Victoria Cross & Bar
Since the creation of the Victoria Cross, Britain’s highest military honour, in January 1856, 1,357 medals have been awarded for conspicuous acts of gallantry.
The criteria for winning the medal is such that only three men have been awarded it more than once. When the Victoria Cross is awarded for a second time the recipient is entitled to add a ‘bar’ to their medals’ ribbon. Bars or clasps are commonly added when a medal is won more than once or for individual battles or campaigns if a medal is commemorating a particular war. For instance the Crimea Medal had a number of bars available to men who served and fought in different battles during the Crimean War.
Lieutenant Colonel Arthur Martin-Leake, before being awarded his second VC
Lieutenant Colonel Arthur Martin-Leake of the Imperial Yeomanry became the first man to win the Victoria Cross twice when he won his second in 1914. Martin-Leake was awarded his first VC during the Boer War when in 1902, he went to the aid of several wounded men during an action at Vlakfontein. During his attempts to aid a wounded officer he was shot three times refusing aid until others around him had been attended to. Martin-Leake was invalided back to Britain where he continued his medical studies. In 1914, at the age of 40, he joined the Royal Army Medical Corps as a Lieutenant and during fighting in the Belgian town of Zonnebeke he rescued a number wounded soldiers under enemy fire. For his gallantry he was awarded a clasp/bar for his Victoria Cross, becoming the first man to be awarded the Victoria Cross twice. Lieutenant Colonel Martin-Leake survived the war and died in 1953.
Captain Noel Chavasse, RAMC
In 1917, Captain Noel Godfrey Chavasse, also of the Royal Army Medical Corps, became the second man to win the Victoria Cross twice. Both of Chavasse’s acts of bravery involved rescuing wounded men under heavy enemy fire. He was first awarded the VC in August 1916, when he saved 20 badly wounded men from enemy fire in No Mans Land near Guillemont, France, carrying several wounded men 500 yards under fire. A year later in July 1917, Chavasse once again put the lives of others ahead of his own during an action at Wieltje, Belgium. He himself was wounded during the action but continued to treat wounded men and also search No Mans Land for wounded troops under fire. He worked until exhausted by his wounds, he died in August 1917. Captain Chavasse was the only Victoria Cross recipient to win the award twice for actions during World War One.
Captain Charles Upham, 20th Infantry Battalion (New Zealand)
Captain Charles Hazlitt Upham of the 20th Battalion (New Zealand) is the most recent recipient of the Victoria Cross and Bar. His first Victoria Cross was won for actions between 22nd and 30th May 1941, during the German Invasion of Crete where he led a platoon against German machine gun positions - destroying three of them personally with grenades. Later when the battalion fell back on new positions a company became separated and Upham and a corporal were sent to guide then back, in the process Upham killed two enemy soldiers.
On the 25th May Upham was wounded by shrapnel but remained with his men, fighting off an attacking German force, killing some 40 enemy infantry. When his platoon was ordered to fall back he remained behind to warn other platoons they were falling back, in doing so he was isolated from his unit, when attacked by two Germans he played dead before surprising and killing both at close quarters with a rifle using only one hand, the other wounded.
Despite his wounds and a lingering case of dysentery Upham remained with his men before he was again wounded and had to be evacuated to Egypt.
His second VC was issued for actions during the First Battle of El Alamein, during which he commanded a company of the 20th Battalion. During the night of the 14th-15th July 1942, Upham and his men attacked positions on El Ruweisat Ridge when a German force attacked, Upham was once again wounded twice but remained with his men attacking enemy strong points. During the action Captain Upham destroyed an enemy tank and several vehicles with grenades before he was shot through the elbow by an enemy machine gun. However, he remained with his men directing defenses against a German counter-attack before he became too weak and was taken to an aid station. Once his wound had been dressed he again returned to his men defending the ridge, throughout the 15th July Upham and his company were heavily shelled before the depleted company, down to just six men according to Upham’s VC citation, was overrun by the enemy - the exhausted and badly wounded Upham was unable to move and was captured by the enemy.
Upham spent the rest of the war as a prisoner of war, making numerous escape attempts before being interned in the infamous Colditz Castle. When Colditz was liberated by the Allies in early 1945, Upham was eager to see action again however, the war ended before he had the opportunity. He was given the bar to his earlier Victoria Cross by King George VI on 11th May 1945. After the war he became a successful farmer and passed away in 1994 at the age of 86. Upham remained the only New Zealander to have won the Victoria Cross twice and the only combatant, Martin-Leake and Chavasse both being doctors, to have won the Victoria Cross.
Lt.Col. Martin-Leake’s VC & Bar (Source)
Capt. Chavasse’s Medals (Source)
Capt. Upham’s Medals (Source)
Account of their actions based on their medal citations