The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Honor given to vet who died in 1998

‘He was my hero,’ widow says. ‘He was for 53 years ... still is.’

- By Christine Condon McClatchy News Service

WASHINGTON — Decades of legal battles and impassione­d pleas on behalf of Kentucky World War II veteran Garlin Murl Conner ended Tuesday in spectacula­r fashion, as his wife accepted his posthumous Medal of Honor from President Donald Trump.

“Today we pay tribute to this Kentucky farm boy who stared down evil with the strength of a warrior and the heart of a true hero,” Trump said during the White House ceremony.

Pauline Conner accepted the award personally in the White House’s East Room, where she embraced the president.

“She told me she voted for Trump,” the president said to laughter from the crowd.

Garlin Murl Conner died in 1998, when he was 79.

The saga began more than 20 years ago, when a friend noticed Conner’s military awards in a cardboard box at the bottom of his Army duffel bag. Conner didn’t talk much about his 28 months in combat, said his wife Pauline, and she hardly knew of his decorated past.

So when Richard Chilton, a former Army Green Beret researchin­g his uncle, who served with Conner, discovered the details of Conner’s heroics, the fight began to upgrade Conner’s Distinguis­hed Service Cross to a Medal of Honor, the highest military award that can be bestowed on an American service member.

In 1997, the Army board rejected Conner’s initial

Medal of Honor applicatio­n, citing insufficie­nt evidence and his appeal failed in 2000. Conner’s applicatio­n got new life when Pauline Conner gathered eyewitness accounts and submitted it to the board again in 2008.

By then, though, two years had passed since the statute of limitation­s had expired. When Conner’s advocates took the case to court, a federal judge called for mediation. The board, going against the advice of its staff, then found there was enough evidence to award the medal.

“He was my hero,” Pauline Conner said Monday. “He was for 53 years and he still is.”

While serving in Houssen, France, in January 1945, Garlin Murl Conner slipped away from the hospital, where he was nursing a combat injury — one of seven he would sustain during the war. He rendezvous­ed with his unit, and volunteere­d to run into enemy fire. Using a field telephone, his goal was to inform American

artillery of German movements.

Conner also earned four Silver Stars, one Bronze Star and three Purple Hearts during more than two straight years of combat.

The Medal of Honor, though, is reserved for extraordin­ary acts of valor that go beyond the call of duty.

It’s possible that Conner is the second-most decorated American World War II veteran, said Erik Villard, a historian at the Center for Military History, although those determinat­ions are “fraught with challenges.” But Conner likely wouldn’t have minded either way, he said.

“I don’t think Conner would’ve given that a second thought,” Villard said. “He wouldn’t be interested in knowing who was first, second or third.”

After the war, Conner returned to farming and later volunteere­d with his wife to assist other veterans.

 ?? ALEX WONG/GETTY IMAGES ?? President Donald Trump and Pauline Lyda Wells Conner (seated), widow of U.S. Army First Lieutenant Garlin Murl Conner, listen during the Medal of Honor ceremony Tuesday at the White House.
ALEX WONG/GETTY IMAGES President Donald Trump and Pauline Lyda Wells Conner (seated), widow of U.S. Army First Lieutenant Garlin Murl Conner, listen during the Medal of Honor ceremony Tuesday at the White House.

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