The medal, made of bronze, is inches wide. The
obverse was designed by
Thomas Hudson Jones. It shows a Navy
cruiser underway with a
B-24 Liberator bomber flying overhead. In the foreground is a sinking enemy submarine, and in the background is the skyline of a city. At the top of the medal are the words
AMERICAN CAMPAIGN. The reverse of the medal, designed by
Adolph Alexander Weinman, is the same design as used on the reverse of both the
Asiatic-Pacific Campaign Medal and the
European-African-Middle Eastern Campaign Medal. It depicts an American
bald eagle between the dates
1941 – 1945 and the words
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. The ribbon is inches wide in oriental blue in the center is a inch center stripe divided into thirds of old glory blue, white, and scarlet. Between the center and the edges are stripes of inch in white, black, scarlet and white. The blue color represents the Americas; the central blue, white and red stripes, taken from the
American Defense Service Medal ribbon, represents the continuance of American defense after Pearl Harbor. The white and black stripes represent the German part of the conflict on the Atlantic Coast, while the red and white stripes are for the Japanese colors and refer to that part of the conflict on the Pacific Coast. ==Ribbon devices==