82d Airborne Division Assoc. America's Guard of Honor, Chartered by The United States Congress   82nd Airborne Division Association Inc., 1SG Leonard A. Funk Chapter
Pittsburgh, PA
Glider Patch
September Meeting starts at 6:30!
Airborne Badge
Glider Badge
HOME | Medal of Honor Citation 1SG Leonard A. Funk | About the Chapter | News | License Plate

1SG Leonard A. Funk, Jr.


1SG Leonard A. Funk

Rank and Organization: First Sergeant, U.S. Army, Company C, 508th Parachute Infantry, 82d Airborne Division
Place and date: Holzheim, Belgium, 29 January 1945
Entered service at: Wilkinsburg, PA

 1SG Funk distinguished himself by gallant, intrepid actions against the enemy. After advancing 15 miles in a driving snowstorm, the American force prepared to attack through waist-deep drifts. The company executive officer became a casualty, and 1SG Funk immediately assumed his duties, forming headquarters soldiers into a combat unit for an assault in the face of direct artillery shelling and harassing fire from the right flank. Under his skillful and courageous leadership, this miscellaneous group and the 3d Platoon attacked 15 houses, cleared them, and took 30 prisoners without suffering a casualty. The fierce drive of Company C quickly overran Holzheim, netting some 80 prisoners, who were placed under a 4-man guard, all that could be spared, while the rest of the understrength unit went about mopping up isolated points of resistance. An enemy patrol, by means of a ruse, succeeded in capturing the guards and freeing the prisoners,  and had begun

 preparations to attack Company C from the rear when 1SG Funk walked around the building and into their midst. He was ordered to surrender by a German officer who pushed a machine pistol into his stomach. Although overwhelmingly outnumbered and facing almost certain death, 1SG Funk, pretending to comply with the order, began slowly to unsling his submachine gun from his shoulder and then, with lightning motion, brought the muzzle into line and riddled the German officer. He turned upon the other Germans, firing and shouting to the other Americans to seize the enemy's weapons. In the ensuing fight 21 Germans were killed, many wounded, and the remainder captured. 1SG Funk's bold action and heroic disregard for his own safety were directly responsible for the recapture of a vastly superior enemy force, which, if allowed to remain free, could have taken the widespread units of Company C by surprise and endangered the entire attack plan. 

Citation from http://www.history.army.mil/html/moh/wwII-a-f.html

 


“America’s Guard Of Honor"
AFRICA                 SICILY                FRANCE                 THE NETHERLANDS                 BELGIUM                 GERMANY
DOMINICAN REPUBLIC    VIETNAM    GRENADA    PANAMA    PERSIAN GULF    AFGHANISTAN    IRAQ

HOME | Related Links | History of the 82nd Airborne Division | Application
Transfer Membership
| Educational Fund Contribution | Airborne Prayer


Master parachutist badge with 82nd patch superimposed

Glider patch modified from QM Glider Badge