29th Division - WWII Medals of Honor
Sargent Sherwood H. Hallman
Rank and organization: Staff Sergeant, U.S. Army, 175th Infantry,
29th Infantry Division. Place and date: Brest, Brittany,
France, 13 September 1944. Entered service at: Spring City, Pa.
Birth: Spring City, Pa. G.O. No: 31, 17 April 1945.
Citation: For conspicuous gallantry and
intrepidity at risk of his life above and beyond the call of
duty. On 13 September 1944, in Brittany, France, the 2d Battalion
in its attack on the fortified city of Brest was held up by a
strongly defended enemy position which had prevented its advance
despite repeated attacks extending over a 3-day period. Finally,
Company F advanced to within
several hundred yards of the enemy position but was again halted
by intense fire. Realizing that the position must be neutralized
without delay, S/Sgt. Hallman ordered his squad to cover his
movements with fire while he advanced alone to a point from which
he could make the assault. Without hesitating, S/Sgt. Hallman
leaped over a hedgerow into a sunken road, the central point of
the German defenses which was known to contain an enemy
machinegun position and at least 30 enemy riflemen. Firing his
carbine and hurling grenades, S/Sgt. Hallman,
unassisted, killed or wounded 4 of the
enemy, then ordered the remainder to surrender. Immediately, 12
of the enemy surrendered and the position was shortly secured by
the remainder of his company. Seeing the surrender of this
position, about 75 of the enemy in the vicinity surrendered,
yielding a defensive organization which the battalion with heavy
supporting fires had been unable to take. This single heroic act
on the part of S/Sgt. Hallman resulted in the immediate advance
of the entire battalion for a distance of 2,000 yards to a
position from which Fort Keranroux was captured later the same
day. S/Sgt. Hallman's fighting determination and intrepidity
in battle exemplify the highest tradition of the U.S. Armed
Forces.