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Korean War Congressional Medal of Honor Recipient
Pfc. Jack Glennon Hanson, US Army

Jack G. Hanson, Medal of Honor recipient, was born at Escaptawpa, Mississippi, on August 18, 1930. He entered military service at Galveston, Texas. Private First Class Jack G. Hanson, First Platoon, Company F, Eighty-first Infantry Regiment, United States Army, was cited for "gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of his life above and beyond the call of duty" near Sobuk San Mountain, Korea. On the night of June 7, 1951, his company was fiercely attacked while in defensive positions on two hills. Hanson volunteered to remain behind to cover the withdrawal. His assistant gunner and three riflemen were wounded and also withdrew. He remained and maintained a one-man defense. When the platoon counterattacked some 2 hours later, they found Hanson's body in front of his machine gun, his ammunition expended, his empty pistol in his right hand and a machete with blood on the blade in his left, and twenty-two enemy dead around the position. His self-sacrifice enabled his company to regain the lost ground. Hanson is buried in the Robinson Cemetery at Escaptawpa, Mississippi.
CITATION:
Rank and organization: Private First Class, U.S. Army, Company F, 31st Infantry Regiment. Place and date: Near Pachi-dong, Korea, 7 June 1951. Entered service at: Galveston, Tex. Born: 18 September 1930, Escaptawpa, Miss. G.O. No.: 15, 1 February 1952. Citation: Pfc. Hanson, a machine gunner with the 1st Platoon, Company F, distinguished himself by conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of his life above and beyond the call of duty in action against an armed enemy of the United Nations. The company, in defensive positions on two strategic hills separated by a wide saddle, was ruthlessly attacked at approximately 0300 hours, the brunt of which centered on the approach to the divide within range of Pfc. Hanson's machine gun. In the initial phase of the action, 4 riflemen were wounded and evacuated and the numerically superior enemy, advancing under cover of darkness, infiltrated and posed an imminent threat to the security of the command post and weapons platoon. Upon orders to move to key terrain above and to the right of Pfc. Hanson's position, he voluntarily remained to provide protective fire for the withdrawal. Subsequent to the retiring elements fighting a rearguard action to the new location, it was learned that Pfc. Hanson's assistant gunner and 3 riflemen had been wounded and had crawled to safety, and that he was maintaining a lone-man defense. After the 1st Platoon reorganized, counterattacked, and resecured its original positions at approximately 0530 hours, Pfc. Hanson's body was found lying in front of his emplacement, his machine gun ammunition expended, his empty pistol in his right hand, and a machete with blood on the blade in his left hand, and approximately 22 enemy dead lay in the wake of his action. Pfc. Hanson's consummate valor, inspirational conduct, and willing self-sacrifice enabled the company to contain the enemy and regain the commanding ground, and reflect lasting glory on himself and the noble traditions of the military service.

Courtesy of Find A Grave
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