Garlin “Murl” Conner, Cottonbaler, to receive Medal of Honor
The White House announces that First Lieutenant Garlin “Murl” Conner will be awarded posthumously the Medal of Honor today;
Then-First Lieutenant Garlin M. Conner will receive the Medal of Honor posthumously for his actions on 24 January 1945, while serving as an intelligence officer with Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 3d Battalion, 7th Infantry Regiment, 3d Infantry Division. Then-First Lieutenant Conner voluntarily left his position of relative safety to place himself in a better position to direct artillery fire onto the assaulting enemy infantry and armor. He remained in an exposed position which was 30 yards ahead of the defending force for a period of three hours. Despite the enemy coming within five yards of his position and friendly artillery shells exploding around him, he continued to direct the fire of friendly artillery, which ultimately repelled the assaulting enemy elements.
Defense.gov reports that LT Connor’s widow will accept the award;
Pauline, 89, of Albany, Kentucky, will accept the honor on behalf of her husband, who died 20 years ago at age 79. He was drafted March 1, 1941, and assigned to the 3rd Infantry Division’s 3rd Battalion, 7th Infantry Regiment.
First Lt. Garlin Conner spent 28 months on the front lines in eight campaigns in the European-African-Middle Eastern Theater, participated in four amphibious assault landings, was wounded seven times and earned a battlefield commission. He was awarded the Distinguished Service Cross, four Silver Stars and the French Croix de Guerre for his actions in Italy and France. He also received a Bronze Star and three Purple Hearts.
The Medal of Honor for LT Connor upgrades his Distinguished Service Cross. The citation for his DSC reads;
The President of the United States of America, authorized by Act of Congress July 9, 1918, takes pleasure in presenting the Distinguished Service Cross to First Lieutenant (Infantry) Garlin Murl Conner, United States Army, for extraordinary heroism in connection with military operations against an armed enemy while serving with Company K, 3d Battalion, 7th Infantry Regiment, 3d Infantry Division, in action against enemy forces on 24 January 1945, in the vicinity of Houssen, France. On that date, at 0800 hours, First Lieutenant Conner ran 400 yards through the impact area of an intense concentration of enemy artillery fire to direct friendly artillery on a force of six Mark VI tanks and tank destroyers, followed by 600 fanatical German infantrymen, which was assaulting in full fury the spearhead position held by his battalion. Along the way, he unreeled a spool of telephone wire, disregarding shells which exploded 25 yards from him and set up an observation post which he manned for more than three hours during the intense fighting. He was individually credited with stopping more than 150 Germans, destroying all the tanks and completely disintegrating the powerful enemy assault force and preventing heavy loss of life in his own outfit. First Lieutenant Conner’s intrepid actions, personal bravery and zealous devotion to duty exemplify the highest traditions of the military forces of the United States and reflect great credit upon himself, the 3d Infantry Division, and the United States Army.
Category: Real Soldiers
Thank you for your service, Warrior. I am humbled by your actions. Your deeds that day are almost impossible to understand.
This is BULLSHYT! This man lived until 1979, they had ALL the info and they let him die and even then wait 20 years to give him what he should have received in 1945…!! this is CRAP imho!!
Yes, but it wasn’t until three years ago that the Department of Defense to a serious look at previously awarded medals to determine if they should be upgraded. Better late than never.
The best part of it is, I bet he downplayed his actions that day. I can imagine him saying, i was just doing my job.
Take note valor thieves…this man was a real hero.
Here we go again with this upgrade business. To me, this means that not only did Conner’s contemporaries think that the DSC was sufficient, but that multiple administrations decades later thought so too–until now. So, what changed? His wife says she worked on the upgrade for 22 years. Maybe she just wore out the bureaucrats.
The CMOH “is conferred only upon members of the United States Armed Forces who distinguish themselves through conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of life above and beyond the call of duty.”
The DSC/Navy Cross/Air Force Cross “Is awarded for extraordinary heroism.”
“Actions that merit the Distinguished Service Cross must be of such a high degree that they are above those required for all other U.S. combat decorations but do not merit award of the Medal of Honor.”
Source: https://valor.defense.gov/Description-of-Awards/
Now, if you like, go and read some DSC citations and then some CMOH citations and try to explain it to me. I will never understand it–and I’m not talking about witnesses required or any other procedural matter. I’m talking about the actions which resulted in a DSC.
There is a lot of overlap. There are many MoH and service cross honors given to officers for leading dangerous missions, not particular acts of bravery.
Douglas MacArthur for instance.
The Medal of Honor has, for the most part, remained free of being awarded with different criteria for senior officers. MacArthur was a great General, but he coveted the Medal of Honor, a decoration his father received, and lobbied for it.
The Medal of Honor has been awarded numerous times for non-combat actions, including to Lindbergh and the arctic explorer Byrd.
MacArthur got his feet wet for his CMOH.
Respectfully, sir, it is the “Medal of Honor” (MoH), not the “Congressional MoH.”, per A 600-8-22, section II 3-8.
You’re absolutely correct. The name gets confused by “The Congressional Medal of Honor Society”, an organization made up of recipients of the Medal of Honor. TV and movies constantly misstate the name as well.
The question “Name our nation’s highest military award”, when selecting the supernumerary of the guard, regulary tripped up soldiers who answered Congressional Medal of Honor.
yeh like the a.h. MacArthur, that dipshyt got one because “daddy” got one!! imo
I think that the author of the citation sometimes does a poor job at explaining why the award was given. I’ve seen poorly written citations involving actions I’ve witnessed, and to read them you’d never know the extent of what happened.
That’s very true. As a creative linguist I’ve written several mediocre performances into award recommendations worthy of song. 🙂
I don’t know how much money they receive per month now…I know years and years ago it was 50.00 a month…so just think how much they saved by screwing this hero out of his just rewards?
Thank you my elder Brother. You will not be forgotten. God be with your widow.
Thank you First Lieutenant Conner.
30 yards ahead of the front line means that he was providing intelligence about the approaching enemy, right?
Must have had someone watching over him to survive all of that.
A story about Lt. Conner’s service and the efforts involved in getting his DSC upgraded to MoH. Lengthy but a great read.
https://www.army.mil/article/207045/the_silent_farmer_decorated_soldier_of_world_war_ii_finally_awarded_medal_of_honor
Thanks for that. I read it and but for the fact that the gov’t atty’s own father may have been saved by Conner, the DSC would stand. And that’s the kind of stuff that gets me crazy. Do I personally think that Conner deserved the CMOH? Absolutely, but I didn’t get a vote in 1945 and I didn’t get to consider the lawsuit the family filed and so on and so forth. And that’s why I detest these upgrades because more likely than not EVERY DSC should be a CMOH and a few CMOHs should be letters of commendation.
Here’s the odd thing. After all the lawsuits and mediation, the Military Corrections Board reopened the case in 2015 and reviewed everything one more time The report prepared by the staff comes to the conclusion that the DSC should NOT be upgraded. The 3 member board chose to actually disregard the advice of their own report and move the upgrade forward anyway. I’m pretty sure that’s was an unprecedented move. If not unprecedented, it’s very unusual. If you check Conner’s Wikipedia page, there are links to this report in the reference section.
Distinguished Service Cross, 4 Silver Stars, Croix de Guerre, Bronze Star, and 3 Purple Hearts….all that metal on his chest still doesn’t equal to the brass balls he carted around on a daily basis.
3 purple hearts and wounded 7 times? doesn’t compute, I mean fairy kerry go 3 purple hearts didn’t he? no hospital or clinic but a free ride home to become a traitor in the congressional hearings!! imo
I just watched the ceremony on TV and I was blown away by the citation.
The good LT had some giant balls on him. I’m amazed that he didn’t receive the MOH from the get go.
Boy. I sure fell like a slacker now! Whats that sound I hear a clanking? Oh yeah, his big brass balls!
Cincinnatus.
Cottonbalers by God, Damn Fine Soldiers!