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April 14-16, 2021 - Half Staff Alert - Tennessee

Posted by Half-Staff Alerts Staff on Apr 14, 2021

April 14-16, 2021 - Half Staff Alert - Tennessee

By order of the Governor, flags over the State Capitol and all State office buildings should fly at half-staff from Wednesday, April 14 until sunset on Friday, April 16 to honor the memory of Charles Henry Coolidge, Sr., a recipient of the Congressional Medal of Honor.

Coolidge, a Chattanooga native, was an acclaimed hero of World War II who as an enlisted Technical Sergeant led an inexperienced group of soldiers that held off German combatants for several days despite being heavily outnumbered and facing tanks and heavy weaponry. He and his men killed 26 enemy soldiers and wounded 60. Coolidge was our country’s second-to-last living WWII Medal of Honor recipient. His body will be interred on Friday, April 16.

We have copied his citation from the Congressional Medal of Honor Society below:

Leading a section of heavy machine guns supported by one platoon of Company K, he took a position near Hill 623, east of Belmont-sur-Buttant, France, 24 October 1944, with the mission of covering the right flank of the 3d Battalion and supporting its action. TSgt. Coolidge went forward with a sergeant of Company K to reconnoiter positions for coordinating the fires of the light and heavy machine guns. They ran into an enemy force in the woods estimated to be an infantry company. TSgt. Coolidge, attempting to bluff the Germans by a show of assurance and boldness, called upon them to surrender, whereupon the enemy opened fire. With his carbine, TSgt. Coolidge wounded two of them. There being no officer present with the force, TSgt. Coolidge at once assumed command. Many of the men were replacements recently arrived; this was their first experience under fire. TSgt. Coolidge, unmindful of the enemy fire delivered at close range, walked along the position, calming and encouraging his men and directing their fire. The attack was thrown back. Through 24 and 26 October the enemy launched repeated attacks against the position of this combat group but each was repulsed due to TSgt. Coolidge's able leadership. On 27 October, German infantry, supported by two tanks, made a determined attack on the position. The area was swept by enemy small-arms, machine-gun, and tank fire. TSgt. Coolidge armed himself with a bazooka and advanced within 25 yards of the tanks. His bazooka failed to function and he threw it aside. Securing all the hand grenades he could carry, he crawled forward and inflicted heavy casualties on the advancing enemy. Finally it became apparent that the enemy, in greatly superior force, supported by tanks, would overrun the position. TSgt. Coolidge, displaying great coolness and courage, directed and conducted an orderly withdrawal, being himself the last to leave the position. As a result of TSgt. Coolidge's heroic and superior leadership, the mission of his combat group was accomplished throughout four days of continuous fighting against numerically superior enemy troops in rain and cold and amid dense woods.