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| It was Wednesday, May 26, 1943. The
weather was nice for a change...as nice as weather
could get for Attu during this time of year. The
battle for Attu was still raging...it would be three
more days before major fighting for possession of
Attu would end.
The bulk of the remaining Japanese defensive forces by now had retreated to Chichagof village, with pockets of Japanese defenders spread around the mountain tops and ridges protecting the village from U.S. Forces. Sixty two Air Force planes in relays attacked Chichagof village this day until the Japanese camp was destroyed. The end of the Japanese occupation of Attu was near. A battalion of the 4th Infantry reorganized into squads, elements, and individuals who inched up through the cold rocks in their attempt to drive the Japanese off the Ridge. Japanese soldiers, laying in trenches and concealed by snowdrifts and rocks along Fish Hook Ridge, held the Americans back by rolling hand grenades down into their positions. Private Joe P. Martinez, born in Taos, New Mexico and having enlisted in the U.S. Army at Ault, Colorado, was an automatic rifleman in Company K of the 32nd Infantry. With his Company stalled by entrenched enemy soldiers, Martinez stood up and walked into the enemy's fire, and slaughtered five Japanese soldiers with grenades and his BAR (Browning Automatic Rifle). He reached the crest of the ridge before he collapsed with a mortal wound he had taken fifty yards down the hill. The U. S. Northern Force followed him up the hill and took the northwestern razorback of the Fish Hook that Martinez had cleared. It was too late for Martinez to revel in their victory. Joseph P. Martinez's posthumous reward was Attu's only Medal of Honor, and was awarded on 27 October, 1943. Click HERE to
read his story from His citation reads:
Links to sites about Joseph P. Martinez |
Last Updated: 29 March 2006 19:04
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