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The U.S. M1911 & The Medal of Honor

Browning’s classic has helped American servicemen earn the Medal of Honor.

12/17/2010

Murvaux, France, Sept. 29, 1918. The blazing remains of three German observation balloons had barely settled to earth when their assailant force-landed in the gathering dusk. Second Lieutenant Frank Luke had taken off against orders and undoubtedly would be court-martialed upon return to the 27th Aero Squadron, but that was far from his mind. He had enjoyed a record string— 18 enemy aircraft destroyed in as many days. But now, wounded by German anti-aircraft fire, he landed his SPAD fighter, climbed from the cockpit, drew his service pistol, and chambered the first round. Losing blood and alone behind enemy lines, he hefted the Colt and perhaps took comfort from its familiar weight. The 21-year-old Arizonan was expert with the Model of 1911 U.S. Army, and he intended to use it.

Members of the German garrison grabbed their Mausers and advanced toward the SPAD. But Luke, the hot-headed aviator, was in no mood to surrender. When he thought he heard movement in the brush near a stream, he fired three rounds.

Moments later Luke was dead, Colt in hand, a long way from the reality of Phoenix and the heritage of Tombstone. After the Great War, which ended six weeks later, he received a posthumous Medal of Honor.

Luke was not the only member of the American Expeditionary Force to use the M1911 that day. Private Frank Gaffney of the 27th Infantry Division and Lt. Col. Fred Smith, a battalion commander in the 77th, both earned their nation’s highest award in actions involving John M. Browning’s masterpiece on Sept. 29. Smith’s award was posthumous.

In the seven years since the Army had adopted the M1911, the Colt had seen limited combat use. The big pistol had been carried by then-Brig. Gen. John J. Pershing’s troopers during the 1916 punitive expedition into Mexico, but no Medals resulted; however, once Americans were committed to combat in the Great War, John M. Browning’s classic began earning a stellar reputation.

The first Medal awarded to a .45 ACP man went to 1st/Lt. William B. Turner of the 27th Division’s 105th Regiment. In a night action on Sept. 27, 1918, Turner rushed a German machine gun, which opened fire on his group, and he killed the crew with his pistol. Then he pressed forward to another machine gun post 25 yards away and killed one gunner before the rest of his detachment arrived to put the gun out of action. Turner continued leading his men over three lines of hostile trenches, cleaning up each one in turn. Despite repeated wounds, he pressed the attack, and after his .45 ammunition was exhausted, he picked up a rifle and bayoneted several enemies in hand-to-hand encounters. He then organized a counterattack until he was finally surrounded and killed.

The most famous episode occurred on Oct. 8, when Cpl. Alvin York of the 82nd Division used his rifle and his M1911 to kill 25 German machine gunners and infantrymen while capturing an incredible 132 more. Eight decades later, examination of cartridge cases found in the area of York’s action indicated that he may have used his pistol more than his rifle.

Four more doughboys used Colts in Medal of Honor actions that same day, including three from the 30th Division. A junior officer from the 29th, 2nd/Lt. Patrick Regan wielded an empty M1911 to capture 30 Austrians manning four machine guns. The next month 1st/Sgt. Benjamin Kaufman, 77th Division, also bluffed several Germans with an empty pistol.

On Oct. 11 the 30th Division’s Sgt. Richmond H. Hilton used his Colt to kill six enemy soldiers and capture 10 before losing an arm in a shell blast. Another marksman wielding his sidearm was 1st/Lt. Samuel Woodfill on Oct. 12. Despite being gassed, Woodfill—a superb hunter—made 300-yard head shots with his rifle on Maxim gunners, then closed on the enemy. He carried an M1911 given to him by a French civilian who had found the pistol after doughboys had left the area. Though more familiar with revolvers, Woodfill put the semi-automatic to efficient use in clearing the German trenches.

In all, seven officers, three noncommissioned officers and three enlisted men were presented the pale-blue ribbon with 13 white stars for actions involving the Colt semi-automatic during September and October 1918. That figure would be eclipsed in the next world war.

Seventy-Five Years Of 1911s
In the 75 years from 1918 to 1993, at least 55 Medals of Honor were presented to men carrying the .45 ACP. The next cases involved at least 20 M1911 actions in World War II, a dozen in Korea, seven in Vietnam, and finally two in Somalia. The exact total is unknown, as most citations only refer to “pistol” or “revolver” and some famous events do not mention sidearms at all. York’s is one case, and so is the only known interwar MOH event: Marine 2nd/Lt. Herman Hanneken’s methodical hunt for the Haitian bandit leader “Charlemagne” in 1919. While Hanneken used his Colt to end Charlemagne’s depredations, Cpl. W.R. Button used another Browning classic—the Browning Automatic Rifle—to chop down the outlaw’s bodyguards.

The World War II actions were equally divided between the Pacific Theater of Operations and the European area. The first event occurred in the Philippines during February 1942 when 1st/Lt. Willibald C. Bianchi died while leading his Filipino Scouts against the Japanese invaders. Almost a year later, Maj. Charles W. Davis wielded his Colt in leading men of the 25th Infantry Division on Guadalcanal in the Solomon Islands. Neither officer was known to have killed enemy troops in those actions, but the citations make it clear that both carried M1911s while performing “above and beyond the call of duty.”

Two of the most remarkable M1911 actions came in the Marianas in June and July 1944. The Army’s 27th Division, stalled in its advance on Saipan, met determined Japanese defenses in depth. Private Thomas A. Baker of the same regiment as Lt. Turner in 1918 had received a Medal nomination for his courage and initiative in reducing enemy bunkers during June. By July 7 he was a sergeant manning a perimeter attacked by thousands of Japanese from three sides. Though wounded, Baker remained on the line, fired his rifle empty, and then used it as a club. Baker declined the chance to be evacuated in the forced withdrawal, saying he did not want to slow his men’s progress. He asked to be left with the last ammunition available—an M1911 containing eight rounds.

The citation said, “When last seen alive, Sgt. Baker was propped against a tree, pistol in hand, calmly facing the foe. Later Sgt. Baker’s body was found in the same position, gun empty, with eight Japanese lying dead before him.”

At that same time Lt. Col. William J. O’Brien carried two Colts, firing with enthusiasm if not precision in defense of his battalion’s perimeter nearby. He fought until killed manning a Browning .50-cal. machine gun.

As the Central Pacific campaign drove westward, MacArthur fulfilled his pledge and returned to the Philippines in the fall of 1944. Two G.I.s fired their Colts in earning Medals of Honor that December, providing a geographical symmetry to the cycle begun by Lt. Bianchi almost three years before. Private First Class George R. Benjamin of the 77th Division was killed while serving as a radio operator, and PFC Dirk J. Vlug of the 32nd used a bazooka and his pistol in destroying five tanks.

Iwo Jima was the bloodiest battle in Marine Corps history, and three leathernecks of the 4th and 5th Divisions used sidearms on the sulphrous island during February and March 1945. Two of the men, Sgt. Darrell S. Cole and 1st/Lt. Harry L. Martin, were killed in the actions for which they were decorated.

The final recorded M1911 action in the Pacific came on Okinawa that May. A navy corpsman, 19-year-old Robert E. Bush, used a pistol to defend wounded Marines in danger of being overrun by Japanese troops, who were not inclined to take prisoners. Bush’s action also was the last involving an M1911 in the Second World War.

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6 Responses to The U.S. M1911 & The Medal of Honor

Bob Kilpatrick wrote:
January 01, 2011

This is not Medal of Honor episode, but appropriate to the M1911 story. From "We Were Soldiers Once... and Young" by Harold G. Moore and Joseph L. Galloway, about the 7th Cavalry's fight in the Ia Drang Valley of South Vietnam in November 1965: "On the M-60 machine gun, according to extracts from his Silver Star citation, Specialist (Willard) Parish delivered lethal fire on wave after wave of the enemy until he ran out of ammunition. Then, standing up under fire with a .45 pistol in each hand, Parish fired clip after clip into the enemy, who were twenty yards out; he stopped their attack. Says Parish: 'I feel like I didn't do any more than anybody else did up there. I remember a lot of noise, a lot of yelling, and then all at once it was quiet.' The silence out in front of Willard Parish was that of a cemetery: More than a hundred dead North Vietnamese were later found where they had fallen in a semicircle around his foxhole."

Nanook wrote:
December 28, 2010

Beautifully written. One cannot help but wonder why, with a weapon so supurb, developed for the reason it was developed, and never a better caliber devoped, the Army would wish to re-invent. From Pershing forward, it has proven over & over again to be the combat multiplier that it was intended to be. I witnessed some of the testing back when the Army had decided to test the various 9mm's. Although fine weapons were presented, I felt then and feel now that it was a huge mistake to retire the .45. I, personally have several Sig. P220's in the .45 caliber, and would have all I could get my hands on. The Sig fits my hand like a glove where the Colt was a little too small to feel right. I still was one of the few that could fire expert with it, though. A Great Weapon that should be returned. Like it is said, why fire more rounds, when one will do the job.

Bob Given wrote:
December 26, 2010

Why use a 'restored' pre-war M1911 example that has had all it's history washed away by Turnbull, when there are several original, mint examples from every WWI year available to you at AR just for the asking ?? I for one could have fulfilled this need easily.

Kenneth Smith, Friend of Henry Commiskey wrote:
December 25, 2010

There was another Marine that earned the Medal of Honor using the M1911 on 20 September 1950. His Citation is as follows: Medal of Honor citation The President of the United States takes pleasure in presenting the MEDAL OF HONOR to FIRST LIEUTENANT HENRY A. COMMISKEY UNITED STATES MARINE CORPS for service as set forth in the following CITATION: For conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of his life above and beyond the call of duty while serving as a Platoon Leader in Company C, First Battalion, First Marines, First Marine Division (Reinforced), in action against enemy aggressor forces near Yongdungp'o, Korea, on 20 September 1950. Directed to attack hostile forces well dug in on Hill 85, First Lieutenant Commiskey, then Second Lieutenant, spearheaded the assault, charging up the steep slopes on the run. Coolly disregarding the heavy enemy machine-gun and small-arms fire, he plunged on well forward of the rest of his platoon and was the first man to reach the crest of the objective. Armed only with a pistol, he jumped into a hostile machine-gun emplacement occupied by five enemy troops and quickly disposed of four of the soldiers with his automatic pistol. Grappling with the fifth, First Lieutenant Commiskey knocked him to the ground and held him until he could obtain a weapon from another member of his platoon and kill the last of the enemy gun crew. Continuing his bold assault, he moved to the next emplacement, killed two or more of the enemy and then led his platoon toward the rear nose of the hill to rout the remainder of the enemy. His valiant leadership and courageous fighting spirit served to inspire the men of his company to heroic endeavor in seizing the objective and reflect the highest credit upon First Lieutenant Commiskey and the United States Naval Service.[4]

James Daly wrote:
December 20, 2010

Lt. Bianchi (45th Infantry, Phillipine Scouts)died in January, 1945 while being transported to Japan on tan infamous "hell" ship. His remains were never recovered. He had survived the fighting and had spent several years in prison camps.

SGT Gabrielli wrote:
December 20, 2010

Page 8 of your JAN 2011 issue, incorrectly reports "... a group of 17 Americans of the 328th Infantry Reg, 82nd "Rainbow" Div..." The Rainbow Div was the 42nd not the 82nd.