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Alton W. Knappenberger
Obituary
Alton W. Knappenberger, 84, of Boyertown, passed away Monday,
June 9 at Pottstown Memorial Hospital. He was the beloved husband of
Hazel (Hamlin) Knappenberger to whom he was married for over 32
years. Born December 31, 1923 in Coopersburg, he was one of six
children born to the late Frank and Lottie (Greenwalt) Knappenberger.
Mr. Knappenberger served in the U.S. Army during WWII. He was a
Private First Class, in the 3d Infantry Division. Mr. Knappenberger
received the Congressional Medal of Honor For conspicuous gallantry
and intrepidity at the risk of his life above and beyond the call of
duty in action involving actual conflict with the enemy, on February
1, 1944 near Cisterna di Littoria, Italy. Pfc. Knappenberger’s
intrepid action disrupted the enemy attack for over 2 hours. Mr.
Knappenberger was employed at K and K Paving as a truck driver. He
was a member of the American Legion of both Sellersville and Spring
Mount. Mr. Knappenberger enjoyed the outdoors and taught his
children and grandchildren the joys of hunting and fishing. He was
very active with his children’s and grandchildren’s lives
umpiring their little league games in the Pottstown little league,
and playing the role of Santa on a few occasions at their schools.
Mr. Knappenberger was a very loving and devoted husband, father, and
grandfather.
In addition to his wife, he is survived by his children: Alton
Knappenberger and his wife Nancy of Salt Lake City, Utah, Dorothy
Reinert and her husband Robert of Fla., Paul Knappenberger and his
wife Shirley of Pottstown, Hazel Trump of Pottstown, Mitzie Chrisman
and her husband Ronald of Pottstown, and Robert Moser of Graterford;
and many grandchildren, great grandchildren, and great-great
grandchildren.
He was predeceased by his siblings, Elmer Knappenberger, Frances
Kramer, Edie Trump, Laura Moyer, Frank Knappenberger; his children,
Vickey Butler, and Sharon and Karen Knappenberger; and
grandchildren, Jean Marie, and Tracy.
Relatives and friends are invited to attend his funeral service
on Tuesday, June 17 at 7 p.m. from the R.L. Williams, Jr. Funeral
Home, Inc. Skippack Pike at Cedars Rd. Skippack, where friends are
invited to call for the viewing from 5 to 7 p.m. Interment will be
at Arlington National Cemetery. Contributions may be made in his memory to the Veterans Home, 1
Veterans Drive, Spring City, PA 19475-1230. www.rlwilliamsfuneralhome.com
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In Arlington National Cemetery, July
31, 2008, a US Army honor guard folds the American flag that
covered the coffin of the late Medal of Honor recipient Alton
Knappenberger.

A US Army honor guard member presents the
flag from over the coffin of the late Medal of Honor
recipient Alton Knappenberger to Knappenberger's widow Hazel.

Don Moser, left, stepson of Alton
Knappenberger and Hazel Knappenberger, widow of the late
Medal of Honor recipient.
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"A Hero's Tribute"
by Josh Drobnyk and David Venditta
of The Morning Call
August 1, 2008
WATCH
THE VIDEO
ARLINGTON, VA - Alton Warren Knappenberger was laid to rest at
Arlington National Cemetery on Thursday, six decades after he
single-handedly held off two German infantry companies in Italy, a
feat that earned him the military's highest award for valor.
With a Medal of Honor flag flapping in the wind and a firing party
and bugler standing in the distance, four dozen family members and
friends bade farewell to a man they said had long avoided the
recognition that he deserved.
Knappenberger, who lived near Boyertown in Earl Township, could have just as easily gone quietly to his
final resting place. This was the type of sendoff Knappenberger, 84
when he died of natural causes last month, would have shied away
from.
''He wouldn't have done it for himself,'' Hiedie Ott of Boyertown
said of her step-grandfather's Arlington burial. ''He didn't like
the fuss and stuff. .. We just thought that he deserved it. He
deserved his hero's tribute.''
Knappenberger's moment came on a winter
day in 1944 during his first and only combat experience during World
War II. Just days after the Allied landing at Anzio, Italy, the Army
private first-class disrupted a German attack for two hours as most
of the 200 soldiers in his company perished.
Perched on a knoll and armed with a Browning Automatic Rifle that he
grabbed from a soldier that had been killed in the attack,
Knappenberger crawled amid the snow-covered fields to collect
ammunition from American casualties, He was credited with killing 60
enemy soldiers over two hours.
As word spread of his heroics, and his commanders investigated the
reports, his division's commanding general called Knappie, as he was
known, a ''one-man Army.''
''That's what you are,'' he told the private. ''A blasted one-man
Army.''
Four months later in Rome, after victorious Allied forces had
entered the city, Knappenberger received the Medal of Honor, ''for
conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of his life above
and beyond the call of duty.''
He was one of 464 Medal of Honor recipients from World War II.
Twenty-seven are still alive.
His widow, Hazel Knappenberger, said she struggled with the idea of
burying her husband of 32 years so far from their home in Earl
Township, Berks County, near Boyertown. But she said she was assured
by the cemetery that she could join him there one day.
''I wanted to be sure that we could be together because that is what
we promised each other,'' Knappenberger said, standing amidst
friends and family outside the cemetery gates, a button photo of her
late husband pinned to her blouse.
Plus, stepson Don Moser added as he stood beside his mother, ''he
does belong to the country as well.''
After receiving the medal, Knappenberger returned to the Perkiomen
Valley in August 1944 to a hero's welcome, but he avoided showing up
at picnics and parades to celebrate his return. He shunned publicity
throughout his life, believing what he did on the knoll near
Cisterna di Latina didn't deserve special attention.
''I just did what I had to do,'' he said in an interview with The
Morning Call in 2004. ''You go in there and just try to get them
guys before they get you.''
He spent his career working in foundries and manufacturing plants,
driving a truck hauling stone for a quarry, running backhoes and
front-end loaders and laying blacktop. He's survived by his wife,
three children from his second marriage and three stepchildren.
He spent the final years of his life happily watching the ducks and
geese from his trailer, making occasional trips to fish at Mermaid
Lake and the Schuylkill River.
''His biggest fish to catch was the carp,'' recalled his step
grandson, Billy Chrisman, 26. ''He liked the fight.''
He had five heart attacks during the past 30 year.
''The doctor always said, 'Boy, he just won't give in,''' Hazel
Knappenberger said. ''This time it didn't work.'' |
"Medal
of Honor: Portraits of Valor Beyond the Call of Duty"
by Peter
Collier
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Alton W. Knappenberger was profiled by Brian Williams for MSNBC's
Daily
Nightly in August 2007. Every weekday for 110 straight
days, the program featured a different living recipient of the Medal
of Honor. Brian Williams is a board member of the
Congressional Medal of Honor Foundation.
The following words and photos are courtesy of Artisan Books,
publishers of Medal
of Honor: Portraits of Valor Beyond the Call of Duty by Peter
Collier with photographs by Nick Del Calzo.
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Alton Knappenberger was working on a Pennsylvania pig farm when he was
drafted in 1943 at the age of nineteen. He landed at Anzio, on the Italian
coast, on January 22, 1944, as part of the Army’s 3rd Infantry Division,
and although he did not know it at the time, he was about to become
engaged in one of the toughest combat actions of World War II. “Knappie,”
as his friends called him, was surprised by how little resistance the
Germans initially offered. But as his unit slowly pushed inland over the
next few days, he could sense that the enemy was regrouping. It rained
constantly. He never forgot the mud; it was so thick and viscous that he
worried it might suck off his boots.
On February 1, as Private First Class Knappenberger’s battalion neared
the small town of Cisterna di Littoria, the Germans launched a strong
counterattack with tanks and artillery that nearly overwhelmed the U.S.
force. It was the Germans’ intent to push the Americans into the sea.
With American soldiers taking heavy casualties all around him,
Knappenberger crawled to a rise so that he could see the enemy. A German
machine gun about eighty yards away opened fire, its slugs hitting right
in front of Knappenberger and kicking mud into his face. He scrambled to a
Browning Automatic Rifle lying beside one of his dead comrades, stood up,
and aimed a burst at the machine gun, killing the three Germans operating
it. Two Germans crawled to a point within twenty yards of
Knappenberger’s knoll and threw potato masher grenades at him.
Knappenberger wheeled and killed them both with one burst from his
automatic rifle.
He was moving forward when a second German machine gun opened fire from a
range of a hundred yards. Knappenberger silenced it with the BAR. Shortly
afterward, a German 20 mm antiaircraft gun directed fire at his unit. He
took out the German position with his BAR. For the next two hours,
Knappenberger single-handedly held off the enemy infantry, which was
threatening the efforts of the U.S. force to organize a defense. When he
ran low on ammunition, he crawled through heavy fire to the body of
another fallen American and grabbed clips from his pack. He resumed firing
and repelled a German platoon armed with automatic weapons. Despite heavy
fire, shells bursting within fifteen yards of him, he held his precarious
position while continuing to fire at the enemy. Finally, his ammunition
supply completely exhausted, he rejoined his company, having disrupted the
enemy attack for more than two hours. Only six men out of his company of
two hundred had not been killed or wounded.
Over the next few weeks, the breakout from Anzio stalled and developed
into a stalemate between Allied and German forces as each regrouped.
Knappenberger was in a foxhole not far from where the February action had
occurred when he was informed that he was to receive the Medal of Honor.
It was presented to him on June 8, 1944, by General Mark Clark, commander
of the 5th Army, with American troops looking on and the regimental band
playing. Soon thereafter, Knappenberger was sent home and traveled around
the country telling his story as part of a war bond drive. After the war,
he returned home to Pennsylvania and worked as a truck driver and
supervisor of an asphalting crew.
Alton W. Knappenberger
Medal of Honor Citation
Rank and Organization:
Place and Date: |
Private First Class, US Army, 3rd
Infantry Division
Near Cisterna di Littoria, Italy on 1 February 1944 |
For conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of his
life above and beyond the call of duty in action involving actual conflict
with the enemy, on 1 February 1944 near Cisterna di Littoria, Italy.
When
a heavy German counterattack was launched against his battalion, PFC Knappenberger crawled to an exposed knoll and went into position with his
automatic rifle. An enemy machinegun 85 yards away opened fire, and
bullets struck within 6 inches of him. Rising to a kneeling position, PFC
Knappenberger opened fire on the hostile crew, knocked out the gun, killed
two members of the crew, and wounded the third. While he fired at this
hostile position, two Germans crawled to a point within 20 yards of the
knoll and threw potato-masher grenades at him, but PFC Knappenberger
killed them both with one burst from his automatic rifle. Later, a second
machinegun opened fire upon his exposed position from a distance of 100
yards, and this weapon also was silenced by his well aimed shots. Shortly
thereafter, an enemy 20mm antiaircraft gun directed fire at him, and
again PFC Knappenberger returned fire to wound one member of the hostile
crew. Under tank and artillery shellfire, with shells bursting within 15
yards of him, he held his precarious position and fired at all enemy
infantrymen armed with machine pistols and machineguns which he could
locate. When his ammunition supply became exhausted, he crawled 15 yards
forward through steady machinegun fire, removed rifle clips from the belt
of a casualty, returned to his position and resumed firing to repel an
assaulting German platoon armed with automatic weapons. Finally, his
ammunition supply being completely exhausted, he rejoined his company.
PFC Knappenberger's intrepid action disrupted the enemy attack for over
two hours.


Riverside National Cemetery
Medal of Honor Memorial
A special thanks to Kirk R.
Knappenberger of California
who took the following
photographs and
provided them to us for use
on this website.
Riverside National Cemetery is home to The Medal of Honor
Memorial,
one of four sites in the United States recognized by the US
Congress as a National Medal of Honor Memorial Site.

The open air
memorial consists of a plaza surrounded by the flags of all fifty states, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico, representing the homes of the
Medal of Honor recipients. Italian Cypress trees, planted in "squads" of
nine, encircle the plaza.
The focal point of the memorial is a water
sculpture, a wall of water created by a series of jets.

The Medal of Honor Memorial is the first publicly accessible site that
lists the names of all Medal of Honor recipients.
The Medal of
Honor, sometimes referred to as the Congressional Medal of Honor because
it is awarded by the President
on behalf of the Congress, is the highest
military decoration awarded by the United States.
It is bestowed
"for conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of life,
above
and beyond the call of duty, in actual combat against an armed enemy
force."

Three different versions of the Medal of Honor are awarded: Army, Navy, and Air Force.
Fort Benning, Georgia
Knappenberger Field
| Military bases routinely name their streets, buildings
and airfields after military heroes, especially those that are
recipients of the Medal of Honor. Fort Benning in Georgia,
for example, not only has a fitness center named for Audie Murphy
but also a field named after Alton Knappenberger. Every
summer, soldiers enjoy games of intramural softball at Knappenberger Field.
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The Stars And Stripes
21 August 1944
Alton Knappenberger
Related Websites
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Americans.Net
Alton Knappenberger photos plus a tremendous amount of history
regarding the Medal
of Honor. Links to many other related websites.
COMMERCIALLY SPONSORED
US
Army Citation
US Army Center of Military History
OFFICIAL WEBSITE
Home
of the Heroes
Printable version of the citation given to Alton
Knappenberger.
This website "preserves
the history of recipients of the Medal of Honor".
PRIVATELY SPONSORED
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