Valour Reconsidered:
Inquiries into the Victoria Cross and Other Awards for
Bravery
Hugh A. Halliday
The Victoria Cross is the most famous decoration for
bravery in the world, its prestige rivalled only by the
Medal of Honor. Other awards recognize courage in dangerous
(but not combat) circumstances, among them the George Cross
and Canada’s Cross of Valour. But how is bravery measured?
Is valour “in the presence of an enemy” more deserving than
valour away from combat? Do all brave persons receive the
honours they deserve? Where does “duty” end and “above the
call of duty” begin? Has courage sometimes been confused
with recklessness?
Valour Reconsidered examines recommendations for
VCs and similar awards, asking why some were approved and
some not. It explores factors such as service politics,
evolving perceptions “extreme danger” and the role of
personalities who sponsored or opposed recommendations.
The author questions campaigns to award posthumous honours
years after the event in attempts to rewrite history. Such
lobbying in the United States resulted in bestowal of the
Medal of Honor on Theodore Roosevelt 82 years after his
death. Similar actions are proposed in the case of VCs for
Australian, British and New Zealand heroes decades after
the First and Second World Wars, purportedly to “re-right”
historic injustices. Halliday revisits the controversy of
Billy Bishop’s VC (1917) and sheds new light on VCs awarded
after the 1942 Dieppe Raid. He includes a provocative
chapter on Canadian honours and awards, suggesting that
current Canadian definitions of valour and service are more
generous than those prevailing in other countries.
Hugh A.
Halliday, who retired
from the Canadian War Museum in 1995, is widely respected
as an authority on awards and decorations. He is the author
or compiler of several books on RCAF history and airmen,
including Not in
the Face of the Enemy: Canadians Awarded the Air Force
Cross and Air Force Medal, 1918-1966,
as well as
Wreck! Canada’s Worst
Railway Accidents and Murder Among Gentlemen,
all published by Robin Brass
Studio.