

Rank
and organization:
Technical Sergeant, U.S. Army, Company L, 393d Infantry, 99th Infantry Division. Place
and date: Near
Krinkelt, Belgium, 16 December 1944. Entered service at:
Model, Tenn. Born:
1 December 1921,
Right, Tenn. G.O. No.:
6, 11 January 1946. Citation:
He was painfully wounded in an artillery barrage that preceded the powerful
counteroffensive launched by the Germans near Krinkelt, Belgium, on the morning of 16 December 1944. He made his way to an aid station, received
treatment, and then refused to be evacuated, choosing to return to his
hard-pressed men instead. The fury of the enemy's great Western Front offensive
swirled about the position held by T/Sgt. McGarity's
small force, but so tenaciously did these men fight on orders to stand firm at
all costs that they could not be dislodged despite murderous enemy fire and the
breakdown of their communications. During the day the heroic squad leader
rescued 1 of his friends who had been wounded in a forward position, and
throughout the night he exhorted his comrades to repulse the enemy's attempts
at infiltration. When morning came and the Germans attacked with tanks and
infantry, he braved heavy fire to run to an advantageous position where he
immobilized the enemy's lead tank with a round from a rocket launcher. Fire
from his squad drove the attacking infantrymen back, and 3 supporting tanks
withdrew. He rescued, under heavy fire, another wounded American, and then
directed devastating fire on a light cannon which had
been brought up by the hostile troops to clear resistance from the area. When
ammunition began to run low, T/Sgt. McGarity,
remembering an old ammunition hole about 100 yards
distant in the general direction of the enemy, braved a concentration of
hostile fire to replenish his unit's supply. By circuitous route the enemy
managed to emplace a machinegun to the rear and flank of the squad's position,
cutting off the only escape route. Unhesitatingly, the gallant soldier took it
upon himself to destroy this menace single-handedly. He left cover, and while
under steady fire from the enemy, killed or wounded all the hostile gunners
with deadly accurate rifle fire and prevented all attempts to reman the gun. Only when the squad's last round had been
fired was the enemy able to advance and capture the intrepid leader and his
men. The extraordinary bravery and extreme devotion to duty of T/Sgt. McGarity supported a remarkable delaying action which
provided the time necessary for assembling reserves and forming a line against
which the German striking power was shattered.