Al Schmid

Al Schmid
Birth name Albert Andrew Schmid
Born (1920-10-20)20 October 1920
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Died 1 December 1982(1982-12-01) (aged 62)
St. Petersburg, Florida
Allegiance  USA
Service/branch U.S. Marine Corps
Years of service 1941 - 1944
Rank Sergeant
Battles/wars

World War II

Awards Navy Cross
Purple Heart Medal

Al Schmid (20 October 1920 1 December 1982) was a United States Marine awarded the Navy Cross for his heroism at the Battle of the Tenaru (Ilu River) during the Guadalcanal campaign in World War II. Credited with killing over 200 Japanese attackers during a night-long assault, he was blinded in action by a grenade blast and endured multiple surgeries and extended rehabilitation upon his return to the U.S..

His life story appeared in the American news magazines of the time,[1] the book Al Schmid, Marine by Roger Butterfield, and the 1945 film Pride of the Marines, in which he was played by American actor John Garfield.

Biography

Albert Andrew Schmid was born in the Burholme neighborhood of Philadelphia, the second son and third child of Adolph and Marian Schmid who both came from Germany to Philadelphia in the early 1880s. His father worked as a truck driver and baker. His mother died around 1932 and after his father remarried in 1934, Albert (AL) moved out about 1938, eventually becoming an apprentice steel burner at the Dodge Steel Company in Philadelphia in 1940.[2]

World War II

U.S. Marine Corps

Schmid enlisted in the United States Marine Corps on 9 December 1941 after hearing on the radio of the December 7 attack on Pearl Harbor. He received recruit training at Parris Island South Carolina, and further training at New River North Carolina where he was assigned to the 11th Machine Gun Squad, Company H, 2nd Battalion, 1st Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division. While on leave, he used a $60 bonus from his employer to purchase an engagement ring for his girlfriend Ruth Hartley, a salesgirl he first met in May 1941.[2]

Guadalcanal

The 1st Marines landed on Guadalcanal on August 7, 1942, the largest Marine force ever engaged in landing operations up to that time and first American offensive against the Japanese.[2] Schmid a private, was assigned as an assistant gunner/loader of a three-man crew manning a M19171A Browning heavy machine gun (water cooled, 30 caliber)[3] led by the crew's commander Corporal LeRoy Diamond, with Private First Class Johnny Rivers as gunner.[1] Schmid refused medical treatment for a serious foot infection in order to remain in combat with his team and fellow Marines.[4]

On the night of 21 August, an assault force of 800 Japanese crack infantry troops sent from Rabaul on August 18 under the command of Japanese Colonel Kiyonao Ichiki attempted to break through the 2nd Battalion, 1st Marines's perimeter and recapture the hotly contested Henderson Field airstrip. To reach it, Ichiki's infantry regiment had to cross the Ilu River. Cpl. Diamond's team was entrenched and posted on its west bank.[2]

The Japanese attack began under the light of flares at 3 AM. Part way into the assault, Pfc. Rivers was killed. Pvt. Schmid took over the gun and fired it for over four hours. As the assault progressed, Diamond was seriously wounded in the arm, and several bullets hit and shredded the Browning's water jacket. Guided by Cpl. Diamond's fire direction, Schmid kept shooting the gun by himself and loading 250-round belts of ammunition with and without help. Utilizing short bursts to avoid overheating and jamming, Schmid kept firing the machine gun even though it glowed red hot.[1] Ultimately, a crawling Japanese soldier threw a grenade into their machine gun position, wounding Schmid in the shoulder, arm, hand, and face.[2]

In spite of being blinded by the blast, Schmid resumed manning the gun, both firing and replacing ammunition belts in response to physical and verbal cues from Diamond as the Japanese continued to pour across the Ilu firing their weapons at the gun emplacement covered by a sniper firing from a tree across the river.[2]

The next morning, over 200 dead Japanese were counted in front of Schmid's position.[5] Only 15 of the original attackers survived the assault, a solitary soldier among the 800 escaping unwounded.[2]Colonel Ichiki committed suicide.

All three Marines-Rivers, Diamond, and Schmid-were awarded the Navy Cross for extraordinary heroism, Schmid receiving his medal at the Philadelphia Navy Yard on 18 February 1943. He was also promoted to corporal (he was later promoted to sergeant).[1]

Schmid married Ruth Hartley on April 4, 1943. They had a son, Al Schmid, Jr., in June 1944. Schmid spoke at war bond rallies across the nation before being honorably discharged from the Marine Corps on December 9, 1944. He remained in the public's eye throughout the war largely through Roger Butterfield's book, Al Schmid, Marine and the Warner Bros.' film released in August 1945, Pride of the Marines.[2]

Post World War II

In June 1946, Schmid was named Father of the Year in Pennsylvania, and the Democratic Party nominated Schmid as a candidate for the Pennsylvania Secretary of Internal Affairs, but he lost the election.[6]

Schmid eventually recovered partial sight in one eye, but problems with his leg during the cold winters led him to retire in 1957 and move to St. Petersburg, Florida with his wife and two sons.

Death

Al Schmid died of bone cancer on 1 December 1982. On December 6, he was buried at Arlington National Cemetery. His wife Ruth was also buried in Arlington National Cemetery on September 12, 2002 (died August 15, 2002).

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 4 Butterfield, Roger (22 March 1943). "Al Schmid: Hero". Life: 35–44.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 "Albert Andrew Schmid, Sergeant, United States Marine Corps". arlingtoncemetery.net.
  3. Weapons of the World War II Gyrene, M19171A Heavy Machine Gun
  4. p.114 Gerber, David A. In Search of Al Schmid quoted in Mitchell, David T. & Snyder, Sharon L. The Body and Physical Differences: Discourses of Disability 1997 University of Michigan Press
  5. "Army & Navy - HEROES: Dear Ruth . . .". Time. 1 February 1943. (subscription required)
  6. p. 116 ibid
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