direct the governor to confer the Texas Legislative Medal of Honor to a person nominated by the nominating committee. The committee chairs serving on the nominating committee shall jointly prepare a concurrent resolution directing the governor to confer the medal to a person nominated. The legislature may direct the medal to be conferred only during a
In 2013, HB 1589 was signed into law by Governor Rick Perry amending the statute for the bestowal of two Texas Legislative Medals of Honor each legislative session, one for service pre-1956 and one for service post-1957.[3]
Authority
The Texas Legislative Medal of Honor was authorized by the Fifty-eighth Texas Legislature in Senate Bill Number 279 and approved by the Governor John Connally on 3 May 1963, effective 23 August 1963.[2]
Description
Medal
The medal pendant is gold-finished bronze, 1-1/4 of an inch in diameter. In the center of the pendant is a silver shield with the Alamo in the upper half. The lower half of the shield is divided into two parts, with the cannon of the first battle of the Texas Revolution at Gonzales in the wearer's right portion and the Battle of San Jacinto Vince's Bridge in the wearer's left portion. An enameled wreath of live oak circles the shield on the wearer's right and olive on the wearer's left. Circling the shield, wearer's right to left, are the unfurled flags of Mexico, Spain, France, the Republic of Texas, the Confederate States of America, and the United States, enameled in the respective colors of the flags. Above the shield and between the French and Texas flag is a raised lone star within a circle. Below the shield is a scroll with the inscription "TEXAS MEDAL OF HONOR." The reverse side of the pendant is blank. The pendant is suspended by a metal loop attached to a green moiré silk neckband, 1-3/8 of an inch wide and 24 inches long, behind a hexagonal pad in the center made of matching ribbon. On the hexagonal pad, integral to the ribbon, are six white five-pointed stars in the form of two equilateral triangles, points up, one above the other. The green ribbon color is the same as the green color used in the United States Army's Mexican Border Service Medal.[2]
Device
A gold twig of four oak leaves with three acorns on the stem is conferred for second and succeeding decorations. Oak leaf clusters will be worn centered on the pad of the neckband and centered on the service ribbon, with the stem of the leaves pointing to the wearer's right. A maximum of three clusters will be worn.[2]
Lapel button
A lapel button, in the form of an enameled replica of the service ribbon, 1/8 of an inch in height and 21/32 of an inch in width is conferred with this decoration. The Texas Medal of Honor and Texas Medal of Valor are the only decorations with lapel buttons.[2]
Recipients
Date
conferred |
Service Member | Abbreviated Citation | Texas Military Unit | Command | Conflict/Event | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1997 | James Logan | First Texas Medal of Honor recipient; undertook heroic acts to halt a German counterattack | 141st Infantry Regiment | DOD | Operation Avalanche | [4] |
1999 | Jack Knight | Single-handedly destroyed two Imperial Japanese pillboxes; was killed by grenade while attacking a third pillbox | 124th Cavalry Regiment | DOD | Burma Road assault | [5] |
2001 | Roy Benavidez | Voluntarily entered a combat zone; saved the lives of at least eight men; shot 7 times, stabbed twice, 28 fragmentation wounds | Texas native; not in Texas Military unit at time of citation. | DOD | Cambodia rescue mission | [6] |
2003 | Mode Etheredge | Took command after CO was killed; while wounded led unit over 700 yards under fire; achieved unit objective | Texas native; not in Texas Military unit at time of citation. | DOD | Battle of Anzio | [7] |
2005 | Robert Edlin | Led 4 Rangers through a minefield, captured 4 Krupp K5 guns and 800 German soldiers | Texas citizen; not in Texas Military unit at time of citation. | DOD | Battle for Brest | [8] |
2007 | Alfredo Gonzalez | Saved 1 Marine; while wounded, single-handedly destroyed Viet Cong position; was killed attacking additional positions | Texas native; not in Texas Military unit at time of citation. | DOD | Battle of Huế | [9] |
2009 | Pedro Cano | Single-handedly destroyed nine Nazi machine-gun positions | Texas citizen; not in Texas Military unit at time of citation. | DOD | Battle of Hürtgen Forest | [10] |
2011 | Roy Cisneros | Single-handedly charged a fortified enemy position; killed during assault | Texas native; not in Texas Military unit at time of citation. | DOD | Quảng Trị Province patrol | [11] |
2013 | Darryn Andrews | Killed saving 3 soldiers during IED and RPG attack | Texas citizen; not in Texas Military unit at time of citation. | DOD | Paktika Province patrol | [12] |
2013 | Audie Murphy | Single-handedly halted a tank attack; killed or wounded fifty German soldiers; launched a counterattack while wounded | Texas native; not in Texas Military unit at time of citation. | DOD | Colmar Pocket | [13] |
2015 | Chris Kyle | Served four tours of duty; survived six IEDs and two gunshot wounds; single-handedly killed at least 150 enemy combatants | Texas native; not in Texas Military unit at time of citation. | DOD | Operation Iraqi Freedom | [14] |
2015 | William Dyess | Survived the Bataan Death March; organized the only large-scale escape of prisoners of war in the Pacific Theater | Texas native; not in Texas Military unit at time of citation. | DOD | Battle of Bataan | [15] |
2018 | Travis Watkins | Saved 30 soldiers; fought to the death while paralyzed from the waist down | Texas citizen; not in Texas Military unit at time of citation. | DOD | Battle of Yongsan | [16] |
See also
References
- "State Awards". TMD.
- "Joint Force Texas Regulation (1-07)" (PDF). Texas Military Department. August 1, 2009.
- "Texas Legislature Online - 83(R) Actions for HB 1589". Capitol.state.tx.us. Retrieved 2013-08-21.
- "James Logan". Texas State Preservation Board.
- "Jack Llewellyn Knight". Texas State Preservation Board.
- "Roy P. Benavidez". Texas State Preservation Board.
- "M.B. Etheredge". Texas State Preservation Board.
- "Robert Thomas Edlin". Texas State Preservation Board.
- "Alfredo (Freddy) Gonzalez". Texas State Preservation Board.
- "Pedro Cano". Texas State Preservation Board.
- "Roy Cisneros". Texas State Preservation Board.
- "Darryn Andrews". Texas Military Department.
- "Audie Murphy". Texas State Preservation Board.
- "Chris Kyle". Texas State Preservation Board.
- "William Edwin Dyess". Texas State Preservation Board.
- "Travis Watkins". Texas State Preservation Board.