Badge: Order of St Michael and St George, 3rd Class
Order of the Bath of Vice-Admiral David Thomas Norris CB CMG (1875-1937) awarded in March 1919. Badge: Seven rayed, fourteen pointed, white enamel star. In centre St Michael trampling Satan, surrounded by blue band inscribed: 'AUSPICIUM MELIORIS AEVI'. Reverse: Same motto with St George and the dragon in the centre. Suspended from a watered silk ribbon, Saxon blue with central red stripe (for wearing round neck). 1. Spare ribbon for beast badge, pre 1917. 2. spare ribbon for neck badge, pre 1917.
David Thomas Norris (1875-1937) entered the Navy in 1889. In 1893 as a midshipman in HMS 'Nile' in the Mediterranean, he was an eyewitness of the collision between HMS 'Victoria' and HMS 'Camperdown'. He was promoted to lieutenant in 1896, commander in 1907 and captain in 1914. During the First World War he commanded the armed merchant cruiser HMS 'Arlanza' in the 10th Cruiser Squadron, until she had to returned to Belfast for repairs following a mine explosion in the White Sea. Norris then served in the Air Department at the Admiralty. In 1918 he was appointed Commodore Persian Gulf and Mesopotamia, a division of the East Indies station, which involved his command of British naval forces in the Caspian Sea. In May 1919, with six armed merchant vessels, some coastal motor boats and an air unit, attacked thirty Bolshevik ships, fourteen of which were destroyed. Between 1920 and 1921 Norris headed a naval mission to Persia. During the next eight years he held several appointments afloat and ashore, including a brief period in command of the battleship HMS 'Valiant'. He was promoted to rear-admiral in 1924 and retired on his promotion to vice-admiral in 1929. He was promoted to admiral on the retired list in 1933 and died at Sherborne in Dorset in 1937.
David Thomas Norris (1875-1937) entered the Navy in 1889. In 1893 as a midshipman in HMS 'Nile' in the Mediterranean, he was an eyewitness of the collision between HMS 'Victoria' and HMS 'Camperdown'. He was promoted to lieutenant in 1896, commander in 1907 and captain in 1914. During the First World War he commanded the armed merchant cruiser HMS 'Arlanza' in the 10th Cruiser Squadron, until she had to returned to Belfast for repairs following a mine explosion in the White Sea. Norris then served in the Air Department at the Admiralty. In 1918 he was appointed Commodore Persian Gulf and Mesopotamia, a division of the East Indies station, which involved his command of British naval forces in the Caspian Sea. In May 1919, with six armed merchant vessels, some coastal motor boats and an air unit, attacked thirty Bolshevik ships, fourteen of which were destroyed. Between 1920 and 1921 Norris headed a naval mission to Persia. During the next eight years he held several appointments afloat and ashore, including a brief period in command of the battleship HMS 'Valiant'. He was promoted to rear-admiral in 1924 and retired on his promotion to vice-admiral in 1929. He was promoted to admiral on the retired list in 1933 and died at Sherborne in Dorset in 1937.
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Object Details
ID: | MED1132 |
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Collection: | Coins and medals |
Type: | Order |
Display location: | Not on display |
Date made: | 1818 |
People: | Norris, David Thomas |
Credit: | National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, London |
Measurements: | Overall: 45 mm |
Parts: | Badge: Order of St Michael and St George, 3rd Class |