Rank Insignia Previous Honoree ID Next Honoree ID


   
honoree image
First Name: James

Last Name: Gardner

Birthplace: Dyersburg, TN, USA

Gender: Male

Branch: Army (1784 - present)



Home of Record: Memphis, TN
Middle Name: Alton



Date of Birth: 07 February 1943

Date of Death: 07 February 1966

Rank: First Lieutenant

Years Served: 1963 - 1966
James Alton Gardner

   
Engagements:
•  Vietnam War (1960 - 1973)

Biography:

James Alton Gardner
First Lieutenant, U.S. Army
Medal of Honor Recipient
Vietnam War

First Lieutenant James Alton Gardner (7 February 1943 - 7 February 1966) was a U.S. Army officer who was posthumously awarded the U.S. military's highest award for valor, the Medal of Honor, for his heroic actions in the Vietnam War.

James Alton Gardner was born on 7 February 1943, at Dyersburg, TN, the son of mother Johnnye Patterson. Raised in Dyersburg, he attended Holice Powell School before graduating from Dyersburg High School.

Gardner joined the Army from Memphis, TN, in 1964, and was stationed with the 101st Airborne Division at Fort Campbell, KY. He married Joella McManus in June 1965, a month before being sent to Vietnam.

Later that year, after arriving in Vietnam, he helped to form and train Tiger Force, a task force of the division's 1st Battalion (Airborne), 327th Infantry Regiment, 1st Brigade, which specialized in the use of guerrilla tactics. On 7 February 1966, Gardner, then a First Lieutenant in his brigade's Headquarters and Headquarters Company, led a platoon in the relief of a company that was pinned down by a strongly entrenched and numerically superior enemy force at the village of My Canh. During the assault on the enemy positions, he single-handedly attacked four bunkers. He was mortally wounded while approaching a fifth bunker, but managed to destroy it before succumbing to his injuries. For these actions, he was posthumously awarded the Medal of Honor. He was killed on his 23rd birthday, one month before his tour in Vietnam was to end.

Medal of Honor

Citation: For conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity in action at the risk of his life above and beyond the call of duty. 1st Lt. Gardner's platoon was advancing to relieve a company of the 1st Battalion that had been pinned down for several hours by a numerically superior enemy force in the village of My Canh, Vietnam. The enemy occupied a series of strongly fortified bunker positions which were mutually supporting and expertly concealed. Approaches to the position were well covered by an integrated pattern of fire including automatic weapons, machine guns and mortars. Air strikes and artillery placed on the fortifications had little effect. 1st Lt. Gardner's platoon was to relieve the friendly company by encircling and destroying the enemy force. Even as it moved to begin the attack, the platoon was under heavy enemy fire. During the attack, the enemy fire intensified. Leading the assault and disregarding his own safety, 1st Lt. Gardner charged through a withering hail of fire across an open rice paddy. On reaching the first bunker he destroyed it with a grenade and without hesitation dashed to the second bunker and eliminated it by tossing a grenade inside. Then, crawling swiftly along the dike of a rice paddy, he reached the third bunker. Before he could arm a grenade, the enemy gunner leaped forth, firing at him. 1st Lt. Gardner instantly returned the fire and killed the enemy gunner at a distance of 6 feet. Following the seizure of the main enemy position, he reorganized the platoon to continue the attack. Advancing to the new assault position, the platoon was pinned down by an enemy machine gun emplaced in a fortified bunker. 1st Lt. Gardner immediately collected several grenades and charged the enemy position, firing his rifle as he advanced to neutralize the defenders. He dropped a grenade into the bunker and vaulted beyond. As the bunker blew up, he came under fire again. Rolling into a ditch to gain cover, he moved toward the new source of fire. Nearing the position, he leaped from the ditch and advanced with a grenade in one hand and firing his rifle with the other. He was gravely wounded just before he reached the bunker, but with a last valiant effort he staggered forward and destroyed the bunker, and its defenders with a grenade. Although he fell dead on the rim of the bunker, his extraordinary actions so inspired the men of his platoon that they resumed the attack and completely routed the enemy. 1st Lt. Gardner's conspicuous gallantry were in the highest traditions of the U.S. Army.

During a ceremony at the Pentagon on 19 October 1967, Gardner's widow, Joella, was formally presented with his Medal of Honor by Secretary of the Army Stanley Rogers Resor.

The medal passed between Gardner's widow, mother, and sister until 2009. On 14 August 2009, his sister, Lynda Gardner-Park, gave the Medal of Honor to his former unit, the 101st Airborne Division, to be displayed in the Division's headquarters at Fort Campbell, KY.

Medals and Awards

Medal of Honor
Bronze Star Medal
Purple Heart
Vietnam Gallantry Cross with Palm

Vietnam Veterans Memorial

James Alton Gardner's name is inscribed on Panel 05E - Line 11.

Honors

The Army National Guard armory in Dyersburg, TN, is named in Gardner's honor.

Death and Burial

First Lieutenant James Alton Gardner was killed in action on 7 February 1966. He was buried on 15 February 1966, at Fairview Cemetery in his hometown of Dyersburg, TN, GPS (lat/lon): 36.04595-89.37205.



Honoree ID: 956   Created by: MHOH

Ribbons


Medals


Badges


Honoree Photos

honoree imagehonoree imagehonoree image

honoree imagehonoree image

honoree image

Remembrances


Tributes