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Audie Murphy was the most decorated soldier in World
War II, and his highest award, the Medal of Honor, was directly linked
to a North Dakotan. 1st Lt. Walt Weispfenning grew up in Fredonia, in
Logan County, and enlisted in the Army in 1941. He rose through the ranks
to become a commissioned officer, a singular achievement, even in wartime.
Weispfenning and Murphy both belonged to Company B, 15th Regiment, 3rd
Infantry Division. On this day in 1945, the Company had been reduced from
235 to just 18 men. They were holding a position in a French forest, and
when the Company Commander was wounded, Lt. Murphy was ordered to take
his place.
They were hopelessly outnumbered, both in manpower and weaponry, and the
ground was too frozen to dig foxholes. That afternoon, the Germans attacked
with some 200 men and six tanks that quickly took out Company Bs
machine gun squad and their only remaining tank destroyer. At that
moment, Murphy wrote, I know that we are lost.
Lt. Weispfenning was in a forward position when his radio failed, so Lt.
Murphy got on the field telephone to call for artillery support. When
asked how close the Germans were, he yelled, Just hold the phone,
and Ill let you talk to one of the bastards.
Weispfennings eyewitness account became central to Murphy receiving
his Medal of Honor. I saw hundreds of Germans swarming from the
woods, he wrote. They all had automatic weapons. [Murphy]
was all alone out there, except for a tree and a tank destroyer that was
about ten yards to his right. The artillery fire he directed had a deadly
effect. I saw Germans [disappear] in clouds of dirt and snow. A direct
hit from a German 88 smashed into the tank destroyer, and I saw the men
bail out and withdraw to the woods with the rest of the company. Smoke
and flames spurted from the tank destroyer, and the German tanks advanced,
firing their machine guns and cannons at Lieutenant Murphy. The Kraut
infantry line came on. The tanks gave the tank destroyer a wide berth
because its gasoline and ammunition might have exploded at an moment.
Weispfenning continued, saying Murphy did the bravest thing Ive
ever seen a man do in combat. With the Germans 100 yards away, he climbed
onto the tank destroyer turret and began firing its .50 caliber machine
gun at the advancing Krauts. He was completely exposed to the enemy fire,
and there was a blaze under him that threatened to blow the destroyer
to bits. Machine gun, machine pistol, and 88-shell fire was all around
him.
Twice the tank destroyer was hit by direct shell fire and Lieutenant
Murphy was engulfed in clouds of smoke and spurts of flame. His clothing
was riddled by flying fragments of shells and bits of rocks. I saw that
his trouser leg was soaked with blood. He swung the machine gun to where
12 Germans were sneaking up a ditch in an attempt to flank his position,
and he killed all of them at 50 yards.
Weispfenning later said the episode lasted nearly an hour. When
a man is expecting to get his ass shot off in the next minute, he doesnt
pause to consider how the incident will look historically, he said.
Audie deserved the Medal of Honor long before he got it, and I was
only too glad to help out when the opportunity finally came.
Audie Murphy was later the featured guest on a popular television program,
This is your Life. The shows producers wanted Weispfenning
as a surprise guest and tracked him down in Cooperstown, where he was
managing the Melroe Steel Fabricating Plant.
Reuben Gums, Weispfennings brother in law, says, That was
the first any of us knew that Walt had been responsible for Audie getting
our nations highest military award.
Sources:
Champagne, Daniel R. One-Man Stand at Holtzwihr. World War II Magazine.
May 2002.
Graham, Don. No Name on the Bullet: A Biography of Audie Murphey. Viking,
1989: 88-92.
Gums, Reuben. (Personal account.) Jamestown ND, 2 Sep 2005.
Weispfennings obituary. Jamestown Sun. 9 Nov 1991.
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