Approximately 3,000 Commendations for Valuable Service in the Air were awarded, including to service personnel and civilians. Among the recipients were a number of civilian,
RAF and RN test pilots who received the award in recognition of extraordinary flying during extreme conditions. •
Eric Brown: a test pilot who flew 487 types of aircraft, more than anyone else in history. •
Anne Burns: aeronautical engineer, who took part in many test flights as a scientific observer, became the only woman to receive two Commendations for Valuable Service in the Air, in 1954 and 1962. • Captain Basil Bradshaw and First Officer Bernard Sedgwick who successfully landed a
Laker Airways airliner at
Hanover Airport on 17 August 1969 after an
electrical fire filled the cabin with fumes. • Captain Eric Moody who on 24 June 1982 inadvertently flew a
British Airways flight into a cloud of volcanic ash resulting in the failure of all four engines. After gliding the aircraft out of the ash cloud, Moody was able to restart the engines and land the aircraft safely at
Jakarta Airport. • First Officer Alastair Stuart Atchison and cabin crew members Susan Gibbins and Nigel Ogden, after the explosive decompression and partial ejection of the captain, of
British Airways flight 5390 on 10 June 1990. ==King's and Queen's Commendation awards==