Page 9 - Black History Month 2021 - Combined Special Edition of Luke AFB Thunderbolt Davis-Monthan AFB Desert Lightning News
P. 9

U.S. Air Force graphic by Staff Sgt. Alexx Pons
 8  January 29, 2021                                                                                                                                   9
 www.aerotechnews.com
 Facebook.com/AerotechNewsandReview
 Medal  of Honor Recipients                                                        Army Sgt. mAJ. CHriStiAn Fleetwood
  of Honor Recipients
 Medal of Honor Recipients
 Medal


                                                                                                                                    by
                                                                                                                              KATIE LANGE

                                                                                                                                  DoD News
 — Army Sgt. Henry JoHnSon —                                                                                   tion Proclamation on Jan. 1, 1863, many Black men joined
                                                                                                                 After President Abraham Lincoln issued the Emancipa-
                                                                                                               the Army to fight for the Union and their freedom. One of
                                                                                                               them was Christian Fleetwood, who became one of 17 Black
 by    death was to be preferred to a German prison,”                                                          Soldiers to earn the Medal of Honor during the Civil War.
                                                                                                                 Fleetwood was born on July 21, 1840, into a free family
 Col. RICHARD GOLDENBERG  Little wrote. “But Johnson was of the opinion that                                   in Baltimore, Maryland. He was educated in the home of his
 victory was to be preferred to either.”
 New York Army National Guard  Johnson reached for his bolo knife and charged.                                 father’s employer, a sugar merchant, and later graduated
 He  was  26  years  old,  5-foot-4,  weighed  130   His aggressiveness took the Germans by surprise.          from Ashmun Institute in Oxford, Pennsylvania. The school
 pounds and came from Albany, New York. And,   “As Johnson sprang, he unsheathed his bolo                      is  now  Lincoln  University;  some  notable  alumni  include
                                                                                                               Thurgood Marshall and Langston Hughes.
 on the night of May 15, 1918, Army Pvt. Henry   knife, and as his knees landed upon the shoulders               According to the Library of Congress, Fleetwood worked
 Johnson,  a  member  of  the  all-black  New  York   of that ill-fated Boche, the blade of the knife was
 National Guard 369th Infantry Regiment, found   buried to the hilt through the crown of the Ger-              for  the  Maryland  Colonization  Society  and  traveled  to
                                                                                                               African countries. He later published Baltimore’s Lyceum
 himself fighting for his life against 20 German   man’s head.”
 soldiers out in front of his unit’s trenchline.  The Army adopted the bolo knife from its experi-  Courtesy photo  Observer, which was one of the first Black newspapers in
 Johnson fired the three rounds in his French-  ence in the Philippine Insurrection of 1899. The big   A Civil War-era photo shows   border slave states.
 made rifle, tossed all his hand grenades and then   knife, used by Philippine insurgents, was heavily   Army Sgt. Maj. Christian Fleet-  Seven  months  after  Lincoln  issued  the  Emancipation
 grabbed his Army-issue bolo knife and started   weighted along the back of its curved blade, and   wood, Medal of Honor recipient.  Proclamation, Fleetwood joined the Union Army as part of
 stabbing. He buried the knife in the head of one   was devastating for close-quarter combat.                  the 4th U.S. Colored Infantry. He quickly rose to the rank
 attacker and then disemboweled another German   Turning to face the rest of the German patrol,                of sergeant major.
 Air Force photo  soldier.  Johnson was struck by a bullet from an automatic       About a year later, he would earn the Medal of Honor.
                                                                                   On Sept. 29, 1864, Fleetwood and his fellow Soldiers were fighting near Chaffins Farm, a large
  Medal of Honor recipient then-Air   “Each  slash  meant  something,  believe  me,”   pistol, but continued to lunge forward, stabbing and   open bluff between Richmond, Virginia, and the James River. Union Gen. Ulysses S. Grant ordered
 Force Capt. James P. Fleming.   Johnson said later. “There wasn’t anything so fine   slashing at the enemy.  troops to attack northward from the river to capture the city.
 about it. … just fought for my life. A rabbit would   The enemy patrol panicked, Little wrote. Over-
 have done that.”  whelmed by Johnson’s ferocity and with the sound   Photo by Lisa Ferdinando, DoD  During the battle, Union soldiers overwhelmed defenders inside Fort Harrison and captured the
 By the time (what a reporter at the time called)   of approaching French and American troops, the   New York State Military Museum  strategic area of New Market Heights, where Fleetwood’s brigade was sent to fight.
 retired Air ForCe Col. JAmeS Fleming  “The Battle of Henry Johnson” was over, Johnson   Germans ran back into the night.  ABOVE LEFT: Army Sgt. Henry Johnson was part of the 369th Infantry Regiment —   forcements. During the fight, two flag bearers from Fleetwood’s unit were shot. While one Soldier
                                                                                   At first, they were repelled, but they were eventually able to take the hill with the help of rein-
 had been wounded 21 times and had become the
 “The raiding party abandoned a considerable
 first American hero of World War I.  quantity of equipment (from which estimate of   the Hellfighters from Harlem — which originally was composed of New York National   picked up the regimental colors, Fleetwood picked up the U.S. flag. According to the Medal of Honor
 Johnson’s actions that night brought attention   strength of party is made), a number of firearms,   Guard Soldiers. This photograph was taken as the ship carrying the regiment returned   citation, Fleetwood “bore them (the flag, or ‘colors’) nobly through the fight.”
 by    the 20th Special Operations Squadron based out   to the African-American doughboys of the unit —   including  automatic  pistols,  and  carried  away   to New York City in 1919. An all-black combat unit, the 369th fought under French com-  He was 23 and the highest-ranking Black man at the time to commit actions that would earn him
 KATIE LANGE  of Nha Trang Air Base. Their mission: to support   the New York National Guard’s former 15th In-  their wounded and dead,” reported the New York   mand in World War I.   the Medal of Honor.
 troops sent into volatile areas of Vietnam along   fantry, redesignated the 369th for wartime service.  National Guard annual report of 1920.  Fleetwood was honorably discharged from the Army in 1866. He settled in Washington, D.C., and
 DoD News  the Cambodian border.  The 369th Infantry, detached under the French   By daylight, the carnage was clear. Even after   ABOVE RIGHT: New York Army National Guard Command Sgt. Maj. Louis Wilson ac-  spent the rest of his life working for the district and federal government. In 1887, he became the
 Helicopter pilots inserted troops and pulled   On Nov. 26, 1968, Fleming flew to the aid of a   4th Army’s command, arrived on the front-line   suffering 21 wounds in hand-to-hand combat, John-  cepts the Medal of Honor from President Barack Obama on behalf of World War I Sgt.   commander of the D.C. National Guard’s 7th Battalion. He remained in that position until 1892.
 them out of the jungles of Vietnam on a regular   seven-man team of Army Green Berets on a re-  trenches in the Champagne region of northeastern   son had stopped the Germans from approaching the   Henry Johnson during a ceremony at the White House, June 2, 2015. Johnson served   Fleetwood was actively involved in musical organizations and also organized a Colored High School
 basis during the war. But Air Force Col. James   connaissance patrol. They had been compromised   France on April 15, 1918. They were relieved to   French line or capturing his fellow Soldier.  honorably with the 369th Infantry Regiment, known as the Harlem Hellfighters.   Cadet Corps. He died in 1914 at the age of 74. At his funeral, the D.C. National Guard acted as an
 P. Fleming’s refusal to leave anyone behind dur-  while spying on enemy troops and were in danger   be free of the supply and service tasks of the past   “He killed one German with rifle fire, knocked   escort — a fitting tribute to a man who spent much of his life building it.
 ing an incident on Nov. 26, 1968, set him apart   of being overrun by a large, heavily armed enemy,   months and ready to join the fight.  one down with clubbed rifle, killed two with bolo,
 from the average pilot and earned him the Medal   which chased them to a riverbank.  The American Expeditionary Forces detached   killed one with grenade, and, it is believed, wounded
 of Honor.  Fleming knew one rescue helicopter had al-  the regiment to bolster an ally and preserve ra-  others,” the National Guard report said.  — Army mAJ. CHArleS l. tHomAS —
 The French 16th Division, which commanded
 Fleming was born in Sedalia, Missouri, at the   ready been downed by enemy fire — he watched   cial segregation in the American command. The
 end of World War II. His father had been a mili-  it happen. But he searched for the missing patrol   French welcomed the regiment that would earn   the Hellfighters, quickly recognized the actions of
 Johnson and Roberts. The two Soldiers received the
 tary pilot, so Fleming naturally grew fascinated   anyway, disregarding his own safety while danger-  its nickname as the “Hellfighters from Harlem.”
 with service and flying. He joined ROTC while he   ously low on fuel. Enemy fire crashed through his   Fought  by  only  two  Soldiers,  the  regiment’s   Croix du Guerre, France’s highest military honor.   by    3rd platoon was chosen to be the lead element of   situation led the 3rd platoon to triumph over the
 The French orders, dated May 16, state Henry
 was at Washington State University and, upon   chopper’s windshield before he finally found the   first battle would otherwise be a footnote in World   Johnson “gave a magnificent example of courage   KATIE LANGE  a task force that had been formed to storm and   enemy that day, despite losing more than half of
 War I history if not for the scrutiny the all-Black
 graduation in 1966, he entered the Air Force to   Green Berets wading into the river water, trying   and energy.”  capture the village of Climbach, France.  its men to injury or death. The platoon helped
 become a pilot, too.  to escape the onslaught following them.  regiment faced at the time.  They were the first U.S. Soldiers to earn this dis-  DoD News  Drawing Out the Enemy  the task force capture Climbach and push enemy
 After weeks of combat patrols, raids and artil-
 Fleming was halfway through fixed-wing pi-  Fleming found a way to hover his helicopter   tinction, and Johnson’s medal included the coveted   During  World   There had been no reconnaissance of the area,   troops back to the Siegfried Line.
 lot training when a call went out for men to fly   right above the riverbank so one of his crew mem-  lery barrages, Johnson and his buddy, Pvt. Need-  Gold Palm for extraordinary valor.   War II, more than a   so little was known about the enemy at that   Thomas was taken off the front lines. After recu-
 ham Roberts, 17, of Trenton, New Jersey, stood
 helicopters in Vietnam, so he volunteered. After   bers could grab the Green Berets, pulling them   watch near a bridge over the Aisne River at Bois   From that point on, Johnson was known as   Courtesy photo  million Black men   position. Thomas knew it would be an extremely   perating from his many wounds, he returned home
 more months of training, he was sent into combat.  out of the water one by one. The last man on the   d’Hauzy during the night of May 15.  “Black Death.”  served  in  the  U.S.   dangerous mission, so he volunteered to command   and was awarded the Distinguished Service Cross.
 “I was terribly excited to go,” Fleming said in   team practically had to jump into the chopper right   The regiment would go on to prove itself in com-  military; however, not one of them received the   the platoon and ride in the column’s lead vehicle,   He was promoted to captain in February 1945.
 An enemy patrol with 20 to 24 troops was deter-
 an interview with the Veterans History Project.   before they took off.  mined to eliminate the outpost and take prisoners   bat operations through the rest of the war, receiving   Medal of Honor during the war or directly after-  an  M-20  scout  car.  According  to  his  Medal  of   The 3rd platoon was awarded the Distinguished
 “I wanted to go fly in war.”  Despite continued fire in their direction, Flem-  back to learn about the American force.   the Croix de Guerre for the unit’s actions and 171   ward. Decades later, when a review called that   Honor citation, Thomas assumed the village had   Unit Citation, making it the first unit attached to
 A few months into his tour, Fleming was a first   ing made it out of the fray. All seven men on the   Around 2 a.m., shots rang out and the sounds   individual decorations for heroism.   discrepancy  into  question,  Army  Maj.  Charles   a concentration of enemy armored vehicles, and   the 103rd Division — and the first Black combat
 lieutenant and the aircraft commander of a UH-  recon patrol made it out alive, thanks to his un-  of wire cutters alerted the two American Soldiers.   Johnson would be singled out for his heroism   L. Thomas posthumously became one of the first   he wanted to draw the enemy’s first strike toward   unit — to earn that honor.
 1F Iroquois transport helicopter that was part of   wavering desire to bring everyone home.  Johnson, opening a box of grenades, told Roberts   and actions under fire. Former President Theodore   Black men from that era to receive the nation’s   him instead of the rest of the task force.   Thomas stayed in the Army for about two more
 About  a month later,   to run back and alert the main line of defense. But   Roosevelt called Johnson one of the five bravest   highest medal for valor.   As  Thomas’  scout  car  reached  high  ground   years before leaving in August 1947 to return to
 Fleming  was  injured  and   at that moment, the first enemy grenades landed   Americans to serve in World War I.  Thomas was born on April 17, 1920, in Birming-  southeast  of  the  village,  the  enemy  attacked.   civilian life. He married and had two children.
 evacuated  to  Japan.  When   in their position.  The question of whether the African-American   ham, Alabama, and he grew up in Detroit. He   Artillery and other gunfire from about 700 yards   His family returned to Michigan, where Thomas
 he returned to Vietnam a   Johnson stalled the German patrol with gre-  15th New York Infantry would fight as well as   graduated from high school in 1938 and went to   away slammed into the vehicle, disabling the car
 few months later, he was   nades of his own as Roberts was struck down with   any other unit was answered in the darkness of   work with his father as a molder at a Ford Motor   and severely wounding Thomas, who immediately   worked as a missile technician at Selfridge Air   Photo courtesy of the Library of Congress
                                                                                 Force Base (now Selfridge Air National Guard
 surprised to hear he was go-  shrapnel wounds to his arm and hip. When out of   May 15, 1918.  Company plant. He’d also enrolled in Wayne State   signaled for the column behind him to stop.   Base), before joining the IRS as a computer pro-  Army Capt. Charles Thomas received the
 ing home — he’d been named   grenades, Johnson took up his French rifle.  After the war, Johnson and Roberts returned   University to study mechanical engineering, but   As he tried to help his comrades get to safety,   Distinguished Service Cross in February
 a recipient of the Medal of   “The Labelle rifle carries a magazine clip of   home as national heroes. Promoted to sergeant,   then the war began, and he was drafted into the   Thomas was exposed to enemy machine gun fire,   grammer.   1945 from Brig. Gen. Joseph E. Bastion
 Honor.  but three cartridges,” noted Arthur Little, the 1st   Johnson led the New York City parade for the 369th   Army on Jan. 20, 1942.   Thomas  died  of  cancer  on  Feb.  15,  1980,  in   for his service during World War II.
 Fleming received the na-  Battalion commander, in his 1936 book “From   in February 1919.   Thomas started his military career in the in-  which hit him multiple times in the chest, legs   Wayne, Michigan. He is buried there in Westlawn
 tion’s highest military award   Harlem to the Rhine.”   Johnson’s extensive injuries, however, prevented   fantry, but he was quickly chosen to attend officer   and left arm. Despite the intense pain, Thomas   Cemetery.
                                                                                 A Belated Honor
 for  valor  from  President   “Johnson fired his three shots — the last one   his return to any normal civilian life. He had dif-  training school. He was commissioned as a second   was still able to order the column’s first two M-5   niece, accepted the Medal of Honor on his behalf
 Richard Nixon at a ceremony   almost muzzle-to-breast of the German bearing   ficulty finding work. He died destitute in 1929 and   lieutenant on March 11, 1943, then assigned to   anti-tank guns into place and direct their fire back   In the 1990s, the Army ordered a study on racial   from President Bill Clinton during a White House
 at the White House on May   down upon him. As the German fell, a comrade   was buried at Arlington National Cemetery.  Company C of the 614th Tank Destroyer Battalion.   at the enemy within a few minutes.  disparities during World War II. It found there   ceremony.
 14, 1970.  jumped over his body, pistol in hand, to avenge   Some 97 years after his combat service, the   His unit arrived in England in September 1944   Thomas  knew  his  injuries  were  so  bad  that   were Black service members whose actions were   Five other Soldiers posthumously received the
 Fleming  spent  a  total  of   his death. There was no time for reloading. John-  Defense Department reviewed Johnson’s records   and eventually joined Gen. George Patton’s 3rd   he wouldn’t be able to stay in command, so he   worthy of the Medal of Honor. Recommendations   same upgrade during that ceremony: Staff Sgt.
 30 years in the Air Force,   son swung his rifle round his head, and brought   and recommended him for the Medal of Honor. It   Army in France, first seeing combat toward the   signaled for the platoon commander to join him.   were made to the Pentagon’s Board of Generals   Edward A. Carter Jr., 1st Lt. John R. Fox, Pfc.
 retiring as a colonel in 1996.  it down with a thrown blow upon the head of the   was presented by President Barack Obama in 2015.  end of November 1944. The battalion was attached   Thomas proceeded to get that man up to speed on   to upgrade the medals of seven Soldiers from that   Willy James Jr., Staff Sgt. Ruben Rivers and Pvt.
 He and his wife currently   German. The German went down, crying.”   “We are a nation — a people — who remember   to the 103rd Infantry Division when a 24-year-old   the enemy’s gun positions, the platoon’s ammuni-  era. Congress had to authorize a statute of limita-  George Watson. First Lt. Vernon Baker was the
 Air Force photo   live in Washington. They had   As Johnson looked over to assist Roberts, he saw   our heroes,” Obama said during the Medal of Honor   Thomas performed the heroics that would put him   tion status and the general situation. He refused   tions waiver so the men, including Thomas, could   only man to receive the honor in person.
    in the history books.
                                           to be evacuated until he felt sure the junior officer
                                                                                                                         Today, we thank these brave men for their sac-
 Air Force UH-1F Iroquois helicopters insert special op-  three  children,  including  a   two Germans lift him up to carry him off toward   ceremony at the White House. “We never forget   On Dec. 14, 1944, then-1st Lt. Thomas was the   would be able to take command successfully.   be recognized.   rifices and are grateful their actions were finally
 son who joined the Marines
                                                                                   On Jan. 13, 1997 — more than 50 years after
 their sacrifice, and we believe it’s never too late to
 the German lines.
 erations teams into Cambodia during the Vietnam War.   and served in Afghanistan.  “Our men were unanimous in the opinion that   say, ‘Thank you.’”  commanding officer of Company C. The company’s   Thomas’  personal  courage  and  grasp  of  the   the battle in Climbach — Sarah Johnson, Thomas’   met with the honor they deserved.
   4   5   6   7   8   9   10   11   12   13   14