List of Soldier's Medal recipients
Appearance
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This article contains a list of Wikipedia articles about recipients of the United States Army's Soldier's Medal, awarded to "any person of the Armed Forces of the United States or of a friendly foreign nation who, while serving in any capacity with the Army of the United States, distinguished himself or herself by heroism not involving actual conflict with an enemy." (Army Regulation 600-8-22).
Soldier's Medal
[edit]Inter-war years
[edit]- William A. Matheny, USAAF[1]
World War II
[edit]- Marty Allen, USAAF (comedian)
- Allison Brooks, USAAF
- David E. Grange, Jr., WW2 or Korea
- Bob Hoover, USAAF[2]
- Otto Kerner, Jr., USA
- Charles A. MacGillivary, USA, MOH
- Henry Mucci
- Frank D. Peregory, USA, MOH
- Preston Schoyer, USA [3]
- Walter K. Wilson, Jr., USA, WW2 or other
Korea
[edit]- John T. Corley, USA, Korea or WW2
- John Galvin, USA, Korea or Vietnam
- Reis Leming, USAF, during Korean War
- Leo J. Meyer, USA, Korea, 1951
- Edwin W. Rawlings, USAF, Post-Korea, 1954
- Leon L. Van Autreve, Korea or other
Vietnam
[edit]- Glenn Andreotta, USA
- Leonard Boswell, USA
- Lawrence Colburn, USA
- Richard Gary Davis, USA
- William W. Hartzog, USA
- Mike Hayden, USA
- Colin Powell, USA
- Doug Peacock, USA[4]
- Donn A. Starry, USA[5]
- Hugh Thompson, USA
- Alfred Valenzuela, USA
Gulf War
[edit]- Wayne A. Downing, USA, Gulf War or Vietnam
Awarded Soldier's Medal
[edit]- James Leroy Bondsteel, USA, MOH, Vietnam
- Melbourne Kimsey, USAF
- John K. Singlaub, USA
References
[edit]- ^ Watson, Elmo Scott (July 16, 1931). "The Soldier's Medal". Oak Creek Times. Vol. 23, no. 39. Retrieved September 29, 2016.
- ^ Glines, C.V. (11 August 2001). "Book Review: Forever Flying". HistoryNet. World History Group. Retrieved September 29, 2016.
- ^ Flint, Peter B. (March 14, 1978). "B. Preston Schoyer, 66, Novelist And Author of Articles on China". The New York Times. p. 38. Retrieved July 1, 2023.
- ^ Linfield News Team (September 28, 2012). "Author, veteran to present reading, lecture at Linfield". Linfield News. McMinnville, Oregon: Linfield College. Retrieved July 1, 2023.
- ^ Langer, Emily (September 1, 2011). "Four-star general Donn A. Starry dies at 86". The Washington Post. Retrieved September 29, 2016.