INTERESTING HISTORY NEWSLETTER
May 25, 2009
Beyond the Medal
Peter C. Lemon
was just 19 years old when his life would change in a way the
very few of us can begin to comprehend. Lemon was serving in
Tay Ninh province during the Vietnam War on April 1, 1970 when
his 18-man platoon was attacked by 400 enemy troops. Early in
the firefight a mortar exploded near him vaporizing one of his
close friends and wounding him in the head, back, and
neck.
Lemon and his platoon fought off
three waves of attacks that night, watched three of their close
friends die and faced the prospect of death themselves. During
the third assault with death appearing almost certain, Lemon
jumped up on the pile of dirt surrounding camp out in the open
and continued to fire at the enemy. When morning came, three
lay dead and every one of the remaining men in that platoon had
been injured and Peter Lemon insisted that the other wounded
men be evacuated before him even though his injuries were
serious enough to keep him in the hospital for the next
month.
Pete Lemon would eventually
receive a Medal of Honor for his heroic actions that night but
as far as he is concerned, there were 18 heroes that night and
three of them paid the ultimate price. On the day he received
the medal, he was one of only 204 living Americans to hold that
honor. He is also the only Canadian citizen to be presented
with the medal for fighting in the Vietnam War.
After years of trying to direct
the praise of his actions towards others, Pete Lemon began to
wonder about the other recipients of the Medal of Honor and
wanted to know more about these hero’s beyond the medal so in
1997 he put some of the thoughts, feelings and stories of our
country’s Medal of Honor recipients into a book called
Beyond the Medal: a
Journey From Their Hearts to Yours. On this
Memorial Day, we all need to take a moment to reflect on the
heroic acts of others that have allowed us to maintain our
freedom in this great country.
Mark Bowman
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