THE HEROIC STORY OF "ROBERT CRAIG" HONORING HIM FOR HIS EXTRAORDINARY ACTIONS DURING WWII.

 



Robert Craig, born in Scotland and raised in Toledo, Ohio, was a Second Lieutenant in the U.S. Army and posthumously awarded the Medal of Honor for his heroic actions on July 11, 1943, near Favoratta, Sicily.

Craig entered the Army in February 1941, was commissioned a Second Lieutenant of Infantry and served with the 15th Infantry of the 3rd Infantry Division. 

On July 11, 1943,  during his service leading troops in Operation Husky, the Allied invasion of Sicily, Craig set out to destroy an Italian Army machine gun nest that had halted the advance of his company, 

making his own attempt following the wounding of three other officers who had tried to locate and silence that machine gun emplacement. Craig located the enemy position and killed its three crewmen.

As his company advanced, Craig and his platoon encountered the fire of enemy soldiers. Craig ordered his men to withdraw to cover while he drew the enemy fire on himself. 

From a kneeling position, he killed five and wounded three enemy soldiers while providing the covering fire enabling his platoon to reach cover. He was killed by enemy fire, but his men carried on. His example is credited with spurring them to victory.

He was posthumously awarded the Medal of Honor for his actions on July 11, 1943.


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