Friday, August 2, 2019

When everybody’s somebody, nobody’s anybody! D-Day 75th and the brass hats

We made it through the various D-Day commemorations without Governor General Julie Payette showing up wearing her NASA Medals or breaking any medals wearing rules which is a relief.
Canada's two highest ranking medals wearing offenders. The Governor General Julie Payette -- known for wearing totally unauthorized Space Trip Medals from NASA, and Honorary LGen Richard Rohmer, who loves to wear every pin and bauble in his sock drawer -- even unauthorized ones. 
That being said, we had a flood of emails asking about the sash being worn by Honorary Lieutenant General Richard Rohmer, who has been featured on this blog several times before. As we have noted in the past, we have great respect for the Honorary Lieutenant General’s valorious service in the Second World War and his contributions to Canada over his long and highly accomplished lifetime. 

What we take issue is with his penchant for wearing his medals incorrectly – and wearing unauthorized medals. An officer, gentleman and an one of Her Majesty’s Counsel Most Learned in the Law (he is a lawyer and a Queen’s Counsellor) one would assume that Rohmer would know that even he has to follow the rules and regulations set out by the Government of Canada as managed by the Governor General’s Office. No sadly he does not, so during the 75thanniversary of the D-Day landings the CBC and other networks were full of images of Honorary Lieutenant General Rohmer parading around wearing a mystery sash, too many neck gongs, at least one unauthorized/ unrecognized medal and some weird looking pin with a trillium on it.

First let us address the mystery red sash. What is it? Has Rohmer been made a Grand Cross of the Legion d’Honneur or a Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath or a Knight Grand Commander of the New Zealand Order of Merit– it is none of these as they are worn over the right shoulder and not the left. A search of the Canada Gazette, where all authorized foreign decorations and orders are listed when they are properly awarded to Canadians, fails to reveal that Rohmer has been awarded anything new. Could it be that as an honorary Lieutenant General, Rohmer has decided that he can wear an CAF Infantry Sash over the left shoulder given his years of service in the CAF? 


Now let us examine Rohmer’s impressive group of mounted medals.
Rohmer's mounted group of medals.
Right beside his St. John Ambulance Long Service Medal (black and white ribbon with 3 bars), there is a blue ribbon with a yellow stripe – it looks much like the Royal Canadian Mounted Police Long Service Medal – yet Rohmer never earned the RCMP LSM, so it is not that. A search of Rohmer’s Wikipedia page reveals it could be the United States Navy Distinguished Marksman Ribbon which he earned long ago, but that award doesn’t come with a medal. So it must be the Toronto Emergency Medical Services Long Service Medal. Totally unauthorized for wear along with officially granted federal and provincial honours, this lustrous medal is struck in high quality aluminum foil and dipped in clear nail polish to give it an impressive shine. 
The Toronto EMS Long Service Medal 


Of course the wearing of this medal along with officially granted federal and provincial medals is a violation of Order-in-Council 1998-591; but hey, Rohmer is already breaking a host of rules (only two neck badges are to be worn in RCAF DEU) covered in A-AD 265 Canadian Armed Forces Dress Instructions, that everyone else is supposed to follow if they are wearing a CAF uniform, but it seems having a load of gongs and a heavy brass hat means you are immune from the rules or a watchful RSM or even our  Chief of Defence Staff.

Then there is the badge on the pocket that Rohmer is wearing above his Order of St. John breast star. There is the Minister of Veterans Affairs Commendation, and RCAF Ops Wings which are all legitimate and authorized, and then the mystery oval pin. 
It looks like some sort of Ontario awards with a white trillium – 75 years of safe driving of a motor vehicle? 75 years of residency in Ontario? The award for not picking trilliums in Ontario? Just what is this mystery badge? 

All this is written fully expecting a number of irate emails from readers chastising us for DARING to question such a notable and well regarded veteran. Well even the highly accomplished and high ranking are open for criticism if they break the rules the rest of the Canadian public are supposed to follow. 

This is all best left to Rohmer himself. In a January 2019 article carried in Zoomer 
Magazine. Rohmer notes “I’m the most highly decorated citizen in the country. It takes me 20 minutes to put the medals and decorations on.” Well aside from the grandness of the statement (one would never expect to hear the great Canadian exemplar of medal wearing, Major General George Pearkes, VC, PC, CC, CB, DSO, KStJ, MC, CD, CdeG, to utter such a phrase), I think you get the general idea (pardon the pun) that the General knows exactly what he is doing when he puts on a uniform – be it is RCAF, Ontario Provincial Police or Toronto EMS uniforms. 

10 comments:

  1. Many regional governments in Ontario are now issuing their own long service medals for Paramedics. You usually have to have been employed with one service provider for at least 12 years. Toronto, Peel, and York issue these playthings. I had a senior officer wear one and I asked the military guys with whom I worked, what the heck that thing was, and none of them knew. It is funny to watch them wear these trifles with their official Exemplary Service Medal, one wonders how they decided the hierarchy of placement on the left side. As for the General, no one wants to ruin his day by quoting uniform regs.

    ReplyDelete
  2. The maroon sash is probably the Belgium Order of the Crown (Grand Cross)(while unorthodox, he appears to be wearing the full-size officer rosette next to his French Legion d'honneur). Are you new at this?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It is not the Order of the Crown of Belgium, the Canada Gazette shows no listing for Rohmer receiving any foreign honours that entitle him to wear a sash. It's not a Canadian honour, its not a foreign honour that has been approved, so perhaps he went to Fabricland and bough some maroon cloth to add to his uniform!

      Delete
    2. This comment has been removed by the author.

      Delete
  3. Incidentally, the United States Navy Distinguished Marksman Ribbon is in fact a medal, and NO it is not it. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marksmanship_Medal

    ReplyDelete
  4. Ontario Lieutenant Governor’s Community Volunteer Award for Students. https://www.ontario.ca/page/honours-and-awards-volunteering#section-3

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. No, it isn't the Lieutenant Governor’s Community Volunteer Award for Students... but it uses the same "template design" as that award. The student award consists of 3 small trilliums above the crest of the Lt. Gov that is serving at that time. The award pins that have 1 large trillium above the crest are given by the Lieutenant Governor to people who they feel have contributed greatly to their office and to the province. There is no application process... the Lt. Gov gifts them to those they feel are worthy of it.

      Delete
  5. This comment has been removed by the author.

    ReplyDelete
  6. He is pretty candid about his 'creativity':

    “I did some research on the Légion d’honneur,” he tells me as I fiddle with the Velcro bits on the ends of his sash. “I found out that Napoleon, when he created the decoration, also created the red sash. When I got the decoration, I went out and had the sash made. I’m the only one who wears a sash.”

    https://www.everythingzoomer.com/arts-entertainment/2022/08/06/legendary-canadian-veteran-richard-rohmer-98-on-his-unique-bond-with-the-monarch/

    ReplyDelete
  7. The pin is the Ontario Lieutenant Governor’s Community Volunteer Award for Students. Pretty sure he would not be eligible when it was first released, since you have to be graduating from an Ontario high school to be eligible.

    ReplyDelete