#MedalofHonor Monday! 🇺🇸 This week in #history (1946), a hero is awarded the Medal of Honor. John McKinney’s story could have easily become lost to history, if only because McKinney himself seemed anxious to forget what he’d been through.
“When the Georgian came home, he was invited to many military functions,” a local newspaper reported in 1964, “but he declined most of the invitations. He said he wanted to forget the war.” Indeed, the paper concluded, he mostly “shuns parades and ceremonies.”
When the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor, he wanted to join the army, but he couldn’t. His help was needed at home, so he stayed—at least until his draft notice arrived.
McKinney’s heroism came in the Philippines during May 1945. He was at an outpost in Tayabas Province just before dawn on the 11th. He was attempting to sleep in a tent not too far from an American machine-gun position.
“Day was just starting to break,” McKinney later described. “I first heard the kid on the machine gun holler. Next thing I knew, they were chopping at me.”
The flap to his tent had been flung open, and a Japanese sergeant lunged inside, wielding a sword. He swung down on McKinney’s head, fortunately missing everything but his right ear. Another Japanese soldier was behind the first, bayonet at the ready.
McKinney took out one with the butt of his rifle. He was soon shooting from his hip, taking the other enemy soldier out as well. But he was getting worried about the lack of response from the American machine gun nearby.
What had happened to the soldiers stationed there? He would soon discover one soldier fatally wounded, one in shock, and one injured. The latter witnessed what followed as McKinney was left to defend the machine gun—alone.
“Pvt. McKinney was confronted by 10 infantrymen who had captured the machine gun with the evident intent of reversing it to fire into the perimeter,” McKinney’s Medal citation describes.
The attacks just kept coming. Wave after wave of Japanese came for McKinney. At some point, the machine gun became inoperative, and he was left with only his rifle—and his hands.
Nevertheless, his Medal citation notes that he “cut down waves of the fanatical enemy with devastating fire or clubbed them to death in hand-to-hand combat.”
“I really didn’t get scared until it was all over,” he remembered afterwards. “Later, that afternoon, I got to thinking about it and got to shaking a little.”
McKinney had “saved his company from possible annihilation,” his Medal citation concluded. He was awarded the Medal by Harry Truman, who called his award a “great citation.”
Naturally, McKinney didn’t think he’d done anything special. “Everybody in the infantry should get one,” he shrugged. “The infantry had it roughest of all.”
“In certain ways, John McKinney was not unlike other Americans who went off to war,” his biographer Forrest B Johnson concludes. “Most of them had nothing of monetary value or power to return to;they fought because America had an enemy who threatened freedom..." /20 of X #history
".....In one inspiring moment of courage, John McKinney proved that patriotism, bravery, and resourcefulness can come from a simple country boy.”
This day in #history (1777) General George Washington writes a letter from Valley Forge. The army was struggling, and Washington pled for help. A copy of Washington’s letter was delivered to nearly every state. /1 of X #America#AmericanRevolution
Would states think he was exaggerating the gravity of the situation? Was his story even believable? But clothes & other supplies were desperately needed. Nearly 3,000 of his 11,000 men were “unfit for duty by reason of their being bare foot and otherwise naked.” /2 of X #history
That didn’t even count the soldiers who had been “detained in Hospitals and crouded in Farmers Houses for the same causes.” /3 of X #America#history#AmericanRevolution
This day in #history (1825) James Wilkinson dies in Mexico City. He has been called the “most notorious American traitor you’ve probably never heard of.” Another historian has called him the “the most consummate artist in treason that the nation ever possessed.” /1 of X
He must have been! His questionable activities were not proven until decades after his death. /2 of X #history#America
Wilkinson had his finger in many pies. Early on, he found himself in trouble during the Conway Cabal, an effort to have George Washington replaced as Commander-in-Chief of the Continental Army. He even had to resign from the army for a period of time.
/3 of X #history#America
This day in #history (1776): General George Washington makes a harrowing trip across the Delaware River, in the dead of night. The tremendous feat came just when it was needed most. /1 of X #America
Washington’s army was reeling from a series of crushing defeats: The British had won important battles in New York and had chased Americans across New Jersey. Early in December, a defeated American army had narrowly escaped across the Delaware River. /2 of X #history#America
That river provided a barrier from further British attacks, at least for the moment, because Washington had ensured the destruction of every boat for miles around. /3 of X #history#America
"Christmas is also a time to remember the treasures of our own history. We remember one Christmas in particular, 1776, our first year as a nation..... /1 of X
"......The Revolutionary War had been going badly. But George Washington’s faith, courage, and leadership would turn the tide of history our way. On Christmas night he led a band of ragged soldiers..... /2 of X
"...across the Delaware River through driving snow to a victory that saved the cause of independence. It’s said that their route of march was stained by bloody footprints, but their spirit never faltered and their will could not be crushed...." /3 of X
This week in #history (1777) George Washington’s army marches into Valley Forge. When you think of Valley Forge, you probably think of half-clothed & starving men, suffering through a long winter, barely surviving.
But Valley Forge was so much more than that. /1 of X #American
For one thing, the mood in Valley Forge was significantly better than you might imagine. Yes, some men were not well-clothed and suffered hardships accordingly. But . . . . /2 of X #American#history#freedom
But the men who were more fully outfitted took the difficult outdoor tasks. And everyone pitched in, finding supplies in the area around them. Did you know that they built a small city of huts to house themselves? /3 of X #American#history#freedom
#MedalOfHonor Monday 🇺🇸 At about this time in 1944, a hero leads his men in a tough battle against the Japanese. Then-First Lieutenant Robert B. Nett would be wounded multiple times, even taking a shot to his neck. Amazingly, Nett survived..... /1 of X #history
He would go on to personally receive his Medal of Honor.
Nett was inspired by a family friend to join the military, originally joining the Connecticut National Guard in 1941. Unsurprisingly, his unit was activated in the wake of the attack on Pearl Harbor. /2 of X #history#Army
By 1944, he was serving with the U.S. Army in the south Pacific. He’d been in Guam that summer, but found himself in Leyte by the end of the year. / 3 of X