Rank and organization: Second Lieutenant, U.S. Army, Company E, 20th Infantry, 6th Infantry Division. Place and date: Munoz, Luzon, Philippine Islands, 5 February 1945. Entered service at: Minneapolis, Minn. Birth: South Haven, Minn. G.O. No.: 77, 10 September 1945.
Citation... 2d Lt. Rudolph (then T/Sgt.) was acting as platoon leader at
Munoz, Luzon, Philippine Islands. While administering first aid on the
battlefield, he observed enemy fire issuing from a nearby culvert.
Crawling to the culvert with rifle and grenades, he killed 3 of the
enemy concealed there. He then worked his way across open terrain toward
a line of enemy pillboxes which had immobilized his company. Nearing the
first pillbox, he hurled a grenade through its embrasure and charged the
position. |
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With his bare hands he tore away the wood and tin covering, then dropped a grenade through the opening, killing the enemy gunners and destroying their machinegun. Ordering several riflemen to cover his further advance, 2d Lt. Rudolph seized a pick mattock and made his way to the second pillbox. Piercing its top with the mattock, he dropped a grenade through the hole, fired several rounds from his rifle into it and smothered any surviving enemy by sealing the hole and the embrasure with earth. In quick succession he attacked and neutralized 6 more pillboxes. Later, when his platoon was attacked by an enemy tank, he advanced under covering fire, climbed to the top of the tank and dropped a white phosphorus grenade through the turret, destroying the crew. Through his outstanding heroism, superb courage, and leadership, and complete disregard for his own safety, 2d Lt. Rudolph cleared a path for an advance which culminated in one of the most decisive victories of the Philippine campaign. | |
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