View Full Version : Veterans Lapel Badges
For those of you that served in the forces before 31st Dec 1994 do you realise that you can obtain one of theses badges simply by phoning 0800-1693458 or going on line www.veterans.uk.info and clicking on the veterans lapel badge button on the home page just make sure you have your national insurance number to hand.Wear it with pride
I couldnt get the link to work, is this the same place?
http://www.veterans-uk.info/vets_badge/vets_badge.htm
after veterans put a full stop instead if you are still having trouble give the free phone a try it only takes about 5 minutes
I have just tried the link you put up and it took me to the home page ok
Thanks for the link , This is just a point off me , often due to my long hair and drees sense people find it hard to believe i was ever in the army , let alone did 17 years. But to me getting a silly little badge for the look at me factor is a waste of time. What i did or didn't do in the army is only concern to myself .
The wearing of badges might suit some people but to me its a load of rubbish , as long as you know what you did or didnt do , thats what matters.
As this badge is available to Clerks / chefs / Co s Drivers etc [ nothing against you guys ] aswell as infantry men in my eyes the badge means nothing , badges and medals ought to be marked Combat or non Combat , then they might mean somthing.
So i for one will not be getting a badge
thats a good moan over with
cheers all
led
You were doing really well there Led............................and then!!!!!!
As this badge is available to Clerks / chefs / Co s Drivers etc [ nothing against you guys ] aswell as infantry men in my eyes the badge means nothing , badges and medals ought to be marked Combat or non Combat ,
Al's Top Tip...........Body Armour On, Helmet On, Rifle cocked........Watch and Shoot :arghh: :yes:
hey thanks for the thread.i have been on the freephone number and it does only take 5mins.badge comes 2/4weeks
Hammy_Junior
05-12-2007, 13:14
You were doing really well there Led............................and then!!!!!!
Al's Top Tip...........Body Armour On, Helmet On, Rifle cocked........Watch and Shoot :arghh: :yes:
Could not agree with you more Al, to suggest that the Veterans badge means very little unless you are infantry is a very shallow statement to make. What you need to remember is that the majority of Clerks, myself included, did the infantry thing as well Led, and at the end of the day soldier first clerk second was always my motto. So what would constitute combat and non combat then? Northern Ireland 4 tours and a residential tour = ACSM, Bosnia UN and straight after, Bosnia Nato, Kosovo, Iraq and Afghanistan. At the end of the day on all these tours there were people who wanted me and others dead so I for one, am proud to wear the badge with pride along with all my medals during Remembrance days. Must admit Led i think you will get quite a few with a similar view as me.
:mask: Watch and shoot indeed.
Hammy_Junior
05-12-2007, 13:16
And as an after thought, having left the Army 2 years ago as a Chief Clerk the veterans badge should of been given out with discharge papers etc then. They trialled it in 2005 and extended it, soldiers had the option of having it or refusing it, non in my last unit were refused. If that didnt happen then maybe the administrators of the Bn at the time need shooting as well.:mad:
hi hammy , nothing against you mate as i consider you a mate of mine , and as you know i have done as many tours as you but there is a difference to being behind a desk typing out part ones and being out on the ground , i know evertybody has a job to do ,but the job they did ought to be on the badge or medal , basic fact of combat and non combat , some people shoot , some people dont.
I am sure the guys in A coy who have just come back will tell us all the difference.
We all have jobs to do or the army would never run .But we all remember the band coming over to Northen ireland for 31 days just to get a medal , Is it fair that they get the same medal as the rest of us
This is not a dig at my freinds just an observation
cheers
led
Hammy_Junior
05-12-2007, 15:37
I know it wasnt a dig at me Led but times do change, I can quite happily say that my time as an Infantry man not once did I shoot or be shot at. In my tour of Iraq I emptied my magazine (and filled my pants) on more than one occasion. As for the band thing I couldnt agree with you more mate, in my time as a shiny **** clerk it was staff officers who used to do the minimum and get a medal, I know of a Major in the Royal Signals who deployed 4 days before the UN became IFOR in Bosnia and got both medals!!!!!! There other favorite when stationed overseas was to spend the maximum amount of time away before Residual LOA kicked in and then stay in Germany the maximum time would allow that they didnt lose LSSA, now thats dodgy.
using your equation only my 2 NATO tours (Bosnia and Kosovo) dont class as Combat medals (i didnt think they did anyway lol).
cheers Ham
If think you get my point [a bit anyway][ and i get yours] i think we all have different jobs and maybe its just the word Veteran i have a problem with , i dont consider myself one i was just a guy in the army.
This means i will not be asking for a badge.Maybe the badge ought to read member of Hm forces
Cheers ham
led
richie264
05-12-2007, 17:59
VETERAN... a person who has grown old in or had long experience of (esp. military) service or occupation.
Clive Rees (08)
05-12-2007, 21:52
Sorry don't know you Led.
But surely you need the cogs to turn the wheel!!!
Regards
Clive
I agree with Led to a point about the Veteran Badge, in that I dont feel like a Veteran, so the badge stays in the box.
I disagree with the clerk/non combatant bit. I think that Leds comments probably reflect that during his and my own period of service, we were involved in small conflicts, primarily JNCO/Pl Comd led engagements against small units, and those in a supporting role, were sometimes a little detached from what was going on. But that did not diminish their role. In the last decade though, things have changed, as the engagements are on a larger scale.
I'm reminded of the young L/Cpl Chef in Gorazde, who during the period that the Serbs took the BIH positions, continued to cook food for about 150 men in a 24x24 tent, whilst rifle companies/Recce and Tac, remained under hard cover. Whilst all this was going on the Muslims and Serbs were at full scale war literally fighting over the top of this young lad's head(Never had Percy Sugdens classic line "I've cooked eggs under fire" been more appropriate).
Indeed to collect the boys food, CQMS's drove to the tent in Saxons. the food was placed into the rear, we than drove the short distance to the Colpro/Pits that the guys were living in, and doled out the scoff.!!!!! Meanwhile the slopjocky with only tent fabric for cover continued to prepare drina mash on a wood burning stove.......During those few days, he was one guy I wouldn't have swapped places with....his actions were later recognised with a commendation, which was very deserved.
During that same period our company clerk ...Jefford, narrowly escaped being killed when a mortar round hit the sandbagged sanger he was on stag in whilst protecting the rest of us.
stu reed
06-12-2007, 07:25
I remember the "CQMS food runs" made to the A Coy Colpro in Gorazde very well.(i was with Mortors then) that chef not only cooked in that tent but, chopped the wood and kept that fire going non stop for months, even with all that snow and rain!
As the tours come round more frequent, in ever more hostile enviroments, the lads and girls go away to more intense fighting than ever before. Without the CSS, everything would grind to a halt. In times of conflict/tours they are not only doing their own trade but they are the life support, stretcher bearers, ammo carriers, radio op, stagging on like the rest and anything else the are told to do by the CSM/CQMS.It doesnt matter what part of the Armed Forces you were in, it is "Soldier First", trade second
My lapel badge was posted to me along with my discharge Red Book, I had no idea I would get one. When I recieved it I thought of a "Veteran" as WW2, Korea, Falklands, Gulf War and those fighting in Afghanistan etc so mine will stay in the box as I would not feel right wearing it.
Hammy_Junior
06-12-2007, 09:33
With useful comments now in and this leading to a good hearty debate could we not set up a poll.
1. Have you got a veterans Badge?
2. Have you ever worn it?
3. Will you wear it in say 20 years time when you may feel more like a veteran?
My answers by the way are yes, once, yes.
I left the Army just under 2 years ago and wanted to "wash my hands with it all", but when I got an E mail telling me about this site I quickly remembered all my army service but especially my 13+ years with the RWF. My medals, veterans badge, beret and hackle got dusted off and worn with pride at church on 11th Nov and will continue to do so for the rest of my life. I never became a member of the comrades association something thast I hope to be able to correct in the near future.
Am I a veteran? using Ritchie 64's termanogy then yes, but I'm only 41, reasonably healthy and still have a full head of naturally coloured hair.
Do I feel like a veteran, no not really, in the days were media and press (and to a certain degreee the government) are trying to keep the forces high on the public agenda with welcome home parades, fairer treatment for the injured etc etc then maybe we should show that we "did our bit" for a long time and wear our badge with pride when ever possible.
Paul Davies 701
06-12-2007, 09:34
Just to get my four-pence in I for one am proud to wear the veterans pin badge. Unfortunately due to circumstances I only did the tours of Northern Ireland as that was the only conflicts going on at that time, if I'd been in longer perhaps I would have been in the later conflicts. However, whilst I do not consider myself a veteran on the scale of the lads from the world wars or for that matter on the scale of the lads serving in Iraq or Afghanistan I did my time and appreciate being recognised for it, lets be honest there is very little appreciation going on out there as it is. I do however agree with Led regarding soliders going to a conflict for the minimum number of days just to get a medal, however where I disagree is whether you served as a cook, clerk, etc, etc EVERYONE has a role to play if you did the full tour or were injured in that tour whether you were in the rear with the gear or up front with the grunts YOU DID YOUR TIME and are just as entitled to wear your badge, medals with the same pride as anyone else.
Hammy_Junior
06-12-2007, 09:38
cheers Ham
If think you get my point [a bit anyway][ and i get yours] i think we all have different jobs and maybe its just the word Veteran i have a problem with , i dont consider myself one i was just a guy in the army.
Maybe the badge ought to read member of Hm forces
Cheers ham
led
I do get your point but without wanting to sound a bit cocky if you look at the picture of the badge (or your own if you have one in a box it does say HM Armed Forces Veterans Badge.
Regards mate
Hammy
Hi all
glad i got everyone going again , but i stick with my guns [ well there pretty good guns] I cant see why having a bar on a medal or a badge of the job you did for that medal is Embarrassing[It must be most of you have moand abount it] . You cant compare Being a waiter in the Sgts mess [ Sombody else to annoy] To being a soilder on the ground.
I have a drink now and again down town [Haverfordwest] And i have never Heard any ex Army Braging abount Serving the Sgts/ officers Their Breakfast , But i Do hear **** abount how Tough it Was [Tales Of glory] .
If the name of there job was on a bar on a medal /badge that Will tell us The Story .
In the meantime to the Members of the Band and the Clerks of the world , There.s nothing wrong with having brains
Thanks to all
Led
Hammy_Junior
06-12-2007, 09:47
I wanted to post a double thanks then Led. By the way is Bar Charlies still in Haverfordwest then, me and Dave Martin had many a lock in there.
Yes mate Bar charlies still here , infact Haverfordwest looks as it was in our brawdy Days , and on a good point The royal Welch fusiliers are still Talked abount , Most of the town would be glad to see them back
All the best mate
led
[ Good Topic on the Badge now]
stu reed
06-12-2007, 10:29
Looking back through the thread, I can see Led has a point with the "Veterans" part of the badge. If the badge just had "HM Armed Forces", i would assume every serving and ex-service personel would feel more inclined and pride wearing it, at the correct occasions, instead of being given a "Veterans" badge when the majority do not feel like Veterans at all.
Thanks Stu Sense at last
Here's a tale , as most of you know i do removals [Hump it and dump it] I have worked with a guy who was ex RAF [ Seems like a nice boy] . he was Wearing a Veterans Badge , And imformed me after he did five years, He had enough and bought himself out , and this badge was given to him when he left. [Some veteran Eh ]
the Closest this guy came to combat was when he told me he He Backed my Wagon in to the car of the person we were moving.
So There you go
Cheers
Led
bazbarron
06-12-2007, 15:33
Led you've done it again
But congrats on an entertaining thread, one that would probably be better place on" sound off". As i have said before i don't consider myself to have been any sort of "Jonny Rambo",however being a remf i did have a role to fulfill within the Bn. I never heard you complain about that when we picked a soggy drums platoon up in some dark country lane in the province(or for that matter a trip to the White Horse Banbridge SHHHHH )
As an active member of my local British Legion i know a lot of ex service personnel quite a few who were TA. They served in the days were being called up for active service was virtually unheard of, unlike the present time. Yet they still wear the veterans badge with pride,they did their little bit. Would the wording have been better "EX HM Forces" badge.
Next year i will be attending the NI Veterans parade at the National Arboretum, as i live close to it, i was due to attend this year but due to work commitments couldn't. I have been told that it was a fantastic day and everybody who attended did so with pride, it made no difference what role they had done out there, just that they had been there under the same threat that every single squaddie regardless of job was under.(remember the two signals Sgts Anderstown rd)
As for Hammy he was Deltas and as you know Led we were the "TOP DOGS" and although i didn't make my career Deltas thats were it started for me. For me as it was for Hammy it was a career decision.
Anyway Led keep Rockin
Baz
Just a thought and no disrespect at all to any WW1 and WW11 veterans but I'm sure that many we have seen on parade on Nov 11th were clerks, cooks and co's drivers. I should think several never saw the front lines but were part of that well oiled machine that has given us our freedom today.
A good thought provoking thread Led (I'm a poet and don't know it). However, as a "veteran" of many tours of N.I. I have and will continue to wear my veterans badge with pride on Nov 11th.
Dilwyn
with leds long hair no body would be able to see it anyway if he put it on his lapel
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