The Naval Reserve Medal is a decoration of the United States Navy which was created by order of Secretary of the Navy James Paulding.
The medal was first issued on 12 September 1938 and was an active award
until 1958. On 12 September 1958, the Naval Reserve Medal was declared
discontinued and was replaced by the Armed Forces Reserve Medal. It is not to be confused with the Naval Reserve Meritorious Service Medal which is a different award.
The Naval Reserve Medal was awarded to any commissioned officer or enlisted member of United States Naval Reserve, the associated National Naval Volunteers, and local naval militia
units of the period. To be awarded the decoration, a service member was
required to perform ten years of continuous service in one of the
aforementioned components in either an active duty, drilling reservist,
or inactive status.
An additional award of the NRM is denoted by a service star. The United States Marine Corps equivalent to the award is the Marine Corps Reserve Ribbon. The Naval Reserve Medal originally held precedence just below that of the Navy Good Conduct Medal
which, in turn, held precedence just below unit awards. Sometime after
1958, the precedence of the Naval Reserve Medal was moved to rank just
below the Armed Forces Reserve Medal making it the lowest ranking medal
awarded by the United States Armed Forces aside from the Navy and Coast
Guard expert marksmanship medals.
As the NRM was only available for exactly 20 years and 0 days, and
required 10 years and 0 days USNR service, no sailor could possibly
receive more than two. Additionally, with WWII pulling the vast majority
of reservists into the regular navy, the number of sailors to receive
two NRMs is fantastically low. Therefore, most one-time recipients
served in the USNR after WWII in the 1946-1958 window.
Choose version(s) you wish to order on the grid below.