moh_army.gif (14215 bytes)
The President of the United States
in the name of The Congress
takes pleasure in presenting the
Medal of Honor
to

BELL, BERNARD P.

Rank and organization: Technical Sergeant, U.S. Army, Company I, 142d Infantry, 36th Infantry Division. Place and date: Mittelwihr, France, 18 December 1944. Entered service at: New York, N.Y. Birth: Grantsville, W. Va. G.O. No.: 73, 30 August 1945.

Citation:
For fighting gallantly at Mittelwihr, France. On the morning of 18 December 1944, he led a squad against a schoolhouse held by enemy troops. While his men covered him, he dashed toward the building, surprised 2 guards at the door and took them prisoner without firing a shot. He found that other Germans were in the cellar. These he threatened with hand grenades, forcing 26 in all to emerge and surrender. His squad then occupied the building and prepared to defend it against powerful enemy action. The next day, the enemy poured artillery and mortar barrages into the position, disrupting communications which T/Sgt. Bell repeatedly repaired under heavy small-arms fire as he crossed dangerous terrain to keep his company commander informed of the squad's situation. During the day, several prisoners were taken and other Germans killed when hostile forces were attracted to the schoolhouse by the sound of captured German weapons fired by the Americans. At dawn the next day the enemy prepared to assault the building. A German tank fired round after round into the structure, partially demolishing the upper stories. Despite this heavy fire, T/Sgt. Bell climbed to the second floor and directed artillery fire which forced the hostile tank to withdraw. He then adjusted mortar fire on large forces of enemy foot soldiers attempting to reach the American position and, when this force broke and attempted to retire, he directed deadly machinegun and rifle fire into their disorganized ranks. Calling for armored support to blast out the German troops hidden behind a wall, he unhesitatingly exposed himself to heavy small-arms fire to stand beside a friendly tank and tell its occupants where to rip holes in walls protecting approaches to the school building. He then trained machineguns on the gaps and mowed down all hostile troops attempting to cross the openings to get closer to the school building. By his intrepidity and bold, aggressive leadership, T/Sgt. Bell enabled his 8-man squad to drive back approximately 150 of the enemy, killing at least 87 and capturing 42. Personally, he killed more than 20 and captured 33 prisoners.

Citation Courtesy of www.HomeOfHeroes.com

.

.


Official Sponsor of HomeOfHeroes.com

Medal Of Honor Special Sections

History/Statistics
of the MOH
bn_nav1_wall.jpg (3133 bytes)
Individual
Citations
bn_nav1_wall.jpg (3133 bytes)
Photos
Of Recipients
bn_nav1_wall.jpg (3133 bytes)
The Living
Recipients
bn_nav1_wall.jpg (3133 bytes)
In 
Memory
bn_nav1_wall.jpg (3133 bytes)

Each of the individual citations in this section should be printable as a single, full page similar to the one at right.  If you have any problems getting a finished page like the one shown, click on it to access our PRINT HELPS page. 

Copyright © 1999-2007 by HomeOfHeroes.com
 
    P.O. Box 122 - Pueblo, CO 81005
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

citation.jpg (24538 bytes)

SEARCH
bn_search.jpg (3967 bytes)
OUR SITE

Support
 HomeOfHeroes

EDUCATIONAL

GAME ARCADE

OR
Quick Quiz

***
Bulletin Boards
Electronic Post Cards
 Conference Room
Our Guestbook
Talking Points 

Remembering 911
The Binch
Citizens Speak Out

BEYOND THE MEDAL

This 5 Disc DVD Education Program has been distributed to over 17,500 Public & Private High Schools and is now available to the public!


 

Home Page

Hall Of Heroes

MOH Community 

NEWS

Kidz Page

FREE AREAS of our Site are Available
Thanks to the Following Official Sponsors who Support Us

US Army dress blue uniforms, US Army class a uniform, US Army uniforms, US Army medals, US Army insignia, ACU uniforms, army badges

 If YOUR company or organization would like to support the work of HomeOfHeroes, 
Email Us
. Only Corporate Sponsorship will keep the remainder of the site FREE.

FEATURE STORIES
  Profiles In Courage | Wings of ValorThe Brotherhood of Soldiers At War | Go For Broke
 Pearl Harbor  | A Splendid Little War | Shinmiyangyo-Korea 1871 | Quick Links to MOH Stories

RECIPIENT WEB SITES
Barney Barnum  |  Jack Lucas  |  Mitch Paige  |  Wesley Fox  |  Sammy Davis
Roger Donlon
Peter Lemon  |  Drew Dix  |  Mike Novosel

Medal Of Honor Calendar  |  Books By MOH RecipientsSteve Ryan MOH Posters

What Does 
A Hero Look Like?

Click on Superman To Find out


FOOTNOTES
In
HISTORY

NEW
Looking for a Hero or trying to verify awards? We have posted the names of more than 120,000 recipients of the highest awards in a BRAND NEW FREE SECTION
DECORATIONS 1862 - Present
.

To OBTAIN Your USER NAME & PASSWORD for the FOLLOWING Pages
Join our Member ONLY Enhanced Library

Military Medals & Awards 

Information and Images of ALL Military Medals
The Purple Heart 
How to Request Records/Medals Earned
  How to Obtain Military Records of a Family Member 

Honor Roll of America's Military Heroes


Brevet Medal


DSC 


Navy Cross 


Air Force Cross 

Distinguished Service Medals

Defense - Army - Navy - Air Force - Coast Guard - Merchant Marine



Silver Star

Contact Your

Government Officials

U.S. History and Information
The History Room | U.S. Flag HistoryHistory of the Flag |
How to Display the Flag
| The National Anthem | The Pledge of Allegiance The American Creed | The Seal of our Nation | Our National Symbol
Arthur MacArthur's Flag | William Carney's Flag | FDR's Flag of Liberation]
FLAG DAY           STATE FLAGS
American Presidents
U.S. Presidents | Inaugural Addresses

God & Country
ROOM

MY HERO Web Page Creator 
(Create a Tribute to the Hero in Your Own Life)

Meet the Webmaster  |  SITE MAPEmail Us

HomeOfHeroes.com now has more than 25,000 pages of US History for you to view.