PARAMARINES Ruhl, Donald Jack

John Robertson

Administrator
Staff member
  • SURNAME
Ruhl
  • FORENAME
Donald Jack
  • UNIT
former 1 Marine Parachute Regiment (Company L)
  • RANK
Private First Class
  • NUMBER
  • DATE OF DEATH
21st February 1945
  • AGE
21
  • GRAVESITE
Hillside Cemetery,Greybull,Big Horn County,Wyoming
  • ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
from Joliet,Montana
born 2.7.1923 Columbus,Montana
educated at grammar schools,Columbus
graduated Joliet High School 1942
farm hand 1937 - May 1942
laboratory assistant,Refining Company,Laurel,Montana 1942
entered service 12.9.1942 Butte,Montana
PFC 19.12.1942
3 Marine Parachute Bn (Company C) 1943
1 Marine Parachute Regiment (Company L,3 Bn) 1943-44
28th Marine Regiment (Company E,2 Bn) 21.2.1944
award Medal of Honor
KIA Iwo Jima
 

DATE OF DEATH:

21-Feb-1945

CITATION:

Medal of Honor : The President of the United States of America, in the name of Congress, takes pride in presenting the Medal of Honor (Posthumously) to Private First Class Donald Jack Ruhl, United States Marine Corps Reserve, for conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of his life above and beyond the call of duty while serving as a rifleman in an assault platoon of Company E, Twenty-Eighth Marines, FIFTH Marine Division, in action against enemy Japanese forces on Iwo Jima, Volcano Islands, from 19 to 21 February 1945. Quick to press the advantage after eight Japanese had been driven from a blockhouse on D-day, Private First Class Ruhl single-handedly attacked the group, killing one of the enemy with his bayonet and another by rifle fire in his determined attempt to annihilate the escaping troops. Cool and undaunted as the fury of hostile resistance steadily increased throughout the night, he voluntarily left the shelter of his tank trap early in the morning of D-day plus 1 and moved out under a tremendous volume of mortar and machinegun fire to rescue a wounded Marine lying in an exposed position approximately 40 yards forward of the line. Half pulling and half carrying the wounded man, he removed him to a defiladed position, called for an assistant and a stretcher and, again running the gauntlet of hostile fire, carried the casualty to an aid station some 300 yards distant on the beach. Returning to his platoon, he continued his valiant efforts, volunteering to investigate an apparently abandoned Japanese gun emplacement 75 yards forward of the right flank during consolidation of the front lines, and subsequently occupying the position through the night to prevent the enemy from repossessing the valuable weapon. Pushing forward in the assault against the vast network of fortifications surrounding Mt. Suribachi the following morning, he crawled with his platoon guide to the top of a Japanese bunker to bring fire to bear on enemy troops located on the far side of the bunker. Suddenly a hostile grenade landed between the two Marines. Instantly Private First Class Ruhl called a warning to his fellow Marine and dived on the deadly missile, absorbing the full impact of the shattering explosion in his own body and protecting all within range from the danger of flying fragments although he might easily have dropped from his position on the edge of the bunker to the ground below. An indomitable fighter, Private First Class Ruhl rendered heroic service toward the defeat of a ruthless enemy, and his valor, initiative and unfaltering spirit of self-sacrifice in the face of almost certain death sustain and enhance the highest traditions of the U.S. Naval Service. He gallantly gave his life for his country.

WEB LINKS:

https://valor.militarytimes.com/hero/663
Last edited by a moderator:
First to Fight
By Victor H. Krulak
Top