Citation
GUNNERY SERGEANT WILLIAM C. WALSH
UNITED STATES MARINE CORPS RESERVE
For conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of his life
above and beyond the call of duty as Leader of an Assault Platoon, serving
with Company G, Third Battalion, Twenty-seventh Marines, Fifth Marine Division,
in action against enemy Japanese forces at Iwo Jima, Volcano Islands, on
27 February 1945. With the advance of his company toward Hill 362 disrupted
by vicious machine-gun fire form a forward position which guarded the approaches
to this key enemy stronghold, Gunnery Sergeant Walsh fearlessly charged
at the head of his platoon against the Japanese entrenched on the ridge
above him, utterly oblivious to the unrelenting fury of hostile automatic
weapons and hand grenades employed with fanatic desperation to smash his
daring assault. Thrown back by the enemy's savage resistance, he once again
led his men in a seemingly impossible attack up the steep, rocky slope,
boldly defiant of the annihilating streams of bullets which saturated the
area, and despite his own casualty losses and the overwhelming advantage
held by the Japanese in superior numbers and dominate position, gained
the ridge's top only to be subjected to an intense barrage of hand grenades
thrown by the remaining Japanese staging a suicidal last stand on the reverse
slope. When one of the grenades fell in the midst of his surviving men,
huddled together in a small trench, Gunnery Sergeant Walsh in a final
valiant act of complete self-sacrifice, instantly threw himself
upon the deadly bomb, absorbing with his own body the full and terrific
force of the explosion. Through his extraordinary initiative and inspiring
valor in the face of almost certain death, he saved his comrades form injury
and possible loss of life and enabled his company to seize and hold this
vital enemy position. He gallantly gave his life for his country.
HARRY S. TRUMAN
President of the United States
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