词条 | Joseph Vittori | ||||||||||||||
释义 |
|name= Joseph Vittori |birth_date= {{Birth date|1929|8|1}} |death_date= {{Death date and age|1951|9|16|1929|8|1}} |birth_place= Beverly, Massachusetts |death_place= Killed in action near Songnae-dong, Korea |placeofburial= initially United Nations military cemetery, Tanggok, Korea later St. Mary’s Cemetery, Beverly, Massachusetts |placeofburial_label= Place of burial |image= Vittori J.jpg |medal=Moh right.gif |medal_alt= A light blue neck ribbon with a gold star shaped medallion hanging from it. The ribbon is similar in shape to a bowtie with 13 white stars in the center of the ribbon. |caption= Joseph Vittori, posthumous Medal of Honor recipient |nickname= |allegiance={{flagicon|United States}} United States of America |branch= United States Marine Corps |serviceyears= 1946–1949, 1950–1951 |rank= Corporal |commands= |unit= 2nd Battalion, 1st Marines |battles=Korean War |awards= Medal of Honor Purple Heart (x2) |laterwork= }} Corporal Joseph Vittori (August 1, 1929 – September 16, 1951) was a 22-year-old United States Marine who was killed in action during the Korean War. After serving 3 years in the Marine Corps he returned home, joined the Marine Corps Reserve and worked various jobs around his home town. His unit was called to active duty to participate in the Korean war and after attending some training they were sent to Korea. He was killed during the Battle of the Punchbowl while defending against an assault on Hill 749 near Songnea-dong, Korea on the night of September 15–16, 1951. He was fatally wounded while fighting off an enemy breakthrough at a gap in his battalion's lines. He was the 19th Marine to earn the nation's highest decoration for heroism in Korea. For his actions he posthumously received the Medal of Honor. Early lifeVittori was born in Beverly, Massachusetts August 1, 1929 and attended school there until graduating from high school. He worked on his father's farm until October 4, 1946 and then joined the Marine Corps on a three-year enlistment.[1] Military careerAfter enlisting he was sent to the Marine Corps Recruit Depot Parris Island in South Carolina where he graduated in December 1946. He served briefly at the Norfolk Naval Shipyard in Norfolk, Virginia and Brooklyn Navy Yard in Brooklyn, New York before being attached to the Marine Detachment aboard the {{USS|Portsmouth|CL-102|6}} from April to June 1947. After sea duty he was then stationed at the Philadelphia Navy Yard until May 1948, when he joined the 2nd Marine Division at Camp Lejeune North Carolina. From January to May 1949, he served with the Sixth Fleet in the Mediterranean area and again served at Camp Lejeune, until October 3, 1949, when he was discharged.[1] With his service to the Marine Corps over he returned to his hometown of Beverly, Massachusetts and worked for a year as a plasterer and bricklayer until enlisting in the Marine Corps Reserve on September 26, 1950 for an indefinite tour of active duty. He was sent back to Camp Lejeune for training until January 1951, when he arrived in Korea to join Company F, Second Battalion, First Marines, First Marine Division (Reinforced). He participated in the South and Central Korean campaign, receiving a promotion to corporal on June 15, 1951.[1] On June 9, 1951, he earned his first Purple Heart when was wounded near Yanggu, and after leaving the field hospital, was assigned a position as a property sergeant. After a week at the new job, he asked to rejoin his buddies in his old infantry platoon, and was allowed to do so.[1] On September 16, 1951 during the Battle of the Punchbowl his company was assaulting Hill 749, where the Korean People's Army had established several entrenched positions. A vicious enemy counter-attack drove back a forward platoon with heavy casualties, and along with two other volunteers from his reserve platoon, he dashed into hand-to-hand combat in the midst of the swarming enemy to give the Marine company time to consolidate its positions.[1] Later, when a call went up for an automatic rifleman to defend an isolated heavy machine gun position on the flank of his company's sector, he again volunteered.[1] With heavy casualties leaving a {{convert|100|yd|adj=on}} gap in the Marine lines at the position, he fought a single-handed battle to prevent an enemy breakthrough. Leaping from one side of the position to the other, he kept up a withering fire of over 1,000 rounds in three hours. He made repeated trips through heavy shellfire to replenish his ammunition, manned a machine gun after its gunner fell, and despite enemy penetration to within feet of his position, kept the enemy out of the breach in his company's lines until he was killed. The next morning the Marines counted almost 200 enemy dead in the area.[1] He was killed in action on September 16, 1951, two months after being allowed to return to his unit. He was originally buried at the United Nations military cemetery in Tanggok, Korea. His body was returned to the United States in January 1952 for reburial in St. Mary's Cemetery, Beverly, Massachusetts.[2] The Medal of Honor was presented to his parents on September 7, 1952.[1] Awards and decorationsIn addition to the Medal of Honor, he received two Purple Hearts for wounds received in action and the following medals.[1]
Medal of Honor citationThe President of the United States in the name of The Congress takes pride in presenting the MEDAL OF HONOR posthumously to CORPORAL JOSEPH VITTORI UNITED STATES MARINE CORPS RESERVE for service as set forth in the following CITATION:
/S/ HARRY S. TRUMAN See also{{Portal|Biography|United States Marine Corps}}
Notes1. ^1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 {{Cite web|accessdate=October 12, 2007 |url=http://www.tecom.usmc.mil/HD/Whos_Who/Vittori_J.htm |title=Corporal Joseph Vittori, USMCR|work=Who's Who in Marine Corps History |publisher=History Division, United States Marine Corps}} 2. ^{{Find a Grave|7856886|work=Claim to Fame: Medal of Honor recipients|accessdate=February 23, 2010}} 3. ^*{{Cite web |accessdate=February 23, 2010 |url = http://www.history.army.mil/html/moh/koreanwar.html |title = Medal of Honor recipients |work = Korean War |publisher= United States Army Center of Military History |date = June 8, 2009}} References{{Marine Corps}}
|url=http://www.usmc.mil/moh.nsf/000003c919889c0385255f980058f5b6/0000033ba9f47a7385255fa60054a155?OpenDocument |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20070220130419/http://www.usmc.mil/moh.nsf/000003c919889c0385255f980058f5b6/0000033ba9f47a7385255fa60054a155?OpenDocument |archivedate=February 20, 2007 |title=Cpl Joseph Vittori, Medal of Honor, 1951, 2/1/1, Korea (Medal of Honor citation) |work=Marines Awarded the Medal of Honor |publisher= United States Marine Corps}} Further reading
|accessdate=February 24, 2010 |title = U.S. Marine Corps biographical dictionary: the corps' fighting men, what they did, where they served |work = Vittori, Joseph |publisher = Franklin Watts, Inc. |author= Schuon, Karl |date=June 1963 |page=232 |url = https://books.google.com/books?id=WMY6AAAAIAAJ&printsec=frontcover&source=gbs_v2_summary_r&cad=0#v=onepage&q=&f=false}}
|accessdate=February 23, 2010 |author=Johnston, Maj John H., USMC. |title=A Brief History of the 1st Marines |publisher=Historical Branch, United States Marine Corps |year=1962}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Vittori, Joseph}} 9 : 1929 births|1951 deaths|American military personnel killed in the Korean War|American people of Italian descent|United States Marine Corps Medal of Honor recipients|People from Beverly, Massachusetts|United States Marines|United States Marine Corps reservists|Korean War recipients of the Medal of Honor |
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