Rank and organization: Chaplain (Maj.), U .S. Army, Company A, 173d Support Battalion, 173d Airborne Brigade. Place and date: Near Dak To Province, Republic of Vietnam, 19 November 1967. Entered service at: Fort Dix, N.J. Born: 17 January 1927, Jersey City, N.J. Citation... For conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity in action at the risk of his life above and beyond the call of duty. Chaplain Watters distinguished himself during an assault in the vicinity of Dak
To. Chaplain Watters was moving with one of the companies when it
engaged a heavily armed enemy battalion. As the battle raged and the
casualties mounted, Chaplain Watters, with complete disregard for
his safety, rushed forward to the line of contact. |
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Unarmed and completely exposed, he moved among, as well as in
front of the advancing troops, giving aid to the wounded,
assisting in their evacuation, giving words of encouragement,
and administering the last rites to the dying. When a wounded
paratrooper was standing in shock in front of the assaulting
forces, Chaplain Watters ran forward, picked the man up on his
shoulders and carried him to safety. As the troopers battled to
the first enemy entrenchment, Chaplain Watters ran through the
intense enemy fire to the front of the entrenchment to aid a
fallen comrade. A short time later, the paratroopers pulled back
in preparation for a second assault. Chaplain Watters exposed
himself to both friendly and enemy fire between the 2 forces in
order to recover 2 wounded soldiers. Later, when the battalion
was forced to pull back into a perimeter, Chaplain Watters
noticed that several wounded soldiers were Lying outside the
newly formed perimeter. Without hesitation and ignoring attempts
to restrain him, Chaplain Watters left the perimeter three times
in the face of small arms, automatic weapons, and mortar fire to
carry and to assist the injured troopers to safety. Satisfied
that all of the wounded were inside the perimeter, he began
aiding the medics--applying field bandages to open wounds,
obtaining and serving food and water, giving spiritual and
mental strength and comfort. During his ministering, he moved
out to the perimeter from position to position redistributing
food and water, and tending to the needs of his men. Chaplain
Watters was giving aid to the wounded when he himself was
mortally wounded. Chaplain Watters' unyielding perseverance and
selfless devotion to his comrades was in keeping with the
highest traditions of the U.S. Army. | |
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