Queen Elizabeth II Coronation Medal

The Queen Elizabeth II Coronation Medal (French: Médaille du couronnement de la Reine Élizabeth II[1]) is a commemorative medal instituted to celebrate the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II on 2 June 1953.

Queen Elizabeth II Coronation Medal
Obverse and reverse of medal
TypeCommemorative medal
Awarded forCommunity contribution
Presented byThe monarch of Australia, Canada, Ceylon, New Zealand, Pakistan, South Africa, and the United Kingdom
EligibilityCommonwealth citizens
Established2 June 1953
Total129,051
Ribbon bar
RelatedSilver Jubilee Medal,
Golden Jubilee Medal,
Diamond Jubilee Medal,
Platinum Jubilee Medal

Award

This medal was awarded as a personal souvenir from the Queen to members of the Royal Family and selected officers of state, members of the Royal Household, government officials, mayors, public servants, local government officials, members of the navy, army, air force and police in Britain, her colonies and Dominions. It was also awarded to members of the Mount Everest expedition, two of whom reached the summit four days before the coronation.[2] It was struck at the Royal Mint and issued immediately after the coronation.[3]

For Coronation and Jubilee medals, the practice up until 1977 was that the authorities in the United Kingdom decided on a total number to be produced, then allocated a proportion to each of the Commonwealth countries and Crown dependencies and other possessions of the Crown. The award of the medals was then at the discretion of the government of each territory, which was left free to decide who was to be awarded a medal and why.[4]

A total of 129,051 medals were awarded,[5] including:

  • 11,561 to Australians.
  • 12,500 to Canadians.[6]

Description

Medal with rim impressed: Mount Everest Expedition

The Queen Elizabeth II Coronation Medal is a silver disk, 1.25 inches in diameter. The obverse features a crowned effigy of Queen Elizabeth II, facing right, in a high-collared ermine cloak and wearing a Tudor Crown along with the collar of the Garter and Badge of the Bath. There is no raised rim and no legend.

The reverse shows the Royal Cypher EIIR surmounted by a large crown. The legend around the edge reads "QUEEN ELIZABETH II CROWNED 2nd JUNE 1953". The medal was designed by Cecil Thomas.[7]

The dark red ribbon is 1.25 inches (32 mm) wide, with 564 inch (2 mm) wide white edges and two narrow dark blue stripes in the centre, each 564 inch (2 mm) wide and 116 inch (1.6 mm) apart.

Ladies who were awarded the Queen Elizabeth II Coronation Medal can wear it on their left shoulder with the ribbon tied in the form of a bow.[3]

The medals were issued unnamed, except for the 37 issued to the British Mount Everest Expedition. These were engraved "MOUNT EVEREST EXPEDITION" on the rim.[2]

Precedence by country

Some orders of precedence are as follows:

CountryPrecedingFollowing
Australia Australia
Order of precedence[8]
King George VI Coronation MedalQueen Elizabeth II Silver Jubilee Medal
New Zealand New Zealand
Order of precedence[9]
King George VI Coronation MedalQueen Elizabeth II Silver Jubilee Medal
Union of South Africa South Africa
Order of precedence[10]
Tshumelo Ikatelaho - General Service MedalIndependence Medal (Transkei)
Dominion of Ceylon Ceylon
Order of precedence
50th Anniversary Medals (Army) (Navy) (Air Force)Ceylon Armed Services Long Service Medal
United Kingdom United Kingdom
Order of precedence[11]
King George VI Coronation MedalQueen Elizabeth II Silver Jubilee Medal

Notable recipients

Australia

Brunei

  • Alam Abdul Rahman

Ceylon

  • Basil Henricus
  • Bertram Heyn

Nepal

New Zealand

The following list includes notable New Zealanders who received the Queen Elizabeth II Coronation Medal,[14][15] and is not an exhaustive list of recipients.

A

B

  • Wiri Baker
  • Doug Ball
  • Harry Barker
  • Bill Barnard
  • Fred Barnard
  • Jim Barnes
  • Miles Barnett
  • Bill Barrett
  • Harold Barrowclough
  • Cyril Bassett
  • Eric Batchelor
  • Ed Bate
  • Ernest Bathurst
  • Ken Baxter
  • Clive Beadon
  • C. E. Beeby
  • Matt Benney
  • Carl Berendsen
  • Fred Betham
  • Thyra Bethell
  • William Blacklock
  • Tom Bloodworth
  • Denis Blundell
  • Roger Blunt
  • Bert Bockett
  • William Bodkin
  • George Bolt
  • Charles Bowden
  • Fred Bowerbank
  • Michael Bowles
  • Warwick Braithwaite
  • Thomas Brash
  • Cyprian Brereton
  • William Bretton
  • Bob Briggs
  • William Bringans
  • Walter Broadfoot
  • Bill Brown
  • Malcolm Burns
  • Jim Burrows
  • Peter Butler

C

  • John Cairney
  • Frank Callaghan
  • Flora Cameron
  • Dick Campbell
  • Alan Candy
  • Edward Caradus
  • David Carnegie
  • Harold Caro
  • Clyde Carr
  • Turi Carroll
  • Ernest Caygill
  • Charles Henry Chapman
  • Johnny Checketts
  • Hector Christie
  • George Clifton
  • George Clinkard
  • Harry Combs
  • Eric Compton
  • Michael Connelly
  • Phil Connolly
  • Philip Cooke
  • Bert Cooksley
  • Ernest Corbett
  • Frank Corner
  • Joe Cotterill
  • Charles Cotton
  • Robert Coupland
  • John Court
  • James Crichton
  • William Cunningham
  • George Currie

D

  • Clifford Dalton
  • Joseph Darnand
  • Arthur Davenport
  • Alfred Davey
  • Eliot Davis
  • Ernest Davis
  • George Davis-Goff
  • Stanley Dean
  • James Deas
  • Helen Deem
  • Reginald Delargey
  • Rangitīaria Dennan
  • Edwin Dixon
  • Frederick Doidge
  • Viva Donaldson
  • Arthur Donnelly
  • Percy Dowse
  • Harry Dudfield
  • Roger Duff
  • Mason Durie

E

  • James Elliott
  • Keith Elliott
  • Ned Ellison
  • Sam Emery
  • Mary Enright
  • Pat Entrican
  • Dean Eyre

F

G

  • Victor Galway
  • Rua Gardner
  • Thomas Garland
  • Archer Garside
  • William Gentry
  • Jack George
  • Geoff Gerard
  • Theodore Nisbet Gibbs
  • Esmond Gibson
  • Bill Gilbert
  • Frank Gill
  • William Gillespie
  • Alexander Gillies
  • Elizabeth Gilmer
  • Ron Giorgi
  • William Girling
  • Fred Glasse
  • Stan Goosman
  • Edward Gordon
  • Leon Götz
  • John Grace
  • John Gildroy Grant
  • Elizabeth Gregory
  • William Gregory
  • Kenneth Gresson
  • Richard Gross
  • William Gummer

H

K

  • Paddy Kearins

L

  • Mary Gonzaga Leahy

M

N

  • Edgar Neale
  • Erima Northcroft

P

  • Rusty Page

R

  • Edith Rudd

S

T

U

W

  • Ron Wakelin
  • Mark Wallace
  • Robert Walls
  • Fintan Patrick Walsh
  • George Walsh
  • John Walsh
  • Bob Walton
  • Joseph Ward
  • Alwyn Warren
  • Ellenor Watson
  • James Wattie
  • Jack Watts
  • Clifton Webb
  • John Weeks
  • Stephen Weir
  • George Weston
  • Ronald Erle White
  • William Whitlock
  • Agnes, Lady Wigram
  • Leonard Wild
  • Lionel Wilkinson
  • Gordon Wilson
  • Ivon Wilson
  • Joseph Vivian Wilson
  • Stanley Wilson
  • Frederick Wood
  • George Wood
  • Jack Wright
  • Len Wright

Pakistan

Samoa

Tonga

See also

References

  1. Médaille du couronnement de la Reine Élizabeth II
  2. Captain H. Taprell Dorling. Ribbons and Medals. p. 113. Published A.H.Baldwin & Sons, London. 1956.
  3. Howard N Cole. Coronation and Royal Commemorative Medals. p. 49. Published J. B. Hayward & Son, London. 1977.
  4. New Zealand Defence Force - British Commonwealth Jubilee And Coronation Medals - The Coronation Medal 1953 Archived 23 April 2007 at the Wayback Machine (Accessed 5 May 2015)
  5. Howard N Cole. Coronation and Royal Commemorative Medals. p. 49. Published J. B. Hayward & Son, London, 1977. Cole states 129,051 medals were struck, citing 84th Annual report of the Deputy Master and Comptroller of the Royal Mint, 1953 (HMSO 1955).
  6. Veterans Affairs Canada - Queen Elizabeth II Coronation Medal (1953) (Accessed 5 May 2015)
  7. "Cecil Walter Thomas OBE, FRBS". Mapping the Practice and Profession of Sculpture in Britain and Ireland–1951. University of Glasgow. Retrieved 6 January 2016.
  8. "The Order of Wearing Australian Honours and Awards" (PDF). Government House. Archived from the original (PDF) on 11 February 2014. Retrieved 7 July 2014.
  9. "Order of Wear: Orders, Decorations and Medals in New Zealand". Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet. 18 November 2013. Retrieved 25 May 2014.
  10. Republic of South Africa Government Gazette Vol. 477, no. 27376, Pretoria, 11 March 2005, OCLC 72827981
  11. "No. 56878". The London Gazette (Supplement). 17 March 2003. p. 3352.
  12. Williams, Meta (1992). Mrs Lilian Gresham, State Commissioner, 1945-1954: The Post-War Reconstruction Era. Brisbane, Australia: Girl Guides Australia (Queensland). p. 43. ISBN 0646102702.
  13. Collins, Susan (2008). "Architect Details: Frank Kenneth Milne". Architects of South Australia. University of South Australia. Retrieved 21 April 2024.
  14. Taylor, Alister; Coddington, Deborah (1994). Honoured by the Queen – New Zealand. Auckland: New Zealand Who's Who Aotearoa. ISBN 0-908578-34-2.
  15. "Coronation Medal" (PDF). Supplement to the New Zealand Gazette. No. 37. 3 July 1953. pp. 1021–1035. Retrieved 14 April 2021.
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