Hershel W. Williams

Birthday October 2, 1923

Birth Sign Libra

Birthplace Quiet Dell, Marion County, West Virginia, U.S.

DEATH DATE 2022-6-29, Huntington, West Virginia, U.S. (98 years old)

Nationality United States

#28752 Most Popular

1923

Hershel Woodrow "Woody" Williams (October 2, 1923 – June 29, 2022) was a United States Marine Corps Reserve warrant officer and United States Department of Veterans Affairs veterans service representative who received the Medal of Honor, the United States military's highest decoration for valor, for heroism above and beyond the call of duty during the Battle of Iwo Jima in World War II.

Williams was the last living Medal of Honor recipient from World War II.

Williams, the youngest of eleven children, was born in Quiet Dell in Marion County, West Virginia, southeast of Fairmont, on October 2, 1923, and raised on a dairy farm in the area.

At birth, Williams weighed 3 1⁄2 pounds and was not expected to live.

His mother, Lurenna, decided to name him after the doctor who arrived at their farm several days after his birth.

By the time he was 11, his father, Lloyd, had died of a heart attack and several of his siblings had died due to the flu.

Williams worked a series of odd jobs in the area, including as a truck driver for W.S. Harr Construction Company of Fairmont, and as a taxi driver.

When Pearl Harbor was attacked, he was working in Montana as a Civilian Conservation Corps enrollee.

Williams was drawn to the Marines by their dress blue uniforms he had seen several men in his community wear.

He disliked the Army's brown wool uniform he considered "... the ugliest thing in town ... I decided I did not want to be in that thing. I want to be in those dress blues."

Aside from the appearance of the uniform, Williams knew nothing of the Marines.

1942

Standing 5-foot-6, when Williams tried to enlist in the Marine Corps in 1942, he was told he was too short for service.

1943

After the height regulations were changed in early 1943, he successfully enlisted in the United States Marine Corps Reserve in Charleston, West Virginia, on May 26.

Williams received his recruit training at Marine Corps Recruit Depot San Diego, California.

Upon completion, he was sent to the Camp Elliott training center in San Diego, where he joined the tank training battalion on August 21, 1943.

The following month he was transferred to the training center's infantry battalion for instruction as a demolition man and in the use of flamethrowers.

The training, Williams said, was technical and focused on the flamethrower's design: three tanks, two of which held a mix of diesel fuel and aviation gas, and a third tank that held compressed air.

There was little training on the operational use of the weapon.

"We had to learn that ourselves", he said.

Williams was assigned to the 32nd Replacement Battalion on October 30, 1943, and left for New Caledonia in the southwest Pacific on December 3 aboard the M.S. Weltey Reden.

1944

In January 1944, he joined Company C, 1st Battalion, 21st Marine Regiment, 3rd Marine Division at Guadalcanal.

In July and August 1944, he was attached to Headquarters Company and participated in action against the Japanese during the Battle of Guam.

In October, he rejoined Company C.

Williams' next and final campaign was at the Battle of Iwo Jima, where he distinguished himself with actions "above and beyond the call of duty", for which he would be awarded the Medal of Honor.

1945

On February 21, 1945, he landed on the beach with the 1st Battalion, 21st Marines.

Williams, by then a corporal, distinguished himself two days later when American tanks, trying to open a lane for the infantry, encountered a network of reinforced concrete pillboxes.

Pinned down by machine-gun fire, his company commander asked one of his men to attach a high explosive charge to a pole and, supported by Williams, his flamethrower and several Marine riflemen, shoved the improvised weapon into an opening in the enemy's pillbox.

As they fought their way to the pillbox, all of the men, except Williams, became casualties.

Undeterred, Williams arrived at the first pillbox, shoved the flamethrower nozzle into the pillbox opening and fired the weapon, killing all of the soldiers inside.

He then returned five times to his company area, refueled his weapon, and moved forward to destroy the remaining pillboxes.

Covered by only four riflemen, he fought for four hours under intense enemy small-arms fire and repeatedly returned to his own lines to prepare demolition charges and obtain serviced flame throwers.

He returned to the front, frequently to the rear of hostile emplacements, to wipe out one position after another.

At one point, a wisp of smoke alerted him to the air vent of a Japanese bunker, and he approached close enough to put the nozzle of his flamethrower through the hole, fire and kill the occupants.

On another occasion, he was charged by enemy riflemen who attempted to stop him with bayonets; he fired at them with a burst of flame from his weapon and in a PBS America documentary "The Seabees on Iwo Jima" recounted how "It took all the oxygen from them..."

which killed them.

Williams said that much of the action "is just a blank. I have no memory."

These actions occurred on the same day that two flags were raised on Mount Suribachi, and Williams, about one thousand yards away from the volcano, was able to witness the event.

He fought through the remainder of the five-week-long battle, even though he was wounded in the leg on March 6 by fragmentation, for which he was awarded the Purple Heart.

In September 1945, he returned to the United States, and on October 1 he joined Marine Corps Headquarters in Washington, D.C. He and thirteen other servicemen were presented the Medal of Honor by President Harry S. Truman on October 5, 1945, at the White House.

On October 22, 1945, he was transferred to the Marine Barracks, Naval Training Center Bainbridge, Maryland, for discharge.