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Personal info

Full name
PETERSON, George
Date of birth
28 May 1912
Age
32
Place of birth
Brooklyn, New York
Hometown
Brooklyn, Kings County, New York

Military service

Service number
06719683
Rank
Staff Sergeant
Function
Platoon Sergeant
Unit
K Company,
3rd Battalion,
18th Infantry Regiment,
1st Infantry Division,
2nd Platoon
Awards
Medal of Honor,
Bronze Star with Oak Leaf Cluster,
Purple Heart with 3 Oak Leaf Clusters

Death

Status
Killed in Action
Date of death
30 March 1945
Place of death
Eisern, Germany

Grave

Cemetery
American War Cemetery Margraten
Plot Row Grave
D 21 10

Immediate family

Members
John Peterson (father)
John Peterson Jr (brother)
Anna Peterson (sister)
Selma Peterson (sister)

More information

George Peterson was awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor posthumously for his bravery while serving with K Company, 18th Infantry near Eisern, Germany in 1945.
He was an acting platoon sergeant with Company K, near Eisern, Germany. When his company encountered an enemy battalion and came under heavy small-arms, machinegun, and mortar fire, the 2nd Platoon was given the mission of flanking the enemy positions while the remaining units attacked frontally. S/Sgt. Peterson crept and crawled to a position in the lead and motioned for the 2nd Platoon to follow. A mortar shell fell close by and severely wounded him in the legs, but, although bleeding and suffering intense pain, he refused to withdraw and continued forward. Two hostile machineguns went into action at close range. Braving this grazing fire, he crawled steadily toward the guns and worked his way alone to a shallow draw, where, despite the hail of bullets, he raised himself to his knees and threw a grenade into the nearest machinegun nest, silencing the weapon and killing or wounding all its crew. The second gun was immediately turned on him, but he calmly and deliberately threw a second grenade which rocked the position and killed all 4 Germans who occupied it. As he continued forward he was spotted by an enemy rifleman, who shot him in the arm. Undeterred, he crawled some 20 yards until a third machinegun opened fire on him. By almost superhuman effort, weak from loss of blood and suffering great pain, he again raised himself to his knees and fired a grenade from his rifle, killing 3 of the enemy guncrew and causing the remaining one to flee. With the first objective seized, he was being treated by the company aid man when he observed 1 of his outpost men seriously wounded by a mortar burst. He wrenched himself from the hands of the aid man and began to crawl forward to assist his comrade, whom he had almost reached when he was struck and fatally wounded by an enemy bullet. S/Sgt. Peterson, by his gallant, intrepid actions, unrelenting fighting spirit, and outstanding initiative, silenced 3 enemy machineguns against great odds and while suffering from severe wounds, enabling his company to advance with minimum casualties.
Born in Brooklyn on May 28, 1912, Sergeant Peterson was wounded in Tunisia and again in Sicily. He was in the first wave on D-Day.

The Medal of Honor was accepted by his father on 2 November 1945 at Fort Jay, Governors Island.

Source of information: Peter Schouteten, Terry Hirsch, WWIImemorial, www.newspapers.com - The Brooklyn Daily Eagle, bklyn.newspaper.com - Brooklyn Daily Eagle 03 November1945

Photo source: Peter Schouteten, Erik