Luther
Skaggs, Jr., was born 3 March 1923 in Henderson,
Kentucky. He entered the Marine Corps, 6 October
1942, and received recruit training at Parris Island,
South Carolina, and Camp Lejeune, North Carolina.
He went overseas 1 March 1943.
Private
First Class Skaggs, a squad leader with a mortar
section in the 3d Marine Division, was critically
wounded when a Japanese grenade exploded in his
foxhole during the night of 21-22 July 1944 on the
Asan-Adelup beachhead on Guam. But instead of calling
a corpsman and revealing his outfit's position,
he calmly applied a tourniquet to his shattered
leg and for eight hours continued to return the
enemy's fire with his rifle and hand grenades.
In the official Medal of Honor citation, he is commended
for being uncomplaining and calm through this critical
period and serving as "a heroic example of courage
and fortitude to other wounded men."
When
his section leader became a casualty shortly after
landing on the beachhead, PFC Skaggs promptly took
over and led the section through intense fire for
a distance of 200 yards to a strategic position.
It was while defending this vital position that
he was wounded, and after fighting throughout the
night propped up in his foxhole, he crawled unassisted
to the rear where he continued the attack. Only
when the Japanese in the area had been annihilated
did he seek medical attention. He lost his leg as
the result of the wound.
Private
First Class Skaggs was referred to as a "tough little
guy" by his buddies, who did not know that he had
been hit until the battle was over. He was promoted
to corporal upon being honorably discharged from
active service in the Marine Corps on 4 April 1946.
The
Medal of Honor was presented to him by President
Harry S. Truman at a White House ceremony on 15
June 1945.
Corporal
Luther Skaggs, Jr., died on 6 April 1976 and was
buried in Arlington National Cemetery.
Medal of Honor Citation