Social Welfare Decoration

Social Welfare Decoration
Ehrenzeichen für deutsche Volkspflege
The four classes of the decoration
TypeCivil Award
Awarded forMerit in the field of welfare, Winterhilfswerk or the care of sick and wounded
Presented by Nazi Germany
StatusObsolete
Established1 May 1939 (1939-05-01)
Ribbon bar
Precedence
EquivalentGerman Red Cross Decoration
Next (lower)Medal of Social Welfare

The Social Welfare Decoration (German: Ehrenzeichen für deutsche Volkspflege) was a German Civil Award created by Adolf Hitler on 1 May 1939 for services in the social sector.

It could be awarded to Germans and foreigners for a wide variety of service to the German state in the social sector. This included service with the Winterhilfswerk, the National Socialist People's Welfare, medical and rescue work, or care of ethnic Germans.[1] It replaced the German Red Cross Decoration.[2]

It was conferred in four classes, each consisting of a white-enamelled gold Balkenkreuz, with the Reich eagle and swastika in the centre, and a medal:[1]

  • Special class: a four-rayed breast star with the badge worn from a sash over the right shoulder
  • 1st class with diamonds: exclusively for ladies of high rank. Worn on the left shoulder from a bow
  • 1st class: a neck decoration
  • 2nd class: worn on the left side on a pin
  • 3rd class: worn on the left chest from a ribbon
  • Medal of Social Welfare: a circular silver coloured medal, worn on the left chest from a ribbon. It shows an image of the cross with, on the reverse, the inscription: 'Medaille für deutsche Volkspflege' (Medal for German social welfare).

Only one grade could be worn at a time. From January 1942, the 3rd class and the medal could be awarded with crossed swords on the ribbon.[1]

Recipients included Reinhard Heydrich who received the first class for providing "security to the German people" and Doctor Josef Mengele, in 1941, for providing medical services to the wounded on the Eastern Front.

  1. ^ a b c Littlejohn, David; Dodkins, Colonel C. M. (1968). Orders, Decorations, Medals and Badges of the Third Reich. California: R. James Bender Publishing. pp. 36–39. ISBN 978-0854200801.
  2. ^ Dorling, H. Taprell (1956). Ribbons and Medals. London: A. H. Baldwin & Sons. p. 215. OCLC 930416375.