And just a Distinguished Service Cross? He got jipped.
Look up Audie Murphy by the way. Originally laughed out of the Marine recruiter's office for looking like a 12 yr old boy, went on to sheer awesomeness.
And just a Distinguished Service Cross? He got jipped.
Look up Audie Murphy by the way. Originally laughed out of the Marine recruiter's office for looking like a 12 yr old boy, went on to sheer awesomeness.
Hell, check this out...Some Finnish guy named Hayha gets shot in the face with an exploding bullet after sniping 500+ Nazis, and is disappointed that the war is over when he regains consciousness a couple weeks later.
DSC? Sounds more like Army Cross material - if not Blue Max!
Isn't Audie Murphy the youngest officer ever commissioned by the Army? Or am I getting wires crossed?
Yeah, wrong on all counts.
"Army Cross" is the DSC, which is second to the MOH.
And, it looks like the DSM has replaced the DSC in current precedence, because I'm not seeing it (unless I need new specs again...) I wonder if I have a WWII-era precedence listing anywhere?
Reading through some of his citations, I'm surprised he was never awarded the MOH. His actions seem to be in line with some of the more recent MOH awardees.Yeah, he only had 3 of them during WWII. Short-changed, for sure.He was the first to receive 7 awards at once, though. Distinguished Service Cross with two oak leaf clusters, the Silver Star with one oak leaf cluster, the Legion of Merit and the Bronze Star Medal and the Purple Heart. 29 awards total during his career.
MSG Chilson was second for most-decorated only to 1LT Murphy. Chilson should have received the MOH also...but, it is what it is.![]()
You talking about Lynch? IIRC, she was pulled from a hospital. Lynch was hurt and received the Purple Heart for injuries. It's not a valor medal, it's for being wounded.
It is pretty amazing how many died to received their MOH's though.
I find the comparison between officers and enlisted with the MOH interesting - consider the Bronze Star: it has a special attachment to indicate an award of the medal for valour. Enlisted men can only get the BSM for valour, while officers can be awarded it for administrative achievements and suchlike. To me, this cheapens the medal even more than "overawarding" does!