Baltimore Sun Sunday

Carefully saluting a WWII veteran

Soldier, 95, receives his Bronze Star in age of COVID-19

- By Hailey Branson-Potts

LOS ANGELES — Eldon Knuth was trapped.

It was November 1944, and U.S. forces were fighting to liberate the heavily fortified French city of Metz from the Nazis.

When Knuth’s battalion attacked the German-held Fort Jeanne d’Arc, he and about 30 other soldiers with the Army’s 95th Infantry Division got stuck behind enemy lines, in the bitter cold, with meager supplies.

For five days, Pfc. Knuth — a 19-year-old Iowa farm boy — survived on militaryis­sued chocolate bars. His wet feet swelled as the trench foot that would trouble him for the rest of his life set in.

For their bravery, Knut and his fellow soldiers would come to be known as the Iron Men of Metz.

But on a warm afternoon last week, as the 95-year-old World War II veteran was awarded one of the U.S. Army’s highest honors, he was treated as delicately as an ancient vase. Organizers of the ceremony at his retirement village, where Knuth received a Bronze Star, mounted a defense against an invisible but deadly new enemy: COVID-19.

“It was utter chaos,” Knuth recalled of the Metz standoff. “Not very many men made it to the fort. Some were injured. Some died. Some just turned around because the fire from the Germans was so intense.”

Only a handful of people were allowed at the retirement facility’s first in-person gathering since the pandemic began. Everyone wore masks. People stood far from Knuth to pay their respects, and there were no congratula­tory handshakes. Residents were encouraged to watch from their rooms on an internal television channel.

“This is a once-in-a-lifetime event. Normally, this would be standing-room only,” said Dmitry Estrin, executive director of University Village, as he stood near the few dramatical­ly spaced out chairs in a large event hall.

For older people like Knuth, a slight man with bright blue eyes and thin white hair who leans heavily on a walker, the coronaviru­s has been especially devastatin­g.

That Knuth could have an in-person celebratio­n at University Village, where he and his 94-year-old wife, Margaret, live with nearly 500 other retirees, meant a lot. He got the Bronze Star, which recognizes meritoriou­s service in a combat zone, in the mail a month ago and figured that would be the end of it.

Retired U.S. Air Force Lt. Col. Robert Johnson, who volunteers working with older veterans, said Knuth had long qualified for the Bronze Star but that it had been overlooked, as was common with World War II veterans.

Johnson helped Knuth apply to receive his longoverdu­e award, which took more than a year to arrive.

“This ceremony is very special,” Knuth said, wearing a jacket adorned with military service medals. His voice was muffled by a black cloth mask with the words, “I Wear This Mask to Protect You.”

Over the last six months, life has changed a lot for the Knuths.

He was an avid swimmer who hit the pool five times a week to maintain circulatio­n in legs badly damaged in Metz. He was devastated when the pandemic closed the University Village pool and gym for several weeks, and he now has to make appointmen­ts to exercise.

He and Margaret don’t socialize much, eating in their villa instead of in the dining hall with friends. They don’t see their six children as often. And they worry about catching COVID-19 during doctors’ appointmen­ts.

“It’s stressful,” Knuth said. “If you go out, you have to worry about, ‘Am I going to come back with the virus?’ ”

There have been a few cases of COVID-19 among residents on the sprawling campus, which includes an adjacent skilled nursing facility, Estrin said. But residents have been “great partners” with the safety protocols and have been successful at avoiding outbreaks, he said.

The Bronze Star ceremony was a ray of hope after so many stressful months. Attendees said it was important to honor World War II veterans, whose numbers are dwindling.

At the 70th reunion of the Iron Men of Metz at Ft. Sill, Oklahoma, last year — where Knuth was awarded the French National Legion of Honor Medal — there were only seven veterans.

Maj. Gen. Laura Yeager, commander of the 40th Infantry Division and the first woman to lead an Army infantry division, said she “jumped at the opportunit­y” to present Knuth his Bronze Star. Coming three quarters of a century after his wartime service, she said, the award was “obviously overdue.”

Wearing a mask as he sat at the front of the event hall, Knuth smiled as speakers — who cleaned the microphone between each speech — praised his valor and the full life he lived after the war. He was an engineerin­g professor who taught for 35 years at UCLA, wrote more than 100 scientific papers and traveled the world with Margaret.

“We think we’re living in trying times,” Yeager told the audience. “And certainly the combined effects of pandemic, wildland fires, economic uncertaint­y, racial disparitie­s and all the tensions that we face today are definitely rocking the state and the nation.

“But with reflection, we know that we have been through much worse.”

 ?? AL SEIB/TNS ?? Eldon Knuth, 95, waves Tuesday during a Bronze Star ceremony at a California nursing home. Attendance was limited due to the pandemic.
AL SEIB/TNS Eldon Knuth, 95, waves Tuesday during a Bronze Star ceremony at a California nursing home. Attendance was limited due to the pandemic.

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