
The President of the United States
in the name of The Congress
takes pleasure in presenting the
Medal of Honor
to
TOMINAC, JOHN
J .
Rank and organization: First Lieutenant, U.S. Army, Company I,
15th Infantry, 3d Infantry Division. Place and date: Saulx de Vesoul, France, 12
September 1944. Entered service at: Conemaugh, Pa. Birth: Conemaugh, Pa.
G.O. No.: 20, 29 March 1945.
Citation:
For conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity at risk of life above and beyond the call of
duty on 12 September 1944, in an attack on Saulx de Vesoul, France 1st Lt. Tominac charged
alone over 50 yards of exposed terrain onto an enemy roadblock to dispatch a 3-man crew of
German machine gunners with a single burst from his Thompson machinegun after smashing the
enemy outpost, he led 1 of his squads in the annihilation of a second hostile group
defended by mortar, machinegun automatic pistol, rifle and grenade fire, killing about 30
of the enemy. Reaching the suburbs of the town, he advanced 50 yards ahead of his men to
reconnoiter a third enemy position which commanded the road with a 77-mm. SP gun supported
by infantry elements. The SP gun opened fire on his supporting tank, setting it afire with
a direct hit. A fragment from the same shell painfully wounded 1st Lt. Tominac in the
shoulder, knocking him to the ground. As the crew abandoned the M-4 tank, which was
rolling down hill toward the enemy, 1st Lt. Tominac picked himself up and jumped onto the
hull of the burning vehicle. Despite withering enemy machinegun, mortar, pistol, and
sniper fire, which was ricocheting off the hull and turret of the M-4, 1st Lt. Tominac
climbed to the turret and gripped the 50-caliber antiaircraft machinegun. Plainly
silhouetted against the sky, painfully wounded, and with the tank burning beneath his
feet, he directed bursts of machinegun fire on the roadblock, the SP gun, and the
supporting German infantrymen, and forced the enemy to withdraw from his prepared
position. Jumping off the tank before it exploded, 1st Lt. Tominac refused evacuation
despite his painful wound. Calling upon a sergeant to extract the shell fragments from his
shoulder with a pocketknife, he continued to direct the assault, led his squad in a hand
grenade attack against a fortified position occupied by 32 of the enemy armed with
machineguns, machine pistols, and rifles, and compelled them to surrender. His outstanding
heroism and exemplary leadership resulted in the destruction of 4 successive enemy
defensive positions, surrender of a vital sector of the city Saulx de Vesoul, and the
death or capture of at least 60 of the enemy. |