

Rank
and organization:
Private
First Class, U.S. Army, 3d
Infantry Division. Place and date: Near Cisterna di Littoria, Italy, 1 February
1944. Entered service at:
Spring Mountain,
Pa. Birth: Cooperstown,
Pa. G.O.
No.: 41, 26 May 1944. Citation: For conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity at
the risk of his life above and beyond the call of duty in action involving
actual conflict with the enemy, on 1 February 1944 near Cisterna di Littoria, Italy. When a heavy German
counterattack was launched against his battalion, Pfc. Knappenberger
crawled to an exposed knoll and went into position with his automatic
rifle. An enemy machinegun 85 yards away
opened fire, and bullets struck within 6 inches of him. Rising to a kneeling position, Pfc. Knappenberger opened fire on the hostile crew, knocked out
the gun, killed 2 members of the crew, and wounded the third. While he fired at this hostile position, 2
Germans crawled to a point within 20 yards of the knoll and threw potato-masher
grenades at him, but Pfc. Knappenberger killed them
both with 1 burst from his automatic rifle.
Later, a second machinegun opened fire upon his exposed position from a
distance of 100 yards, and this weapon also was silenced by his well-aimed
shots. Shortly thereafter, an enemy
20-mm. antiaircraft gun directed fire at him, and again Pfc. Knappenberger returned fire to wound 1 member of the
hostile crew. Under tank and artillery
shell-fire, with shells bursting within 15 yards of him, he held his precarious
position and fired at all enemy infantrymen armed with machine pistols and
machineguns which he could locate. When
his ammunition supply became exhausted, he crawled 15 yards forward through
steady machinegun fire, removed rifle clips from the belt of a casualty,
returned to his position and resumed firing to repel as assaulting German
platoon armed with automatic weapons.
Finally, his ammunition supply being completely exhausted, he rejoined
his company. Pfc. Knappenberger’s
intrepid action disrupted the enemy attack for over 2 hours.