Dickin Medal
The PDSA Dickin Medal was instituted in 1943 in the United Kingdom by Maria Dickin to honour the work of animals in World War II. It is a bronze medallion, bearing the words "For Gallantry" and "We Also Serve" within a laurel wreath, carried on a ribbon of striped green, dark brown, and pale blue. It is awarded to animals that have displayed "conspicuous gallantry or devotion to duty while serving or associated with any branch of the Armed Forces or Civil Defence Units". The award is commonly referred to as "the animals' Victoria Cross".
Maria Dickin was the founder of the People's Dispensary for Sick Animals, a British veterinary charity. She established the award for any animal displaying conspicuous gallantry and devotion to duty whilst serving with British Empire armed forces or civil emergency services. The medal was awarded 54 times between 1943 and 1949 – to 32 pigeons, 18 dogs, 3 horses, and a ship's cat – to acknowledge actions of gallantry or devotion during the Second World War and subsequent conflicts.
The awarding of the medal was revived in 2000. In December 2007, 12 former recipients buried at the PDSA Animal Cemetery in Ilford, Essex, were afforded full military honours at the conclusion of a National Lottery-aided project to restore the cemetery.
Recipients
The first recipients of the award, in December 1943, were three pigeons serving with the Royal Air Force who contributed to the recovery of aircrews from ditched aircraft. The most recent recipient is Kuga, a Belgian Malinois who served with the Australian Special Air Service Regiment in Afghanistan in 2012., the Dickin Medal has been awarded 71 times, plus one honorary award made in 2014 to all the animals that served in the First World War.
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.|alt=A pigeon, at rest, facing to the right. It has dark feathers on its head and neck, with two dark stripes two-thirds of the way down its pale wings.
Recipient | Animal | Date of award | Notes | Ref |
White Vision | Pigeon | 2 12 1943 | Delivered a message that led to the rescue of a ditched aircrew in October 1943. She flew 9 hours in bad visibility and heavy weather with strong headwinds. | |
Winkie | Pigeon | 2 12 1943 | Delivered a message that contributed to the rescue of a ditched aircrew in February 1942 | |
Tyke | Pigeon | 2 12 1943 | Delivered a message that contributed to the rescue of a ditched aircrew in June 1943 | |
Bob | 24 03 1944 | A mongrel, worked on patrol at Green Hill, North Africa; served with the 6th Battalion Queen's Own Royal West Kent Regiment | ||
Beach Comber | Pigeon | 1 09 1944 | Brought the first news of the landings at Dieppe in 1942; served with the Canadian Army | |
Gustav | Pigeon | 1 09 1944 | Brought the first message from the Normandy beaches on 6 June 1944 | |
Paddy | Pigeon | 1 09 1944 | Held best recorded time with a message from the Normandy Operations in June 1944 | |
Rip | A mongrel, located many victims of the air-raids of The Blitz | |||
Jet | 12 01 1945 | An Alsatian,#endnote B| assisted in the rescue of persons trapped under blitzed buildings; served with the Civil Defence Service | ||
Irma | 12 01 1945 | An Alsatian,#endnote B| assisted in the rescue of persons trapped under blitzed buildings; served with the Civil Defence Service | ||
Beauty | 12 01 1945 | A Wirehaired Terrier, assisted in the location of buried air-raid victims; served with a PDSA Rescue Squad | ||
Rob | 22 01 1945 | A Collie, made over 20 parachute descents during the North African Campaign; served with the Special Air Service #endnote A| | ||
Kenley Lass | Pigeon | First pigeon to deliver intelligence from an agent in enemy-occupied France in October 1940; served with the National Pigeon Service. She was parachuted with the agent and released 12 days later to fly 300 miles back to home in less than 7 hours. | ||
Navy Blue | Pigeon | Although injured, delivered a message from a raiding party in France, June 1944 | ||
Flying Dutchman | Pigeon | Delivered three messages from agents in the Netherlands; missing in action on the fourth mission in 1944 | ||
Dutch Coast | Pigeon | Delivered an SOS message from a ditched aircrew 288 miles in 7.5 hours in April 1942 | ||
Commando | Pigeon | Delivered three messages from agents in occupied France; served with the National Pigeon Service | ||
Royal Blue | Pigeon | First pigeon of the war to deliver a message from a forced landed aircraft on the Continent in October 1940 | ||
Thorn | 02 03 1945 | An Alsatian,#endnote B| located air-raid casualties in a burning building; served with the Civil Defence Service | ||
Rifleman Khan | 27 03 1945 | An Alsatian,#endnote B| rescued a soldier from drowning while under heavy shell fire during the assault of Walcheren in November 1944; served with the 6th Battalion Cameronians | ||
Rex | An Alsatian,#endnote B| located casualties in burning buildings; served with the Civil Defence Service | |||
Ruhr Express | Pigeon | Carried an important message from the Ruhr Pocket in April 1945 | ||
William of Orange | Pigeon | Held the record time for delivering a message from the Arnhem Airborne Operation; served with the National Pigeon Service | ||
Scotch Lass | Pigeon | Brought 38 microphotographs across the North Sea from the Netherlands, despite injury, in September 1944 | ||
Sheila | 02 07 1945 | A Collie, assisted in the rescue of four American airmen lost on the Cheviot Hills in a blizzard after a crash in December 1944 | ||
Billy | Pigeon | Delivered a message from a bomber which had been force-landed in 1942 | ||
Broad Arrow | Pigeon | Brought three important messages from the Continent in 1943; served with the National Pigeon Service | ||
NPS.42.NS.2780 | Pigeon | Brought three important messages from the Continent in 1942 and 1943; served with the National Pigeon Service | ||
NPS.42.NS.7524 | Pigeon | Brought three important messages from the Continent in 1942 and 1943; served with the National Pigeon Service | ||
Maquis | Pigeon | Brought three important messages from the Continent from 1943 and 1944; served with the National Pigeon Service | ||
Mary of Exeter | Pigeon | Showed outstanding endurance on war service despite injury | ||
Peter | A Collie, located people trapped under blitzed buildings; served with the Civil Defence Service | |||
Tommy | Pigeon | Delivered a message from the Netherlands to Lancashire in July 1942; served with the National Pigeon Service | ||
All Alone | Pigeon | Delivered an important message following a flight of over 400 miles in one day in August 1943; served with the National Pigeon Service | ||
Judy | A pedigree Pointer, helped keep morale high among fellow prisoners in a Japanese prisoner-of-war camp | |||
Princess | Pigeon | Completed a special mission to Crete, a journey of more than 500 miles over sea, with valuable information | ||
Mercury | Pigeon | Carried out a special task involving a 480-mile flight from Northern Denmark in 1942; served with the National Pigeon Service | ||
NURP.38.BPC.6 | Pigeon | Made three flights in 1941; served with the National Pigeon Service | ||
G.I. Joe | Pigeon | Flew 20 miles in as many minutes, delivering a message which is credited with saving over 100 lives; served with the United States Army Pigeon Service | ||
Punch and Judy | Boxers, saved two British officers in Palestine by attacking a nationalist | |||
Cologne | Pigeon | Homed from a crashed aircraft over Cologne despite injury in 1943 | ||
Duke of Normandy | Pigeon | 08 01 1947 | First bird to arrive with message from Paratroops of 21st Army Group on D Day ; served with the National Pigeon Service | |
NURP.43.CC.1418 | Pigeon | 08 01 1947 | Fastest flight carrying a message from the 6th Airborne Division from Normandy, 7 June 1944; served with the National Pigeon Service | |
DD.43.T.139 | Pigeon | Brought message of foundered ship in the Huon Gulf in time to salvage it and its cargo; served with the Royal Australian Corps of Signals | ||
DD.43.Q.879 | Pigeon | Only survivor of three pigeons released to warn of an impending counter-attack at Manus Island. Reached headquarters in time to extract a US Marine Corps patrol; served with the Royal Australian Corps of Signals | ||
Ricky | 29 03 1947 | A Welsh Collie, located mines along a canal bank at Nederweert in the Netherlands, despite being injured by one | ||
Bing | 29 03 1947 | An Alsatian,#endnote B| parachuted into Normandy with 13th Battalion, 6th Airborne Division. | ||
Olga | Horse | 11 04 1947 | Controlled traffic and assisted rescue operations following a flying bomb explosion in Tooting; served with the police | |
Upstart | Horse | 11 04 1947 | Controlled traffic following a flying bomb exploding in Bethnal Green; served with the police | |
Regal | Horse | 11 04 1947 | Remained calm despite being subject to stable fires in Muswell Hill caused by explosive incendiaries on two separate occasions | |
Simon | Cat | HMS Amethysts ship's cat, awarded for "gallantry under fire" and for the disposal of many rats despite shrapnel injuries during the Yangtze Incident in 1949 | ||
Antis | 28 01 1949 | An Alsatian,#endnote B| served with Václav Robert Bozděch, a Czech airman, in the French Air Force and in the No. 311 Squadron RAF in Britain, and helped his master escape after the death of Jan Masaryk | ||
Tich | 01 07 1949 | A mongrel, awarded for courage and devotion between 1941–45; served with the 1st Battalion King's Royal Rifle Corps | ||
Gander | 27 10 2000 | A Newfoundland, saved Canadian infantrymen on at least three separate occasions during the Battle of Lye Mun on Hong Kong Island in December 1941; killed in action gathering a grenade | ||
Appollo | 05 03 2002 | A German Shepherd, received the award on behalf of all search-and-rescue dogs who assisted in the aftermath of the September 11 attacks in 2001 | ||
Salty and Roselle | 05 03 2002 | Labrador guide dogs, led their blind owners down more than 70 flights of stairs to escape from the damaged World Trade Center in September 2001 | ||
Sam | 14 01 2003 | A German Shepherd, brought down an armed man and held back rioters while serving in Bosnia and Herzegovina in April 1998; served with The Royal Canadian Regiment on assignment from the Royal Army Veterinary Corps | ||
Buster | 9 12 2003 | A Springer Spaniel, located a weapons arsenal in Safwan, Southern Iraq in March 2003; served with the Duke of Wellington's Regiment | ||
Lucky | 6 02 2007 | A German Shepherd, the only member of a four-dog team to survive tracking nationalists in Malaya from 1949 to 1952; served with the Royal Air Force Police | ||
Sadie | 6 02 2007 | A Labrador, detected explosive devices, which were subsequently disarmed, while serving in Kabul, Afghanistan, in November 2005; served with the Royal Gloucestershire, Berkshire and Wiltshire Regiment | ||
Treo | 24 02 2010 | A Labrador-Spaniel crossbreed, located improvised explosive devices while serving in Helmand Province, Afghanistan in August and September 2008; served with Royal Army Veterinary Corps | ||
Theo | 25 10 2012 | A Springer Spaniel, who located improvised explosive devices while serving in Afghanistan, holds the record for most operational finds by an arms and explosives search dog with 14. Died from an apparent seizure after his handler was killed by enemy fire earlier that day. | ||
Sasha | 29 04 2014 | A Labrador who located 15 improvised explosive devices, mortars, mines, and weapons while serving in Afghanistan, with the Royal Army Veterinary Corps. In July 2008 Sasha and her handler were killed in a Taliban ambush by a rocket-propelled grenade. | ||
Warrior | Horse | 2 09 2014 | Honorary award to a First World War warhorse to commemorate the contributions of all animals during the conflict. | |
Diesel | 28 12 2015 | A Belgian Malinois RAID assault dog employed by the French police who was killed by suspected terrorists in the 2015 Saint-Denis raid on 18 November 2015 in Paris. | ||
Lucca | 5 04 2016 | A German Shepherd who worked with the United States Marine Corps for six years before losing a leg in an IED explosion. | ||
Reckless | Horse | 28 07 2016 | A Mongolian mare who worked with the United States Marine Corps in the Korean War. On one day she made 51 solo trips to resupply multiple front line units. | |
Mali | 17 11 2017 | A Belgian Malinois that worked with the Special Boat Service in Afghanistan in 2012. During an 8-hour assault against a Taliban position, the dog indicated the locations of enemy combatants, despite being injured three times by grenade explosions. | ||
Chips | 15 01 2018 | A Husky crossbreed, for bravery and devotion to duty during the US Army's invasion of Sicily on 10 July 1943. | ||
Kuga | 26 10 2018 | A Belgian Malinois, for actions during an Australian Special Operations Task Group patrol in Uruzgan province, Afghanistan. Kuga, who was shot five times during the action, served with the Special Air Service Regiment from 2008 until his death from wounds in 2012. |
- A ^ Rob was awarded the Dickin Medal in 1945 for taking part in more than 20 parachute drops and for his involvement in operations behind enemy lines in Italy and North Africa during the Second World War. There is evidence that his record is a hoax concocted by the training officer at 2nd SAS at the time so that the dog would remain with the regiment.
- B ^ The German Shepherd Dog breed was renamed in the UK by The Kennel Club in 1919 to Alsatian Wolf Dog. During the 1920s, the Wolf Dog part of the name fell out of use and dogs of this breed were simply known as Alsatians. The name had been reverted in most countries by 1977 to German Shepherd Dog.