This Memorial Day weekend we honor the life of Jose F. Valdez, who single-handedly held off over 200 German soldiers.
He was on outpost duty with five others when the enemy counterattacked with overwhelming strength. From his position near some woods 500 yards beyond the American lines he observed a hostile tank about 75 yards away, and raked it with automatic rifle fire until it withdrew. Soon afterward he saw three Germans stealthily approaching through the woods. Scorning cover as the enemy soldiers opened up with heavy automatic-weapon fire from a range of 30 yards, he engaged in a firefight with the attackers until he had killed all three. The enemy quickly launched an attack with two full companies of infantrymen, blasting the patrol with murderous concentrations of automatic and rifle fire and beginning an encircling movement which forced the patrol leader to order a withdrawal. Despite the terrible odds, Pfc. Valdez immediately volunteered to cover the maneuver, and as the patrol one by one plunged through a hail of bullets toward the American lines, he fired burst after burst into the swarming enemy. Three of his companions were wounded in their dash for safety and he was struck by a bullet that entered his stomach and, passing through his body, emerged from his back. Overcoming agonizing pain, he regained control of himself and resumed his firing position, delivering a protective screen of bullets until all others of the patrol were safe. By field telephone he called for artillery and mortar fire on the Germans and corrected the range until he had shells falling within 50 yards of his position. For 15 minutes he refused to be dislodged by more than 200 of the enemy; then, seeing that the barrage had broken the counterattack, he dragged himself back to his own lines. He died later as a result of his wounds. Through his valiant, intrepid stand and at the cost of his own life, Pfc. Valdez made it possible for his comrades to escape, and was directly responsible for repulsing an attack by vastly superior enemy forces.
PFC Valdez was 20 years old.
ReplyDeleteHopefully he got the MoH.
ReplyDeleteAwarded February 8, 1946. The above text is from his Citation.
DeleteFor my freshman cruise in NROTC, summer 1975, I was stationed on the USS Valdez, FF-1096 (a Knox-class frigate) at Charleston Naval Base.
ReplyDeleteCNB is no more. It is now high end condos, apartments & restaraunts. But you can visit the USS Yorktown and the Apollo 8 Capsule in the harbor.
DeleteLooks like a real good kid. Must be missed a lot by his family, bet they was rightfully proud if him.
ReplyDeleteThat's quite the guy!
ReplyDeleteA true American...
ReplyDeleteThat's courage. 4-5 more men of his caliber and they may well have held that OP.
ReplyDeleteMen like this should lead us. Not men who faked bone spurs to avoid serving.
ReplyDeleteCharacter matters.
That's one hell of a story and epitaph for a brave young man.
ReplyDeleteNemo
Bravo Zulu young man.
ReplyDelete