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PEREZ,
MANUEL, JR.
Rank
and organization:
Private First Class,
U.S. Army, Company A 511th Parachute Infantry, 11th Airborne Division.
Place
and date:
Fort William McKinley, Luzon, Philippine Islands, 13 February 1945.
Entered
service at:
Chicago, Ill.
Born:
3 March 1923 Oklahoma City, Okla.
G.O.
No.:
124, 27 December
1945.
Citation:
He was lead scout for Company A, which had destroyed 11 of 12 pillboxes
in a strongly fortified sector defending the approach to enemy-held
Fort William McKinley on Luzon, Philippine Islands. In the reduction
of these pillboxes, he killed 5 Japanese in the open and blasted
others in pillboxes with grenades. Realizing the urgent need for
taking the last emplacement, which contained 2 twin-mount
.50-caliber dual-purpose machineguns, he
took a circuitous route to within 20 yards
of the position, killing 4 of the enemy in his advance.
He threw a
grenade into the pillbox, and, as the crew started withdrawing through
a tunnel just to the rear of the emplacement, shot and killed 4
before exhausting his clip. He had reloaded and killed 4 more when
an escaping Japanese threw his rifle with fixed bayonet at him.
In warding off this thrust, his own rifle was knocked to the ground.
Seizing the Jap rifle, he continued firing, killing 2 more of the
enemy. He rushed the remaining Japanese, killed 3 of them with the
butt of the rifle and entered the pillbox, where he bayoneted the
1 surviving hostile soldier. Single-handedly, he killed 18 of the
enemy in neutralizing the position that had held up the advance
of his entire company. Through his courageous determination and
heroic disregard of grave danger, Pfc. Perez made possible the successful
advance of his unit toward a valuable objective and provided a lasting
inspiration for his comrades.
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