Having written these Medal of Honor blogs for more than a year now, I have to say it’s stunning just how many service members have given their lives by throwing themselves onto grenades to save their comrades. It has happened often in war, and Army Cpl. Gordon M. Craig is one of the many men who earned the nation’s highest honor for his selfless sacrifice.
Army Cpl. Gordon M. Craig
While I haven’t been able to find much about his life before war, Craig grew up in Brockton, Massachusetts, and joined the Army sometime after high school. He was sent to Korea not long after the war began.
In the first half of September 1950, battle raged along the Naktong River in southeast Korea. It became known as the Second Battle of Naktong Bulge and was basically several large battles fought at the same time.
The Army’s 1st Cavalry Division was involved in the battle, and Craig’s 16th Reconnaissance Company was attached to that.
On Sept 10, 1950, Craig and his fellow soldiers were advancing on a hill held by the enemy when they were attacked by heavy grenade, mortar and small-arms fire. Craig and four other soldiers worked their way up the hill to destroy an enemy machine gun nest that was keeping their company from advancing.
As they pushed up the hill, one of the enemy threw a hand grenade at the small unit. Without thinking about his own life, Craig threw himself onto the grenade, smothering its explosion with his body.