Stephen R. Gregg, 90, Dies
#1

February 10, 2005

 

Stephen R. Gregg, 90, Dies; Received the Medal of Honor

 

By RICHARD GOLDSTEIN

 

 

Stephen R. Gregg, who was awarded the Medal of Honor in World War II for

charging a German outpost in France while he was an Army sergeant, enabling the

rescue of seven American soldiers lying wounded on the battlefield, died on

Friday at his home in Bayonne, N.J. He was 90. His death was announced by his

son, Stephen Jr.

 

On Aug. 27, 1944, serving in the 143rd Infantry, 36th Infantry Division,

during the invasion of southern France, Sergeant Gregg was in combat at the town

of Montelimar in the Rhone Valley. As his platoon advanced toward a German

position on a hill, an onslaught of hand grenades felled seven G.I.'s, and

heavy enemy fire prevented medics from reaching them. "We were close by, and you could hear the men that were hit calling for medics," he told The New York Times in 2000. "I said, 'God! I've got to do something here.' I don't know what got into me, but I picked up this gun.

 

"I kept firing and firing. I was just thinking, 'I've got to get as many as

I can before they get me.' I never thought I'd come out of this thing alive,

to be frank with you. The Lord was with me."

 

Sergeant Gregg had picked up a machine gun, and with a medic following him,

he headed up the hill toward the Germans, firing from the hip in the face of

a hand-grenade barrage. His covering fire enabled the medic to remove the

wounded, according to the Medal of Honor citation.

 

After he used up his ammunition, he was confronted by four German soldiers,

who ordered him to surrender. Platoon members opened fire on the Germans, and

as they hit the ground, Sergeant Gregg escaped to an American machine-gun

position. He fired away once more, routing the Germans and enabling the

Americans to take the hill. The next day, when the Germans counterattacked with tanks, Sergeant Gregg directed a mortar barrage, and then he charged a mortar position the Germans had overrun, capturing it by hurling a hand grenade.

 

He continued in combat, received a commission as a second lieutenant and was

presented with the Medal of Honor, the nation's highest award for valor, by

Lt. Gen. Alexander M. Patch, commander of the Seventh Army, on March 14, 1945.

 

Mr. Gregg, a native of the Bronx, grew up in Bayonne and was drafted in 1942

after working as a shipyard welder. Before participating in Operation Anvil,

the invasion of southern France, he took part in the Italian campaign and

fought at Altavilla and the Rapido River alongside one of America's most

celebrated combat heroes, Sgt. Charles E. Kelly, the Medal of Honor winner known as Commando Kelly.

 

Mr. Gregg also received the Silver Star, the Bronze Star and the Purple

Heart. When he returned to Bayonne in May 1945, 50,000 people watched him ride in a procession to a hero's welcome at a city stadium.

 

He worked for 51 years for the Hudson County Sheriff's Department, retiring

as chief of court officers. A county park in Bayonne is named for him.

 

In addition to his son, Stephen Jr., of Warren, N.J., he is survived by a

daughter, Susan Gregg, of Little Falls, N.J.; a sister, Sophie King, of Orange

City, Fla.; and two grandsons. His wife, Irene, died in 2001.

 

Mr. Gregg once said that Medal of Honor winners did not consider themselves

heroic figures. As he told The Record of Hackensack, N.J., in 2000: "We are

just ordinary men who didn't go out to earn this. It was just the spirit of

the moment that came upon you to do things."

Marion J Chard
Proud Daughter of Walter (Monday) Poniedzialek
540th Engineer Combat Regiment, 2833rd Bn, H&S Co, 4th Platoon
There's "No Bridge Too Far"
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