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Distinguished Service Order (DSO)

Established by the British government in 1886, the Distinguished Service Order recognizes individual instances of meritorious or distinguished service in war. It is a military order awarded to officers, typically for service under fire or under conditions equivalent to combat. After 1 January 1917, it was awarded only to those serving under fire; prior to 1943, recipients had to be Mentioned-in-Dispatches. Generally awarded to officers above the rank of Lieutenant Colonel, it could be awarded to lower ranks for exceptional gallantry just short of the Victoria Cross. Canadians have received 1,220 DSOs, 119 first bars, and 20 second bars.

 

Major Alfred Sidney Buttenshaw, DSO

Date of Award: December 28, 1917

Citation

No citation has been found

Notes

Supplement to the London Gazette of 28 December 1917, No. 30450, page 28. Extracts from his personnel file (Library and Archives of Canada, RG 150, Acc 1992-93/166, Box 1335): On enlistment in the CEF, his trade was “Inspector of Ordnance Machinery”. He went overseas on 15 October 1915 as a member of the Canadian Ordnance Corps Travelling Workshop. He was promoted Temporary Major on 1 July 1917 (London Gazette dated 23 August 1917, No. 30247). His file records a Mentioned in Despatches, but the London Gazette reference in the file does not confirm the MiD.