Isadore Seigfreid Jachman of Baltimore, Maryland, was a Staff Sergeant in the U.S.
Army and a posthumous recipient of the Medal of Honor for his extraordinary actions defending the town of Flamierge in Belgium from a German attack on January 4, 1945.
Army and a posthumous recipient of the Medal of Honor for his extraordinary actions defending the town of Flamierge in Belgium from a German attack on January 4, 1945.
Jachman was born in Berlin, Germany before moving to the Unites States with his family when he was two years old. Being Jewish, he had relatives who died in the Holocaust, including six aunts and uncles. He joined the Army in 1942.
On January 4th, 1945, Sergeant Jachman (Company B, 513th Parachute Infantry Regiment) and his company were pinned down by enemy artillery, mortar, small arms fire and two hostile tanks that attacked the unit, inflicting heavy casualties. Jachman left his place of cover, dashed across open ground and grabbed a bazooka from a fallen comrade. He damaged one of the tanks and forced both of them to retire, but he suffered fatal wounds. He was just 22 years old.
For his actions on this day, he was posthumously awarded the Medal of Honor in June 1950.
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