
OT-Little help with WWII ribbon IDs.
Moderators: wdolson, MOD_War-in-the-Pacific-Admirals-Edition
OT-Little help with WWII ribbon IDs.
Can anyone help me with the four ribbons to the right of this photo? This guy was a WWII Navy pilot who flew PBY Liberators.


- Attachments
-
- IMG_3188.jpg (86.43 KiB) Viewed 318 times
I am the Holy Roman Emperor and am above grammar.
Sigismund of Luxemburg
Sigismund of Luxemburg
- SqzMyLemon
- Posts: 4239
- Joined: Fri Oct 30, 2009 2:18 pm
- Location: Alberta, Canada
RE: OT-Little help with WWII ribbon IDs.
I believe the last two are European African Middle Eastern Campaign ribbons.
Could the two blue ones with gold trim be Presidential Unit Citations?
Could the two blue ones with gold trim be Presidential Unit Citations?
Luck is the residue of design - John Milton
Don't mistake lack of talent for genius - Peter Steele (Type O Negative)
Don't mistake lack of talent for genius - Peter Steele (Type O Negative)
RE: OT-Little help with WWII ribbon IDs.
ORIGINAL: SqzMyLemon
I believe the last two are European African Middle Eastern Campaign ribbons.
Could the two blue ones with gold trim be Presidential Unit Citations?
I thought that at first but he served in the Pacific. As far as I know he did no service in the ETO.
I am the Holy Roman Emperor and am above grammar.
Sigismund of Luxemburg
Sigismund of Luxemburg
- geofflambert
- Posts: 14887
- Joined: Thu Dec 23, 2010 2:18 pm
- Location: St. Louis
RE: OT-Little help with WWII ribbon IDs.
I'm no expert but according to this http://militarybest.com/us-army-europea ... plate.html Sqz is right. I see an Italian flag, a French flag, and I don't know what.
- geofflambert
- Posts: 14887
- Joined: Thu Dec 23, 2010 2:18 pm
- Location: St. Louis
RE: OT-Little help with WWII ribbon IDs.
According to this as well.


- Attachments
-
- decoration.._ribbons.jpg (309.85 KiB) Viewed 318 times
- geofflambert
- Posts: 14887
- Joined: Thu Dec 23, 2010 2:18 pm
- Location: St. Louis
- geofflambert
- Posts: 14887
- Joined: Thu Dec 23, 2010 2:18 pm
- Location: St. Louis
RE: OT-Little help with WWII ribbon IDs.
The light blue one resembles the MOH in color. Should have stars on it though, and no gold border.
RE: OT-Little help with WWII ribbon IDs.
Ok that clears it up. Turns out that he did serve in the Middle East around the time of the Tunisian campaign but eventually ended up in the Pacific. Now what are the little stars on the two bottom ribbons for?
I am the Holy Roman Emperor and am above grammar.
Sigismund of Luxemburg
Sigismund of Luxemburg
RE: OT-Little help with WWII ribbon IDs.
It means he got the ribbon more than once. I doubt he wore both of the bottom ribbons at the same time. He probably wore the one with one star, then wore the one with two later.
One of my father's ribbons has multiple stars, but I don't recall which one now. He was involved in the air campaign up the north side of New Guinea, was with the first B-25 unit at Tacloben after Leyte, then was involved in a project flying B-29s out of Saipan early in that campaign, then ended up on Attu in the summer of 1945. He was with the 1st Motion Picture unit and they were sent into the field in late 43 to try and get footage for an USAAF version of the Fighting Lady. He said they never got anything that could be put into a movie like that. He pointed out that on a carrier the action comes to you, but with ground based aircraft, especially later in the war, you went to the action.
Bill
One of my father's ribbons has multiple stars, but I don't recall which one now. He was involved in the air campaign up the north side of New Guinea, was with the first B-25 unit at Tacloben after Leyte, then was involved in a project flying B-29s out of Saipan early in that campaign, then ended up on Attu in the summer of 1945. He was with the 1st Motion Picture unit and they were sent into the field in late 43 to try and get footage for an USAAF version of the Fighting Lady. He said they never got anything that could be put into a movie like that. He pointed out that on a carrier the action comes to you, but with ground based aircraft, especially later in the war, you went to the action.
Bill
WIS Development Team
- rogueusmc
- Posts: 4583
- Joined: Sun Feb 08, 2004 6:21 pm
- Location: Texas...what country are YOU from?
- Contact:
RE: OT-Little help with WWII ribbon IDs.
The ribbons are duplicates of each other for different purposes. If you will notice one of each ribbon is slightly larger than the other one. The smaller of the ribbons were worn on a ribbon rack when just the ribbons on the left breast are worn. When in class 'A' service or dress uniform, Unit awards are worn on the right breast and are larger than the ones in the personal awards worn on the left breast. If the unit awards are worn, the corresponding ribbon on the left breast are removed.ORIGINAL: crsutton
Can anyone help me with the four ribbons to the right of this photo? This guy was a WWII Navy pilot who flew PBY Liberators.
![]()
Semper fi,
Lee
PS...the lower one with only one star is missing a star. If it was a single star, it would have been centered...
There are only two kinds of people that understand Marines: Marines and the enemy. Everyone else has a second-hand opinion.
Gen. William Thornson, U.S. Army

Gen. William Thornson, U.S. Army

- geofflambert
- Posts: 14887
- Joined: Thu Dec 23, 2010 2:18 pm
- Location: St. Louis
RE: OT-Little help with WWII ribbon IDs.
Here's that light blue one


- Attachments
-
- korea.jpg (214.6 KiB) Viewed 322 times
- geofflambert
- Posts: 14887
- Joined: Thu Dec 23, 2010 2:18 pm
- Location: St. Louis
RE: OT-Little help with WWII ribbon IDs.
Incidentally, here's the PTO ribbon. Did he not have one?


- Attachments
-
- asiapacific.jpg (154.72 KiB) Viewed 322 times
RE: OT-Little help with WWII ribbon IDs.
ORIGINAL: geofflambert
Incidentally, here's the PTO ribbon. Did he not have one?
![]()
He should, because that is where he flew the PBY Liberator. His daughter found those medals on a shelf in her basement. I have asked her if she can dig up his squadron. I can then find out where they were assigned.
I am the Holy Roman Emperor and am above grammar.
Sigismund of Luxemburg
Sigismund of Luxemburg
RE: OT-Little help with WWII ribbon IDs.
Very cool. Get them framed...

Member: Treaty, Reluctant Admiral and Between the Storms Mod Team.
RE: OT-Little help with WWII ribbon IDs.
She has an interesting family. Her grandfather on her mother's side was Dutch Bergman. He was once coach of the Washington Redskins and instrumental in getting RFK Stadium built in the 1960s. If you ever go to a Redskins game you will see his name on the stadium's wall of fame. More interesting to me is that he flew a two seater Spad in WWII. and his elderly daughter (her mother) has a couple of photo albums of his from that era. Some amazing photos that I believe have never been seen by anyone but family. I am really pushing her to allow me to do some scans. I want to send some to the Air and Space Museum and perhaps the Air Force Museum.
He played football at Notre Dame under Rockne and was both the Gipper's backfield running mate and room mate. He also coached Catholic University during it power years and still holds the record for the most wins there.
He played football at Notre Dame under Rockne and was both the Gipper's backfield running mate and room mate. He also coached Catholic University during it power years and still holds the record for the most wins there.
I am the Holy Roman Emperor and am above grammar.
Sigismund of Luxemburg
Sigismund of Luxemburg
RE: OT-Little help with WWII ribbon IDs.
Now what are the little stars on the two bottom ribbons for?
The little stars are campaign service stars https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/European- ... gn_Medal-2 . Each star represents a "campaign" in the theater that corresponds to the ribbon. Service members would have had only one ribbon for each theater in which they served. The stars indicate how many campaigns he participated in in that theater. "Oak leaf clusters" are used in the manner described by wdolson. That is, on ribbons awarded for individual merit, multiple awards of the same type are designated by oak leaf clusters. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oak_leaf_cluster
RE: OT-Little help with WWII ribbon IDs.
The two top ribbons are Presidential Unit Citation awards. The top is the 'older' version, the second is an updated version for 'modern' uniforms from the Vietnam era until now. I suspect it was a replacement.
The Presidential Unit Citation would have been worn above the name tag and not with the other, individual ribbons. A Presidential Unit Citation is an award for a unit, not for an individual. People that were part of a unit during the period that the award was issued have the right to wear the award perminantly but people assigned to the unit after the award is given only wear it while part of the unit.
The other was the Middle Eastern Medal which others have described. I'm sure he had a few others as well.
The Presidential Unit Citation would have been worn above the name tag and not with the other, individual ribbons. A Presidential Unit Citation is an award for a unit, not for an individual. People that were part of a unit during the period that the award was issued have the right to wear the award perminantly but people assigned to the unit after the award is given only wear it while part of the unit.
The other was the Middle Eastern Medal which others have described. I'm sure he had a few others as well.
Thomas S. Cofield
Feature Editor, SimHQ.com
t.co0field@comcast.net (stopped the SimHq mail since I get nothing but spam)

Feature Editor, SimHQ.com
t.co0field@comcast.net (stopped the SimHq mail since I get nothing but spam)

RE: OT-Little help with WWII ribbon IDs.
ORIGINAL: crsutton
She has an interesting family. Her grandfather on her mother's side was Dutch Bergman. He was once coach of the Washington Redskins and instrumental in getting RFK Stadium built in the 1960s. If you ever go to a Redskins game you will see his name on the stadium's wall of fame. More interesting to me is that he flew a two seater Spad in WWII. and his elderly daughter (her mother) has a couple of photo albums of his from that era. Some amazing photos that I believe have never been seen by anyone but family. I am really pushing her to allow me to do some scans. I want to send some to the Air and Space Museum and perhaps the Air Force Museum.
He played football at Notre Dame under Rockne and was both the Gipper's backfield running mate and room mate. He also coached Catholic University during it power years and still holds the record for the most wins there.
I'm familiar with the slang term for the Skyraider which was "Spad" and there was the WW I Spad, but I'm not familiar with anything flying in WW II called a Spad. Is that a typo or something I'm not familiar with?
Bill
WIS Development Team
RE: OT-Little help with WWII ribbon IDs.
ORIGINAL: wdolson
ORIGINAL: crsutton
She has an interesting family. Her grandfather on her mother's side was Dutch Bergman. He was once coach of the Washington Redskins and instrumental in getting RFK Stadium built in the 1960s. If you ever go to a Redskins game you will see his name on the stadium's wall of fame. More interesting to me is that he flew a two seater Spad in WWII. and his elderly daughter (her mother) has a couple of photo albums of his from that era. Some amazing photos that I believe have never been seen by anyone but family. I am really pushing her to allow me to do some scans. I want to send some to the Air and Space Museum and perhaps the Air Force Museum.
He played football at Notre Dame under Rockne and was both the Gipper's backfield running mate and room mate. He also coached Catholic University during it power years and still holds the record for the most wins there.
I'm familiar with the slang term for the Skyraider which was "Spad" and there was the WW I Spad, but I'm not familiar with anything flying in WW II called a Spad. Is that a typo or something I'm not familiar with?
Bill
Sorry Bill, that was a mistype. My friends maternal grandfater, Dutch Bergman. played for Notre Dame and left school during WWI. He served 17 months in Europe in the army air corp and then returned to Notre Dame post war to finish his schooling. See is bio here. http://www.cuacardinals.com/sports/fbal ... ture_story.
My friend,s dad who passed away a few years ago was the pilot who flew the PBY Liberator in WWII, and those are his ribbons that I posted above. However it is sort of a mystery to me because I only know of his service in the Pacific, not in the ETO. And those do seem to be campaign ribbons from the Med campaign. Trying to follow up and will post here when I find out more.
I am the Holy Roman Emperor and am above grammar.
Sigismund of Luxemburg
Sigismund of Luxemburg
RE: OT-Little help with WWII ribbon IDs.
This is the owner of the ribbons Bob Monahan in the cockpit of his Ventura patrol bomber. The squadron flew Venturas early on and transited to PBY Liberators in the last year of the war.


- Attachments
-
- LisaIphon..2012003.jpg (273.57 KiB) Viewed 322 times
I am the Holy Roman Emperor and am above grammar.
Sigismund of Luxemburg
Sigismund of Luxemburg