Author Topic: Family of first WWII Medal of Honor recipient, KIA, asks government to remove soldier’s name from bu  (Read 199 times)

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rangerrebew

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Family of first WWII Medal of Honor recipient, KIA, asks government to remove soldier’s name from buildings
 

FeaturedWIB culture January 13, 2021 Staff Writer 0

The descendants of World War II’s first Medal of Honor recipient are requesting the federal government remove the soldier’s name from all public buildings and installations, a move coming after what they call a decades-long “bureaucratic logjam” in bringing his remains home from the Philippines.

First Lt. Alexander “Sandy” Nininger, serving with the 57th Infantry Regiment, Philippine Scouts, died in battle on Jan. 12, 1942, near Abucay on the Bataan peninsula of Luzon Island, during the Japanese invasion.

He was given a hasty burial and subsequently became the war’s first service member to receive the Medal of Honor in the early days of the conflict when Imperial Japan invaded and occupied a huge swath of Asia.

https://warisboring.com/family-of-first-wwii-medal-of-honor-recipient-kia-asks-government-to-remove-soldiers-name-from-buildings/

Offline skeeter

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15 Medals of Honor were given as a result of action on 12/7/41. Perhaps he was the first army MoH.
« Last Edit: January 14, 2021, 02:01:51 pm by skeeter »