

Rank and organization: Private, U.S. Marine
Corps Reserve, Company F, 2d Battalion, 7th Marines, 1st Marine
Division (Rein). Place and date: Korea,
28 November 1950. Entered service at:
Dover,
N.J. Born: 4 November 1929,
New
York, N.Y. Citation: For conspicuous gallantry and
intrepidity at the risk of his life above and beyond the call of duty while
serving as a rifleman with Company F, in action against enemy aggressor
forces. When all the other members of his
fire team became casualties, creating a gap in the lines, during the initial
phase of a vicious attack launched by a fanatical enemy of regimental strength
against his company's hill position, Pvt. Cafferata
waged a lone battle with grenades and rifle fire as the attack gained momentum
and the enemy threatened penetration through the gap and endangered the
integrity of the entire defensive perimeter.
Making a target of himself under the devastating fire from automatic
weapons, rifles, grenades, and mortars, he maneuvered up and down the line and
delivered accurate and effective fire against the onrushing force, killing 15,
wounding many more, and forcing the others to withdraw so that reinforcements
could move up and consolidate the position.
Again fighting desperately against a renewed onslaught later that same
morning when a hostile grenade landed in a shallow entrenchment occupied by
wounded marines, Pvt. Cafferata rushed into the gully
under heavy fire, seized the deadly missile in his right hand and hurled it
free of his comrades before it detonated, severing part of l finger and
seriously wounding him in the right hand and arm. Courageously ignoring the
intense pain, he staunchly fought on until he was struck by a sniper's bullet
and forced to submit to evacuation for medical treatment. Stouthearted and indomitable, Pvt. Cafferata, by his fortitude, great personal valor, and
dauntless perseverance in the face of almost certain death, saved the lives of
several of his fellow marines and contributed essentially to the success
achieved by his company in maintaining its defensive position against
tremendous odds. His extraordinary heroism throughout was in keeping with the
highest traditions of the U.S. Naval Service.