Medal of Honor Recipient: Private First Class Charles N. Deglopper
Rank and organization: Private First Class, U.S. Army,
Co. C, 325th Glider Infantry, 82d Airborne Division. Place and date: Merderet River at la Fiere, France,
9 June 1944.
Entered service at: Grand Island,
N.Y. Birth: Grand Island, N.Y. G.O. No.: 22, 28 February 1946.
Citation:
He was a member of Company C, 325th Glider Infantry, on 9 June 1944 advancing with the forward
platoon to secure a bridgehead across the Merderet River
at La Fiere, France. At dawn the platoon had penetrated an outer line of
machineguns and riflemen, but in so doing had become cut off from the rest of
the company. Vastly superior forces began a decimation of the stricken unit and
put in motion a flanking maneuver which would have completely exposed the
American platoon in a shallow roadside ditch where it had taken cover.
Detecting this danger, Pfc. DeGlopper volunteered to support his comrades by
fire from his automatic rifle while they attempted a withdrawal through a break
in a hedgerow 40 yards to the rear. Scorning a concentration of enemy automatic
weapons and rifle fire, he walked from the ditch onto the road in full view of
the Germans, and sprayed the hostile positions with assault fire. He was
wounded, but he continued firing. Struck again, he started to fall; and yet his
grim determination and valiant fighting spirit could not be broken. Kneeling in
the roadway, weakened by his grievous wounds, he leveled his heavy weapon
against the enemy and fired burst after burst until killed outright. He was
successful in drawing the enemy action away from his fellow soldiers, who
continued the fight from a more advantageous position and established the first
bridgehead over the Merderet. In the area where he made his intrepid stand his
comrades later found the ground strewn with dead Germans and many machineguns
and automatic weapons which he had knocked out of action. Pfc. DeGlopper's
gallant sacrifice and unflinching heroism while facing unsurmountable odds were
in great measure responsible for a highly important tactical victory in the
Normandy Campaign.
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