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Karaberis, Christos H. "Carr"

Date of birth:
April 6th, 1914 (Manchester/New Hampshire, United States)
Date of death:
September 16th, 1970 (United States)
Buried on:
Los Angeles National Cemetery
Plot: 275. Row: G. Grave: 15.
Nationality:
American (1776 - present, Republic)

Biography

His birth name, Christos H. Karaberis, under which the Medal of Honor was awarded, was legally changed to Chris Carr.

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Period:
Second World War (1939-1945)
Rank:
Sergeant
Unit:
Company L, 337th Infantry Regiment, 85th Infantry Division "Custer Division", U.S. Army
Awarded on:
November 1st, 1945
"Leading a squad of Company L, he gallantly cleared the way for his company's approach along a ridge toward its objective, the Casoni di Remagna. When his platoon was pinned down by heavy fire from enemy mortars, machineguns, machine pistols, and rifles, he climbed in advance of his squad on a maneuver around the left flank to locate and eliminate the enemy gun positions. Undeterred by deadly fire that ricocheted off the barren rocky hillside, he crept to the rear of the first machinegun and charged, firing his submachinegun. In this surprise attack he captured 8 prisoners and turned them over to his squad before striking out alone for a second machinegun. Discovered in his advance and subjected to direct fire from the hostile weapon, he leaped to his feet and ran forward, weaving and crouching, pouring automatic fire into the emplacement that killed 4 of its defenders and forced the surrender of a lone survivor. He again moved forward through heavy fire to attack a third machinegun. When close to the emplacement, he closed with a nerve-shattering shout and burst of fire. Paralyzed by his whirlwind attack, all 4 gunners immediately surrendered. Once more advancing aggressively in the face of a thoroughly alerted enemy, he approached a point of high ground occupied by 2 machineguns which were firing on his company on the slope below. Charging the first of these weapons, he killed 4 of the crew and captured 3 more. The 6 defenders of the adjacent position, cowed by the savagery of his assault, immediately gave up. By his l-man attack, heroically and voluntarily undertaken in the face of tremendous risks, Sgt. Karaberis captured 5 enemy machinegun positions, killed 8 Germans, took 22 prisoners, cleared the ridge leading to his company's objective, and drove a deep wedge into the enemy line, making it possible for his battalion to occupy important, commanding ground."

General Orders No.97, 1 November 1945.
Medal of Honor - Army (MoH)

Sources

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