
The President of the United States
in the name of The Congress
takes pleasure in presenting the
Medal of Honor
to
DALY, MICHAEL J.
Rank and organization: Captain (then
Lieutenant), U.S. Army, Company A, 15th Infantry, 3d Infantry Division. Place and
date: Nuremberg, Germany, 18 April 1945. Entered service at: Southport,
Conn. Born: 15 September 1924, New York, N.Y. G.O. No.: 77, 10 September
1945.
Citation:
Early in the morning of 18 April 1945, he led his company through the shell-battered,
sniper-infested wreckage of Nuremberg, Germany. When bl1stering machinegun fire caught his
unit in an exposed position, he ordered his men to take cover, dashed forward alone, and,
as bullets whined about him, shot the 3-man guncrew with his carbine. Continuing the
advance at the head of his company, he located an enemy patrol armed with rocket launchers
which threatened friendly armor. He again went forward alone, secured a vantage point and
opened fire on the Germans. Immediately he became the target for concentrated machine
pistol and rocket fire, which blasted the rubble about him. Calmly, he continued to shoot
at the patrol until he had killed all 6 enemy infantrymen. Continuing boldly far in front
of his company, he entered a park, where as his men advanced, a German machinegun opened
up on them without warning. With his carbine, he killed the gunner; and then, from a
completely exposed position, he directed machinegun fire on the remainder of the crew
until all were dead. In a final duel, he wiped out a third machinegun emplacement with
rifle fire at a range of 10 yards. By fearlessly engaging in 4 single-handed fire fights
with a desperate, powerfully armed enemy, Lt. Daly, voluntarily taking all major risks
himself and protecting his men at every opportunity, killed 15 Germans, silenced 3 enemy
machineguns and wiped out an entire enemy patrol. His heroism during the lone bitter
struggle with fanatical enemy forces was an inspiration to the valiant Americans who took
Nuremberg.
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