Army Cross | |
Presenter: | the State President and, from 1994, the President |
Country: | South Africa |
Type: | Military decoration for bravery |
Eligibility: | South African Army members |
Awarded For: | Exceptional courage, leadership, or skill in dangerous or critical situations |
Status: | Discontinued in 2003 |
Post-Nominals: | CM |
Established: | 1987 |
Firstawarded: | 1992 |
Precedence Label: | SADF pre-1994 & SANDF post-2002 orders of wear |
Higher: | |
Lower: |
The Army Cross, post-nominal letters CM (Crux Militaria), is a military decoration which was instituted by the Republic of South Africa in 1987. It was awarded to members of the South African Army for bravery. The Army Cross was discontinued in 2003, but backdated awards can still be made for acts of bravery during this period.[1]
The Union Defence Forces (UDF) were established in 1912 and renamed the South African Defence Force (SADF) in 1958. On 27 April 1994 it was integrated with six other independent forces into the South African National Defence Force (SANDF).[2] [3] [4] [5] [6]
The Army Cross, post-nominal letters CM (Crux Militaria), was instituted by the State President in 1987.[7]
The cross was initially awarded for exceptional ingenuity, resourcefulness and skill, and extraordinary leadership, dedication, sense of duty and personal example and courage in mortal danger in non-combatant situations. After 1993, it was awarded for exceptional courage, leadership, skill, ingenuity or tenacity in dangerous or critical situations. A Bar, instituted in 1993, could be awarded in recognition of further similar displays of courage, leadership, skill, ingenuity or tenacity in danger.[3]
It was first awarded in 1992, to Corporal D.H. Maritz and Private H.B. Smit, who recovered a disabled tank during a battle in Angola.[3]
The position of the Army Cross in the official order of precedence was revised three times, to accommodate the institution or addition of new decorations and medals, first upon the integration into the South African National Defence Force on 27 April 1994, again when decorations and medals were belatedly instituted in April 1996 for the two former non-statutory forces, the Azanian People's Liberation Army and Umkhonto we Sizwe, and again when a new series of military decorations and medals was instituted in South Africa on 27 April 2003, but it remained unchanged on all three occasions.[8] [9]
Conferment of the decoration was discontinued in respect of services performed on or after 27 April 2003.[6]
Since inclusion in the table itself is impractical, the actions cited for follow below the table. The list of recipients is not complete.
CM no. | Name | Rank | Unit | Date of action | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Maritz, D.H. | data-sort-value="16" | Cpl | ||||
Smit, H.B. | data-sort-value="18" | Pte | ||||
Berkenshaw, Clive | data-sort-value="13" | WO | Cape Town Highlanders | 1990 | ||
20 | de Cruz, Charles | data-sort-value="13" | WO | Cape Town Highlanders | 1990 | |
Blake, Sean | data-sort-value="18" | Gnr | Cape Town Highlanders | 1990 | ||
Carstensen, Riaan | data-sort-value="18" | Gnr | Cape Town Highlanders | 1990 | ||
Evert, Pieter | data-sort-value="18" | Gnr | Cape Town Highlanders | 1990 | ||
Fourie, Theunis | data-sort-value="9" | Lt | Stellenbosch University Military Unit | |||
van Noordwyk, W. [11] | data-sort-value="6" | Lt Col | 2003 |