[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 55 (Wednesday, March 29, 2017)]
[House]
[Pages H2520-H2521]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
RECOGNIZING MEDAL OF HONOR DAY
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Pennsylvania (Mr. Thompson) for 5 minutes.
Mr. THOMPSON of Pennsylvania. Mr. Speaker, on Saturday the Nation
celebrated Medal of Honor Day. This rarely celebrated holiday was
designated by Congress in 1990 but only officially observed once, on
March 25, 1991. I was pleased to see our most decorated war heroes
honored last Friday during a ceremony at the White House.
The Medal of Honor is the highest military honor our Nation can
bestow. According to the Congressional Medal of Honor Society, there
have been 3,498 recipients, and 75 of those individuals are still
living today.
Just last year, I was able to recognize one of Pennsylvania's very
own Medal of Honor recipients, late Army Specialist Ross McGinnis. I
assisted in naming a post office in Knox, Clarion County, for
Specialist McGinnis, who died in December 2006 in Iraq. Specialist
McGinnis was a native son of Knox, Pennsylvania.
While on patrol in eastern Baghdad on December 4, 2006, an
unidentified insurgent positioned on a nearby rooftop threw a grenade
into a Humvee carrying McGinnis and other troops. Specialist McGinnis
threw his body on top of the grenade, absorbing all the fragments of
the grenade with his own body and saving the lives of his fellow
soldiers. He was posthumously awarded the Medal of Honor by President
George W. Bush in 2008.
Mr. Speaker, another such hero, Foster Joseph Sayers, is from my
hometown of Howard, Pennsylvania. He received the Medal of Honor for
acts of bravery near Thionville, France, on November 12, 1944.
During an attack on strong hostile forces entrenched on a hill, he
fearlessly ran up the steep approach towards his objective and then set
up a machine gun 20 yards from the enemy. Realizing it would be
necessary to attract full attention of the enemy while his company
crossed an open area and flanked the enemy, he picked up the gun,
charged through withering machine-gun and rifle fire to the very edge
of the emplacement. He killed 12 German soldiers with devastating
close-range fire.
He took up a position behind a log and engaged the hostile enemy from
the flank in an heroic attempt to distract their attention while his
comrades obtained their objective at the crest of the hill. He was
killed by the very heavy concentration of return fire, but his fearless
assault enabled his company to sweep the hill with minimum casualties,
killing or capturing every enemy soldier on it.
Private First Class Sayers' indomitable fighting spirit,
aggressiveness, and supreme devotion to duty live on as an example of
the highest traditions of the military service for which he was awarded
the Medal of Honor.
Another heroic Medal of Honor recipient from Pennsylvania's Fifth
Congressional District is Private First Class Melvin L. Brown. Private
First Class Brown earned the Medal of Honor for his bravery in the
Korean war.
During an attack on his platoon's perimeter of defense, Private First
Class Brown took his position on a retaining wall approximately 50 feet
high. The enemy, superior in number, started climbing the wall just as
Brown's last round of ammunition was expended, and he was wounded by
enemy fire. His citation said: ``Realizing the vital necessity for
holding and without concern for his personal safety, though wounded and
without his rifle, Brown continued to throw his few remaining hand
grenades into the enemy, causing several casualties with each grenade.
When his supply of grenades was depleted, his comrades from nearby
foxholes commenced throwing grenades towards his position. On several
occasions, the grenades were thrown short of his position. When this
would occur, Brown would leave his position and retrieve the grenades,
exposing himself to enemy rifle and machine-gun fire.''
The enemy continued their climb, and Brown was able to knock 10 to 12
enemy troops from the wall, which served as an inspiration to his
comrades and delayed the attack and enabled his platoon to repel the
enemy. Brown was seriously injured and then died during that action.
Heroic acts for Pennsylvanians during times of war go back to the
Civil War. The Medal of Honor, established by joint resolution of
Congress on the 12th of July 1862, is awarded in the name of Congress
to a person who, while a member of the armed services, distinguishes
himself conspicuously by gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of his
life, above and beyond the call of duty.
A large percentage of Medal of Honor recipients during this time were
actually awarded for action involving flags. One such Medal of Honor
recipient from my hometown was Civil War Corporal Franklin Hogan, a
member of Company A, Pennsylvania 45th Infantry. His citation was
awarded on October 1, 1864, for the capture of the battle flag of the
6th Virginia Infantry.
Mr. Speaker, there are more Medal of Honor recipients from
Pennsylvania's
[[Page H2521]]
Fifth Congressional District and throughout this proud Nation. Each one
demonstrated personal bravery or self-sacrifice that warranted this
extraordinary merit. On behalf of a grateful Nation, I salute all of
our Medal of Honor recipients.
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