Wednesday, May 17, 2017

Benjamin Kaufman Medal of Honor Winner

Benjamin Kaufman 

Medal of Honor Winner





Ben Kaufman, a Buffalo native, who made his permanent home Trenton, attended Syracuse University, when President Woodrow Wilson declared war on the Axis powers.

Ben signed up tight away abandoning his scholarship to fight for his country.

He became a non-commissioned officer, Sergeant of a company very appreciative soldiers in  Company K, 308th Division.

On October 4, 1918, Ben, recovering from a field hospital from a blinding by gas, escaped from the field hospital to re-join and to lead his company.

Turning down two offers as a Commissioned Officer, Ben like the camaraderie of his own unit.

On October 4, 1918, Ben experienced the gruesome shooting  of two of his company privates get shot right near him by a lethal machine gun nest, so terrible in World War 1. He ran towards the machine gunners, threw a grenade to quell the machine gun antagonistic barrage. In doing so, his right arm newly shattered with a bullet wound. Nevertheless, he killed two of the gunnery force, chased several others , and with his gun poised, chased another to his own lines. To the shock of his superiors,  his gun had emptied. So he captured a prisoner with an empty weapon. After reaching American lines, he fainted from loss of blood and battle shock.

For abandoning the field hospital, Ben initially was charged with AWOL. However, upon reconsideration, seeing his bravery and dedication to his company, the brass awarded him with the Congressional Medal of Honor. Indeed, nine other nations joined in awarding him highest military honors. Such was the valor of this young Jewish soldier. 

  

Benjamin Kaufman
Date of birth: March 10, 1894
Date of death: February 05, 1981
Burial location: Trenton, New Jersey
Place of Birth: New York, Buffalo



AWARDS AND CITATIONS




Medal of Honor

CITATION

He took out a patrol for the purpose of attacking an enemy machine gun which had 

checked the advance of the company. Before reaching the gun, he became separated from

 the patrol and a machine gun bullet shattered his right arm. Without hesitation, he 

advanced on the gun alone, throwing grenades with his left hand and charging with an 

empty pistol, taking one prisoner and scattering the crew, bringing the gun and prisoner 

back to the first-aid station.

After the war, he became active in the Jewish War Veterans of the United States of America, serving as national commander in 1941 - 1942. The Ben Kaufman Post 156 of the JWV in Trenton, New Jersey, is a living memorial to a man who always had a smile on his face even when the going was rough.




Orders: 
War Department, General Orders No. 50 (April 12, 1919)

Action Date: 4-Oct-18

Service: Army

Rank: First Sergeant

Company: Company K

Regiment: 308th Infantry

Division: 77th Division




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