Harry Linn Martin
Rank and organization: First Lieutenant,
U.S. Marine Corps Reserve.
Born: 4 January 1911, Bucyrus, Ohio. Appointed from. Ohio.
Citation: For conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity
at the risk of his life above and beyond the call of duty as platoon
leader attached to Company C, 5th Pioneer Battalion, 5th Marine
Division, in action against enemy Japanese forces on Iwo Jima, Volcano
Islands, 26 March 1945. With his sector of the 5th Pioneer Battalion
bivouac area penetrated by a concentrated enemy attack launched a few
minutes before dawn, 1st Lt. Martin instantly organized a firing line
with the marines nearest his foxhole and succeeded in checking
momentarily the headlong rush of the Japanese. Determined to rescue
several of his men trapped in positions overrun by the enemy, he
defied intense hostile fire to work his way through the Japanese to
the surrounded marines. Although sustaining 2 severe wounds, he
blasted the Japanese who attempted to intercept him, located his
beleaguered men and directed them to their own lines. When 4 of the
infiltrating enemy took possession of an abandoned machinegun pit and
subjected his sector to a barrage of hand grenades, 1st Lt. Martin,
alone and armed only with a pistol, boldly charged the hostile
position and killed all of its occupants. Realizing that his few
remaining comrades could not repulse another organized attack, he
called to his men to follow and then charged into the midst of the
strong enemy force, firing his weapon and scattering them until he
fell, mortally wounded by a grenade. By his outstanding valor,
indomitable fighting spirit and tenacious determination in the face of
overwhelming odds, 1st Lt. Martin permanently disrupted a coordinated
Japanese attack and prevented a greater loss of life in his own and
adjacent platoons. His inspiring leadership and unswerving devotion to
duty reflect the highest credit upon himself and the U.S. Naval
Service. He gallantly gave his life in the service of his country.
Congressional Medal of Honor Citations, U.S. Army
Center of Military History
http://www.army.mil/cmh-pg/moh1.htm |