Meritorious Service Medal (Cape of Good Hope)

In May 1895, Queen Victoria authorised Colonial governments to adopt various British military medals and to award them to members of their local permanent military forces. The Cape of Good Hope introduced this system in September 1895 and, in 1896, instituted the Meritorious Service Medal (Cape of Good Hope).

Meritorious Service Medal (Cape of Good Hope)
TypeMilitary long service medal
Awarded for21 years meritorious service
Country Cape of Good Hope
Presented bythe Monarch of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, and Empress of India
EligibilityWarrant officers and senior non-commissioned officers
StatusDiscontinued in 1913
Established1896
Ribbon Bar
Order of wear
Next (higher) Queen Elizabeth II’s Long and Faithful Service Medal
Equivalent Meritorious Service Medal (United Kingdom)
Meritorious Service Medal (Natal)
Meritorious Service Medal (New Zealand)
Meritorious Service Medal (South Africa)
Next (lower) Accumulated Campaign Service Medal

The medal is a distinctive Colonial version of the British Meritorious Service Medal. It was coupled to a Meritorious Service Annuity and was awarded in limited numbers, usually upon retirement, to selected warrant officers and senior non-commissioned officers of the Permanent Force of the Cape of Good Hope who had completed twenty-one years of meritorious service.

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