HONORING THE SERVICES OF "ROBERT SHELDON SCOTT" HE WAS AWARDED THE MEDAL OF HONOR.
Robert Sheldon Scott of Washington, D.C., a Colonel in the U.S. Army, was awarded the Medal of Honor for his extraordinary actions on July 29, 1943, near Munda Point airstrip on New Georgia, Solomon Islands.
Scott, a second lieutenant at the time of his action, was a member of the 172nd Infantry Regiment of the 43rd Infantry Division that successfully captured Munda Point airstrip on the island of New Georgia, Solomon Islands, from its Japanese defender in the summer of 1943.
On July 29, 1943, Japanese soldiers counter-attacked against the American assault on Morrison-Johnson Hill overlooking the airfield.
Scott became detached from the rest of his men, and despite being alone, shot in the left hand, and having received a shrapnel wound to the head, he used a combination of his carbine and grenades to kill 28 Japanese soldiers, causing the rest to withdraw. His colleagues took the hill and later the airstrip.
He was awarded the Medal of Honor in October 1944. In 1997, New Mexico, his home state, declared November 30th as Robert Scott Day in his honor. He died at his home in Santa Fe on February 5th, 1999.
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