Texas State Guard Commanding General's Individual Award

The Texas State Guard Commanding General's Individual Award is the tenth highest military decoration that can be conferred to a service member of the Texas Military Forces.[1] Subsequent decorations are conferred by a bronze or silver twig of four oak leaves with three acorns on the stem device.[2]

Texas State Guard Commanding General's Individual Award
Awarded by Texas Military Department
TypeMilitary decoration
EligibilityTexas Military Forces
Awarded forExceptional service or achievement
StatusCurrently issued
DescriptionService ribbon orange with green stripes
Statistics
EstablishedUnknown
Precedence
Next (higher)Texas Meritorious Service Ribbon
Next (lower)Texas Recruiting Ribbon

Decoration device

Eligibility

The Commanding General's Individual Award may be conferred to any service member of the Texas State Guard by the Commanding General at any Texas State Guard function or activity for exceptional performance, but of a lesser degree than required for award of a higher decoration. The decoration may be conferred by the Commanding General impromptu or through recommendation by unit commanders.[2]

Authority

Unknown

Description

Ribbon

The Texas State Guard Commanding General's Individual Award is a service ribbon consisting of 2 alternating colors of green and orange in varying width stripes.

Device

A bronze twig of four oak leaves with three acorns on the stem device, ΒΌ of an inch in length, is conferred for second and succeeding decorations. A silver leaf is worn in lieu of five bronze leaves. Silver leaves are worn to the wearer's right of a bronze leaf.[2]

Devices

Notable recipients

Date Service Member Citation References
gollark: Except it isn't really.
gollark: I mean, outside of toy models or whatever.
gollark: Maybe you could make a good scifi thing a hundred years in the future or something about faster computers/better optimization algorithms/distributed system designs/something making central planning more tractable. Although in the future supply chains will probably be even more complex. But right now, it is NOT practical.
gollark: In any case, if you have a planned system and some new need comes up... what do you do, spend weeks updating the models and rerunning them? That is not really quick enough.
gollark: If you want to factor in each individual location's needs in some giant model, you'll run into issues like:- people lying- it would be horrifically complex

See also

References

  1. "State Awards". TMD.
  2. "Joint Force Texas Regulation (1-07)" (PDF). Texas Military Department. August 1, 2009.
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