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・ Harold E. Martin
・ Harold E. Moore
・ Harold E. Palmer
・ Harold E. Pierce
・ Harold E. Puthoff
・ Harold E. Robinson
・ Harold E. Saunders
・ Harold E. Shear
・ Harold E. Talbott
・ Harold E. Tanner
・ Harold E. Taylor
・ Harold E. Thompson
・ Harold E. Varmus
・ Harold E. Wagoner
・ Harold E. Weeks
Harold E. Wilson
・ Harold E.H. Nelson
・ Harold Earl Roche
・ Harold Earle
・ Harold Earthman
・ Harold Edgar Coyle
・ Harold Edge
・ Harold Edward Bindloss
・ Harold Edward Dahl
・ Harold Edward Elliott
・ Harold Edward Welsh
・ Harold Edward Winch
・ Harold Edwards
・ Harold Edwards (mathematician)
・ Harold Edwards (RCAF officer)


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Harold E. Wilson : ウィキペディア英語版
Harold E. Wilson

:''For other persons with this name, see Harold Wilson (disambiguation).''
Chief Warrant Officer Harold Edward Wilson (December 5, 1921 – March 29, 1998) was a United States Marine who earned the United States’ military highest award, the Medal of Honor, for heroism as a platoon sergeant of a rifle platoon in Korea on the night of 23-April 24, 1951. He received the award from President Harry S. Truman during ceremonies at the White House on April 11, 1952.
Wounded four times during the night-long battle, he refused medical treatment to rally his men against overwhelming Communist forces. With both arms virtually disabled, he continued to pass ammunition to the hard-pressed Marines and moved from foxhole to foxhole aiding and encouraging his men. When the assault was finally broken, he personally accounted for each of his men before walking a half mile unassisted to an aid station.
A month earlier, he had earned the Bronze Star for “fearless and untiring leadership” of his platoon in several engagements from 1-March 27, 1951. He had been wounded previously on December 9, 1950 during the Chosin Reservoir campaign.
==Marine Corps service==
Harold Edward Wilson was born on December 5, 1921 in Birmingham, Alabama, and attended public schools there. He enlisted in the Marine Corps Reserve and was assigned to active duty on April 20, 1942. During World War II, he served overseas for 27 months and was stationed on Midway Island. In addition to his Pacific service, he was stationed at Parris Island, South Carolina; Camp Lejeune, North Carolina; and Portsmouth, Virginia. He was honorably discharged on October 20, 1945, with the rank of sergeant.
Two years later, he re-entered the Organized Marine Corps Reserve, joining the Birmingham unit. Recalled to active duty in August 1950 after the outbreak of the Korean War, he was assigned to Company G, 3rd Battalion, 1st Marines, 1st Marine Division. Arriving with his unit in Korea in November 1950, he participated in the Wonsan landing, and later fought in the Chosin Reservoir campaign and in the first United Nations counteroffensive. Following the 23-April 24, 1951 action in which he was wounded and earned the Medal of Honor, he was evacuated to the Yokosuka Naval Hospital in Japan and five months later returned to the United States. He was awarded a meritorious promotion to master sergeant in June 1951 and commissioned a Warrant Officer in August 1952. In December 1962, he assumed the post of Adjutant at the Marine Corps Engineer Schools, Camp Lejeune, and the following December was assigned to Force Troops, Fleet Marine Force, Atlantic, serving as Adjutant and Personnel Officer of the 2nd Tank Battalion.
Chief Warrant Officer Wilson was also a veteran of the Vietnam War, serving with Marine Aircraft Group 13 prior to being assigned as 6th Marine Corps District Personnel Officer in November 1968. He retired from the Marine Corps in February 1972.
Chief Warrant Officer Wilson died in Lexington, South Carolina on March 29, 1998. He is buried in Woodridge Memorial Park, Lexington, South Carolina.

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