Rank and organization: Technical
Sergeant, U.S. Army, Company I, 30th Infantry, 3d Infantry
Division. Place and date: Near Kayserberg, France, 8 January
1945. Entered service at: Brighton Ill. Born: 23 February 1920,
East Carondelet, Ill. G.O. No.: 37, 11 May 1945. Citation...
For conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity at risk of life above
and beyond the call of duty. At about 1430 hours on 8 January
1945, during an attack on Hill 616, near Kayserberg, France,
T/Sgt. Dunham single-handedly assaulted 3 enemy machineguns. Wearing a
white robe made of a mattress cover, carrying 12 carbine magazines and
with a dozen hand grenades snagged in his belt, suspenders, and
buttonholes, T/Sgt. Dunham advanced in the attack up a snow-covered hill
under fire from 2 machineguns and supporting riflemen. |
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His platoon 35 yards behind him, T/Sgt.
Dunham crawled 75 yards under heavy direct fire toward the
timbered emplacement shielding the left machinegun. As he jumped
to his feet 10 yards from the gun and charged forward,
machinegun fire tore through his camouflage robe and a rifle
bullet seared a 10-inch gash across his back sending him
spinning 15 yards down hill into the snow. When the indomitable
sergeant sprang to his feet to renew his 1-man assault, a German
egg grenade landed beside him. He kicked it aside, and as it
exploded 5 yards away, shot and killed the German machinegunner
and assistant gunner. His carbine empty, he jumped into the
emplacement and hauled out the third member of the gun crew by
the collar. Although his back wound was causing him excruciating
pain and blood was seeping through his white coat, T/Sgt. Dunham
proceeded 50 yards through a storm of automatic and rifle fire
to attack the second machinegun. Twenty-five yards from the
emplacement he hurled 2 grenades, destroying the gun and its
crew; then fired down into the supporting foxholes with his
carbine dispatching and dispersing the enemy riflemen. Although
his coat was so thoroughly blood-soaked that he was a
conspicuous target against the white landscape, T/Sgt. Dunham
again advanced ahead of his platoon in an assault on enemy
positions farther up the hill. Coming under machinegun fire from
65 yards to his front, while rifle grenades exploded 10 yards
from his position, he hit the ground and crawled forward. At 15
yards range, he jumped to his feet, staggered a few paces toward
the timbered machinegun emplacement and killed the crew with
hand grenades. An enemy rifleman fired at pointblank range, but
missed him. After killing the rifleman, T/Sgt. Dunham drove
others from their foxholes with grenades and carbine fire.
Killing 9 Germans--wounding 7 and capturing 2--firing about 175
rounds of carbine ammunition, and expending 11 grenades, T/Sgt.
Dunham, despite a painful wound, spearheaded a spectacular and
successful diversionary attack. | |
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