Advertisement

Robert Miller McTureous Jr.
Monument

Advertisement

Robert Miller McTureous Jr. Famous memorial Veteran

Birth
Altoona, Lake County, Florida, USA
Death
11 Jun 1945 (aged 21)
Monument
Motobu, Kunigami-gun, Okinawa, Japan Add to Map
Plot
USMC-MC-MO
Memorial ID
View Source
World War II Medal of Honor Recipient. He served as a Private in the US Marine Corps in Company H, 3rd Battalion, 29th Marines, 6th Marine Division. He was awarded the Medal of Honor for action at Okinawa, Ryukyu Islands on June 7,1945, where he was killed in action. His citation reads in part, "Determined to prevent further casualties, he quickly filled his jacket with hand grenades and charged the enemy-occupied caves from which the concentrated barrage was emanating. Coolly disregarding all personal danger as he waged his furious one-man assault, he smashed grenades into the cave entrances, thereby diverting the heaviest fire from the stretcher bearers to his own person and, resolutely returning to his own lines under a blanketing hail of rifle and machine-gun fire to replenish his supply of grenades, dauntlessly continued his systematic reduction of Japanese strength until he himself sustained serious wounds after silencing a large number of the hostile guns. Aware of his own critical condition and unwilling to further endanger the lives of his comrades, he stoically crawled a distance of 200 yards to a sheltered position within friendly lines before calling for aid. By his fearless initiative and bold tactics, Pvt McTureous had succeeded in neutralizing the enemy fire, killing six Japanese troops and effectively disorganizing the remainder of the savagely defended garrison."
Buried: Glendale Cemetery, Umatilla, Florida
World War II Medal of Honor Recipient. He served as a Private in the US Marine Corps in Company H, 3rd Battalion, 29th Marines, 6th Marine Division. He was awarded the Medal of Honor for action at Okinawa, Ryukyu Islands on June 7,1945, where he was killed in action. His citation reads in part, "Determined to prevent further casualties, he quickly filled his jacket with hand grenades and charged the enemy-occupied caves from which the concentrated barrage was emanating. Coolly disregarding all personal danger as he waged his furious one-man assault, he smashed grenades into the cave entrances, thereby diverting the heaviest fire from the stretcher bearers to his own person and, resolutely returning to his own lines under a blanketing hail of rifle and machine-gun fire to replenish his supply of grenades, dauntlessly continued his systematic reduction of Japanese strength until he himself sustained serious wounds after silencing a large number of the hostile guns. Aware of his own critical condition and unwilling to further endanger the lives of his comrades, he stoically crawled a distance of 200 yards to a sheltered position within friendly lines before calling for aid. By his fearless initiative and bold tactics, Pvt McTureous had succeeded in neutralizing the enemy fire, killing six Japanese troops and effectively disorganizing the remainder of the savagely defended garrison."
Buried: Glendale Cemetery, Umatilla, Florida

Bio by: Don Morfe


Inscription

MCTUREOUS ROBERT MILL


Advertisement

Advertisement

How famous was Robert Miller McTureous Jr.?

Current rating: out of 5 stars

Not enough votes to rank yet. (7 of 10)

Sign-in to cast your vote.

  • Maintained by: Find a Grave
  • Originally Created by: Rob Gomoluh
  • Added: Oct 1, 2023
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/260248990/robert_miller-mctureous: accessed ), memorial page for Robert Miller McTureous Jr. (26 Mar 1924–11 Jun 1945), Find a Grave Memorial ID 260248990, citing Okinawa Memorial Park, Motobu, Kunigami-gun, Okinawa, Japan; Maintained by Find a Grave.