Marine
Technical Sergeant Robert Sidney Kennemore, 32, of Greenville,
South Carolina, earned the Medal of Honor during the bitter
Chosin Reservoir campaign of November 1950, when he
deliberately covered an enemy grenade with his foot to keep
his men from being wounded or killed. Sergeant Kennemore, who
lost both of his legs through his unselfish sacrifice, is the
23rd Marine to receive the Nations highest award for heroism
in Korea.
The
medal was presented to Sergeant Kennemore by President Truman
during ceremonies at the White House on 24 November 1952.
The
sergeant, a veteran of the Guadalcanal-Tulagi campaign of
World War II, was born 21 June 1920, at Greenville, South
Carolina. He attended high school at Simpsonville, South
Carolina, until 1935, and was employed by the Montgomery Ward
Company, in Chicago, Illinois, before enlisting in the Marine
Corps on 20 June 1940.
Completing his boot training at San Diego, California, in
August 1940, he was stationed there until July 1942, when he
sailed for the Pacific theater with the 1st Marine Division.
After serving with the division in the Guadalcanal Tulagi
campaign, he returned to the States in June 1943, for duty at
Camp Lejeune, North Carolina.
In
February 1944, Sergeant Kennemore was ordered to Camp
Pendleton, California, where he served until that September.
He was then stationed at the Marine Barracks, Klamath Falls,
Oregon, until February 1945, when he was assigned to the
Marine Barracks, at the Naval Air Station, Boca Chica,
Florida.
In
July 1945, after brief service at Camp Lejeune, Sergeant
Kennemore embarked for Japan to serve on occupation duty with
the Second Marine Division. He returned to the States in April
1946, and served briefly at San Diego and the Marine Barracks,
New Orleans, Louisiana, until September 1946, when he began a
year of duty at the Marine Barracks, Naval Mine Depot,
Yorktown, Virginia. In September 1947, he was ordered to New
York City, where he served for two years at Headquarters of
the 3d Marine Corps Reserve District.
Sergeant Kennemore joined the 2d Battalion, 6th Regiment, 2d
Marine Division, at Camp Lejeune, in October 1949, and with
the outbreak of the Korean fighting moved with the battalion
to the West Coast in July 1950. The 2d Battalion was made part
of the 7th Marines, 1st Marine Division in August 1950, and
the following month Sergeant Kennemore embarked for Korea,
where he served with the 2d Battalion in the Seoul and Chosin
Reservoir campaigns.
After
he was wounded in the action which earned him the Medal of
Honor, Sergeant Kennemore was returned to the States in
December 1950, for treatment at the U.S. Naval Hospital,
Oakland, California. He remained in that hospital for almost a
year, until his retirement on 31 October 1951.
In
addition to the Medal of Honor and the Purple Heart Medal he
received for his wounds, Sergeant Kennemores medals and
decorations include the Presidential Unit Citation with two
Bronze Stars; the Marine Corps Good Conduct Medal with two
Bronze Stars in lieu of second and third awards; the American
Defense Service Medal; the American Theater Campaign Medal;
the Asiatic-Pacific Theater Campaign Medal with two Bronze
Stars; the World War II Victory Medal; the Navy Occupation
Service Medal with Asia Clasp; the Korean Service Medal with
two Bronze Stars; and the United Nations Service Medal.