Medal of Honor Recipient: First Lieutenant Raymond L. Knight
Rank and organization: First Lieutenant, U.S. Army Air
Corps. Place and date: In Northern Po Valley, Italy, 2425 April 1945. Entered
service at: Houston , Tex. Birth: Texas . G.O. No.: 81, 24 September 1945 .
Citation: He piloted a fighter-bomber aircraft in a series of low-level strafing missions, destroying 14 grounded enemy aircraft and leading attacks which wrecked 10 others during a critical period of the Allied drive in northernItaly . On the
morning of 24 April, he volunteered to lead 2 other aircraft against the
strongly defended enemy airdrome at Ghedi. Ordering his fellow pilots to remain
aloft, he skimmed the ground through a deadly curtain of antiaircraft fire to
reconnoiter the field, locating 8 German aircraft hidden beneath heavy
camouflage. He rejoined his flight, briefed them by radio, and then led them
with consummate skill through the hail of enemy fire in a low-level attack,
destroying 5 aircraft, while his flight accounted for 2 others. Returning to his
base, he volunteered to lead 3 other aircraft in reconnaissance of Bergamo airfield, an
enemy base near Ghedi and 1 known to be equally well defended. Again ordering
his flight to remain out of range of antiaircraft fire, 1st Lt. Knight flew
through an exceptionally intense barrage, which heavily damaged his
Thunderbolt, to observe the field at minimum altitude. He discovered a squadron
of enemy aircraft under heavy camouflage and led his flight to the assault.
Returning alone after this strafing, he made 10 deliberate passes against the
field despite being hit by antiaircraft fire twice more, destroying 6 fully
loaded enemy twin-engine aircraft and 2 fighters. His skillfully led attack
enabled his flight to destroy 4 other twin-engine aircraft and a fighter plane.
He then returned to his base in his seriously damaged plane. Early the next
morning, when he again attacked Bergamo ,
he sighted an enemy plane on the runway. Again he led 3 other American pilots
in a blistering low-level sweep through vicious antiaircraft fire that damaged
his plane so severely that it was virtually nonflyable. Three of the few
remaining enemy twin-engine aircraft at that base were destroyed. Realizing the
critical need for aircraft in his unit, he declined to parachute to safety over
friendly territory and unhesitatingly attempted to return his shattered plane
to his home field. With great skill and strength, he flew homeward until caught
by treacherous air conditions in the Appennines
Mountains , where he
crashed and was killed. The gallant action of 1st Lt. Knight eliminated the
German aircraft which were poised to wreak havoc on Allied forces pressing to
establish the first firm bridgehead across the Po River; his fearless daring
and voluntary self-sacrifice averted possible heavy casualties among ground
forces and the resultant slowing on the German drive culminated in the collapse
of enemy resistance in Italy.
Citation: He piloted a fighter-bomber aircraft in a series of low-level strafing missions, destroying 14 grounded enemy aircraft and leading attacks which wrecked 10 others during a critical period of the Allied drive in northern
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