TRUE AMERICAN WAR HEROS

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Suzuki Johnny
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TRUE AMERICAN WAR HEROS

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This Wounded Soldier Got Off His Stretcher And Ran Back To The Fight, Killing Enemies With His Rifle And Entrenching Tool

Epic feats of bravery and martial skill rarely take the form of a two-day rampage, but that is how Ben Wilson would earn a Medal of Honor, Purple Heart, and the Distinguished Service Cross. All this and injuries that put him on a stretcher happened on day one of his rampage.
Wilson enlisted in 1940 and was stationed in Hawaii during the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. He served as an officer in WWII and then left the army when the war was over. Deciding civilian life was not for him he reenlisted as a private. By 1951 he had risen to the rank of First Sergeant.
One of Wilson’s biggest assignments during the Korean war was to take the largest hill near the Hwacheon Dam, located in what is now the northern border of South Korea. The dam was a valuable asset to both sides and control over it, and the surrounding area was crucial.
During the fight for Hell Hill, as it was known, Wilson, and his men stormed up the slopes. Following some initial success, they were met by a fierce North Korean counterattack.
Wilson ordered a retreat but stayed in the fight to give his men time to retreat. He went alone on a charge to head off the attacking North Koreans. He single-handedly killed 7 and wounded 2 before returning to his lines.
His men were able to make another small push up the hill before North Korean numbers forced them to again retreat.
Wilson, staying among the front lines, was wounded but remained to guide his men to better positions down the hill. He fought as many as he could with his rifle but somehow lost it. Undaunted, Wilson whipped out his entrenching tool and killed four more men with his sharpened shovel.
Wilson went back to his lines and was taken down the hill on a stretcher. When more massive counterattacks distracted his stretcher-bearers, Wilson decided he was not wounded enough to leave. He leaped off and ran back up the hill. He fought and led his men for the remainder of the day and finally received medical attention that evening. This day of action earned Benjamin Wilson a Medal of Honor and a Purple Heart.
A few days later on June 9, Wilson returned to the fight. His wounds had been sewn up or bandaged so he could continue to fight.
As a side note, this action might have occurred just a day after he was injured, on June 6. The records are unclear, but most official sources say the 9th.





https://www.warhistoryonline.com/instan ... -tool.html
duc, sequere, aut de via decede
"frapper fort, frapper vite, frappée souvent-- Adm William "Bull" Halsey
“We’re not going to just shoot the sons-of-bitches, we’re going to rip out their living Goddamned guts and use them to grease the treads of our tanks.”--Gen George Patton
"Our Liberty is insured by four "Boxes", the Ballot box, the Jury box, the Soap box and the Cartridge box"

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