Colonial Auxiliary Forces Long Service Medal

The Colonial Auxiliary Forces Long Service Medal was instituted by Queen Victoria in 1899 as a military long service award for part-time members of all ranks in any of the organized military forces of the British Colonies, Dependencies and Protectorates throughout the British Empire. The medal gradually superseded the Volunteer Long Service Medal for India and the Colonies in all these territories, with the exception of the Isle of Man, Bermuda and the Indian Empire.

Colonial Auxiliary Forces Long Service Medal
Queen Victoria version
TypeMilitary long service medal
Awarded forTwenty years service
Country United Kingdom
Presented bythe Monarch of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, and Empress of India
EligibilityAll ranks of part-time Colonial Forces
StatusDiscontinued in 1930
Established1899
Last awarded1931
Ribbon bar
Order of Wear
Next (higher)Colonial Auxiliary Forces Officers' Decoration
Next (lower)Medal for Good Shooting (Naval)
RelatedVolunteer Long Service Medal for India and the Colonies

In 1930, the medal, along with the Volunteer Long Service Medal, the Volunteer Long Service Medal for India and the Colonies, the Militia Long Service Medal, the Special Reserve Long Service and Good Conduct Medal and the Territorial Efficiency Medal, were superseded by the Efficiency Medal in an effort to standardise recognition across the Empire.

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