World War II - U.S. Army
John Joseph Tominac
Details
- Rank:
First Lieutenant (Highest Rank: Colonel)
- Conflict/Era:
World War II
- Unit/Command:
3d Platoon, Company I, 3d Battalion, 15th Infantry,
3d Infantry Division
- Military
Service Branch: U.S. Army
- Medal of
Honor Action Date: September 12, 1944
- Medal of
Honor Action Place: Saulx de Vesoul, France
Citation
For conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of life above and
beyond the call of duty on 12 September 1944, in an attack on Saulx de
Vesoul, France. First Lt. Tominac charged alone over 50 yards of exposed
terrain onto an enemy roadblock to dispatch a three-man crew of German
machine gunners with a single burst from his Thompson machine gun. After
smashing the enemy outpost, he led one of his squads in the annihilation
of a second hostile group defended by mortar, machine-gun,
automatic-pistol, rifle, and grenade fire, killing about 30 of the
enemy. Reaching the suburbs of the town, he advanced 50 yards ahead of
his men to reconnoiter a third enemy position which commanded the road
with a 77-mm SP gun supported by infantry elements. The SP gun opened
fire on his supporting tank, setting it afire with a direct hit. A
fragment from the same shell painfully wounded 1st Lt. Tominac in the
shoulder, knocking him to the ground. As the crew abandoned the M-4
tank, which was running downhill toward the enemy, 1st Lt. Tominac
picked himself up and jumped onto the hull of the burning vehicle.
Despite withering enemy machine-gun, mortar, pistol, and sniper fire,
which was ricocheting off the hull and turret of the M-4, 1st Lt.
Tominac climbed into the turret and gripped the .50-caliber antiaircraft
machine gun. Plainly silhouetted against the sky, painfully wounded, and
with the tank burning beneath his feet, he directed bursts of
machine-gun fire on the roadblock, the SP gun, and the supporting German
infantrymen, and forced the enemy to withdraw from his prepared
position. Jumping off the tank before it exploded, 1st Lt. Tominac
refused evacuation despite his painful wound. Calling upon a sergeant to
extract the shell fragments from his shoulder with a pocketknife, he
continued to direct the assault, led his squad in a hand-grenade attack
against a fortified position occupied by 32 of the enemy armed with
machine guns, machine pistols, and rifles, and compelled them to
surrender. His outstanding heroism and exemplary leadership resulted in
the destruction of four successive enemy defensive positions, surrender
of a vital sector of the city Saulx de Vesoul, and the death or capture
of at least 60 of the enemy.