SHARED SACRIFICES: 
UNSUNG LIBERATors OF FRANCE 
IN WWII.
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SHARED SACRIFICES: 
UNSUNG LIBERATors OF FRANCE 
IN WWII.
  • HOME
  • FAQ
  • FULL FILM SUMMARY
  • OUR PARTNERS
  • SIXTH U.S. ARMY GROUP
  • SIXTH ARMY GROUP HISTORY
  • U.S. SEVENTH ARMY STATS
  • WW2 FILMS
  • MEDIA ABOUT THE 7TH ARMY
  • ADDITIONAL MEDIA
  • CMOH LUCIAN ADAMS
  • CMOH VAN BARFOOT
  • CMOH BARNEY HAJIRO
  • CMOH DANIEL INOUYE
  • CMOH VICTOR KANDLE
  • CMOH AUDIE MURPHY
  • CMOH CHARLES THOMAS

SEVENTH ARMY CONGRESSIONAL MEDAL OF HONOR RECIPIENTS

FEATURED CMOH SOLDIER - LUCIAN ADAMS

                                CONGRESSIONAL MEDAL OF HONOR SOCIETY 

                                                 c2004 Used with permission. 


                                                               LUCIAN ADAMS

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                World  War II - U.S. Army


DETAILS

  • RANK: STAFF SERGEANT
  • CONFLICT/ERA: WORLD WAR II
  • UNIT/COMMAND:
    COMPANY I, 3D BATTALION, 30TH INFANTRY,
    3D INFANTRY DIVISION
  • MILITARY SERVICE BRANCH: U.S. ARMY
  • MEDAL OF HONOR ACTION DATE: OCTOBER 28, 1944
  • MEDAL OF HONOR ACTION PLACE: NEAR ST. DIE, FRANCE


CITATION

For conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity at risk of his life above and beyond the call of duty on 28 October 1944, near St. Die, France. When his company was stopped in its effort to drive through the Mortagne Forest to reopen the supply line to the isolated third battalion, SSgt. Adams braved the concentrated fire of machine guns in a lone assault on a force of German troops. Although his company had progressed less than 10 yards and had lost three killed and six wounded, SSgt. Adams charged forward dodging from tree to tree firing a borrowed BAR from the hip. Despite intense machine-gun fire which the enemy directed at him and rifle grenades which struck the trees over his head, showering him with broken twigs and branches, SSgt. Adams made his way to within 10 yards of the closest machine gun and killed the gunner with a hand grenade. An enemy soldier threw hand grenades at him from a position only 10 yards distant; however, SSgt. Adams dispatched him with a single burst of BAR fire. Charging into the vortex of the enemy fire, he killed another machine gunner at 15 yards' range with a hand grenade and forced the surrender of two supporting infantrymen. Although the remainder of the German group concentrated the full force of its automatic-weapon fire in a desperate effort to knock him out, he proceeded through the woods to find and exterminate five more of the enemy. Finally, when the third German machine gun opened up on him at a range of 20 yards, SSgt. Adams killed the gunner with BAR fire. In the course of the action, he personally killed nine Germans, eliminated three enemy machine guns, vanquished a specialized force which was armed with automatic weapons, and grenade launchers, cleared the woods of hostile elements and reopened the severed supply lines to the assault companies of his battalion.


ADDITIONAL DETAILS

  • ACCREDITED TO: PORT ARTHUR, JEFFERSON COUNTY, TEXAS
  • AWARDED POSTHUMOUSLY: NO
  • PRESENTATION DATE & DETAILS: APRIL 23, 1945
    ZEPMAN STADIUM, NUREMBERG, GERMANY, PRESENTED BY LT. GEN. ALEXANDER M. PATCH III
  • BORN: OCTOBER 26, 1922, PORT ARTHUR, JEFFERSON COUNTY, TX, UNITED STATES
  • DIED: MARCH 31, 2003, SAN ANTONIO, TX, UNITED STATES
  • BURIED: FORT SAM HOUSTON NATIONAL CEMETERY (MH) (AI-555), SAN ANTONIO, TX, UNITED STATES


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