Final Honors for Medal of Honor Warrior

Zaphod

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04/08/2009

Russell Dunham will be laid to rest Friday morning at Valhalla Memorial Park in Godfrey. He died Monday of heart failure at his home in Godfrey. For most of his 89 years, he appeared to have been an ordinary man, scuffling for a living during the Depression, joining the Army, working as a veterans counselor in St. Louis, retiring to a farm near Jerseyville.

But they don't give the Medal of Honor to ordinary men.

During World War II, Mr. Dunham fought his way from North Africa to Sicily to Italy and then into France. On the afternoon of Jan. 8, 1945, on a snowy hillside near the Alsatian village of Kaysersberg (sometimes known as Kayserberg), not far from the German border, Russell Dunham earned his place in that other Valhalla, the legendary Norse hall of warriors.

From the official Medal of Honor Citation:
DUNHAM, RUSSELL E.

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 machine guns.

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 machine guns and supporting riflemen. His platoon 35 yards behind him, T/Sgt. Dunham crawled 75 yards under heavy direct fire toward the timbered emplacement shielding the left machine gun.

As he jumped to his feet 10 yards from the gun and charged forward, machine gun 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 machine gunner 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 machine gun. 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 machine gun 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 machine gun emplacement and killed the crew with hand grenades. An enemy rifleman fired at point-blank 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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"It is foolish and wrong to mourn the men who died. Rather we should thank God that such men lived." - General George S. Patton
 
Valahalla is a fiting resting place for a Hero. May the Valkyries carry him to his rest.
 
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