Medal of Honor Recipient: Sergeant James W. Robinson Jr.
Rank and organization: Sergeant , U.S.
Army, Company C, 2d Battalion, 16th Infantry, 1st Infantry Division. Place and
date: Republic of
Vietnam , 11 April 1966 . Entered service
at: Chicago , Ill. Born: 30 August 1940 , Hinsdale , Ill.
Citation: For conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity in action at the risk of
his life above and beyond the call of duty. Company C was engaged in fierce
combat with a Viet Cong battalion. Despite the heavy fire, Sgt. Robinson moved
among the men of his fire team, instructing and inspiring them, and placing
them in advantageous positions. Enemy snipers located in nearby trees were
inflicting heavy casualties on forward elements of Sgt. Robinson's unit. Upon
locating the enemy sniper whose fire was taking the heaviest toll, he took a
grenade launcher and eliminated the sniper. Seeing a medic hit while
administering aid to a wounded sergeant in front of his position and aware that
now the 2 wounded men were at the mercy of the enemy, he charged through a
withering hail of fire and dragged his comrades to safety, where he rendered
first aid and saved their lives. As the battle continued and casualties
mounted, Sgt. Robinson moved about under intense fire to collect from the
wounded their weapons and ammunition and redistribute them to able-bodied
soldiers. Adding his fire to that of his men, he assisted in eliminating a
major enemy threat. Seeing another wounded comrade in front of his position,
Sgt. Robinson again defied the enemy's fire to effect a rescue. In so doing he
was himself wounded in the shoulder and leg. Despite his painful wounds, he
dragged the soldier to shelter and saved his life by administering first aid.
While patching his own wounds, he spotted an enemy machinegun which had
inflicted a number of casualties on the American force. His rifle ammunition
expended, he seized 2 grenades and, in an act of unsurpassed heroism, charged
toward the entrenched enemy weapon. Hit again in the leg, this time with a
tracer round which set fire to his clothing, Sgt. Robinson ripped the burning
clothing from his body and staggered indomitably through the enemy fire, now
concentrated solely on him, to within grenade range of the enemy machinegun
position. Sustaining 2 additional chest wounds, he marshaled his fleeting
physical strength and hurled the 2 grenades, thus destroying the enemy gun
position, as he fell dead upon the battlefield. His magnificent display of
leadership and bravery saved several lives and inspired his soldiers to defeat
the numerically superior enemy force. Sgt. Robinson's conspicuous gallantry and
intrepidity, at the cost of his life, are in keeping with the finest traditions
of the U.S. Army and reflect great credit upon the 1st Infantry Division and
the U.S. Armed Forces.
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