Arco Medal of Honor recipient featured by Historical Society
David Bleak,
Arco’s Congressional Medal of Honor winner, was featured in the September 2000
issue of “Pass in Review” published by the Idaho Historical Society.
The
account follows:
Rank and Organization Sergeant Medical Company, 2d
Battalion, 223d Infantry Regiment, 40th Infantry Division:
Service: U.S. Army
Born: 27 February 1932, Idaho Falls, Bonneville County, Idaho.
Entered
Service at Shelley, Bingham County, and Idaho.
Served as: Medical Aid man.
Battle and of Action: Minarigol, Korea, 14 June 1952.
Citation:
Sgt. Bleak, a member of the medical company, distinguished himself conspicuous
gallantry and indomitable courage above and beyond the call of duty: in action
against the enemy. As a Medical Aidman, volunteered to accompany a
reconnaissance patrol committed to engage the enemy and capture a prisoner for
interrogation. Forging up the rugged Slope of the key .terrain, the group was
subjected to intense automatic weapons and’ small arms fire and suffered several
casualties. After administering to the wounded he, continued to advance with the
patrol. Nearing the military crest of the hill, while attempting to cross the
fire swept area to attend the wounded, he came under hostile fire from a small
group of the enemy concealed in a trench. Entering the trench he closed with the
enemy, killed two with bare hands and a third with his trench knife. Moving from
the emplacement, he saw a concussion grenade fall in front of a companion, and,
quickly sifting his position, shielded the man from the impact of the blast.
Later, while ministering to the wounded, he was struck by a hostile bullet but,
despite the wound he undertook to evacuate a wounded comrade. As he moved down
the hill with his heavy burden, he was attacked by two enemy soldiers with fixed
bayonets. Closing with the aggressors, he grabbed them and smacked their heads
together, then carried his helpless comrade down the hill to safety. Sgt.
Bleak’s dauntless courage and intrepid actions reflect utmost credit upon
himself and are in keeping with the honored traditions of the military service.
(End of Citation)
The story continues . .
“A couple of 'em got too
close”
In a war the infantry gets mixed up in a lot of things that people
don’t understand. Yes, they carry rifles and other weapons around, jump up and
run, slide on their bellies to a prone position and start firing at something.
You’ve seen all that stuff maybe even done some of it. Sure, it’s mostly a drill
or maybe a scrimmage. But infantry in the line, the grunt” life, is much more
demanding than that. They get all kinds of tough missions. Take this outfit in
Korea, back in ‘52. It was the 22nd Infantry Regiment, 40th Division, a
California Guard outfit, that ran this caper. We want to go back to that time
and place because they had a medic in the 223rd, an Idaho boy, who showed ‘em
how a man fights when he has to. A medic fighting? Sure, but maybe we had better
begin at the beginning.
Born in 1932, David B. Bleak grew up in the high
farm country of Eastern Idaho. That’s important since it says he knew hard work
that breathes self-determination and innovation, into he growing young. Bleak
pretty much followed farming all of his life, It kind of naturally followed in
those days that on November 1, 1950, at the ripe old age of eighteen. David
Bleak joined the U. S Army. He took his basic training at Fort Riley, Kansas,
the famous old horse cavalry post. Before long he was assigned to a Medical
Company that became organic to the 2nd Battalion, 223 infantry Regiment of
California’s 40th Infantry Division. He then received more advanced specialized
medical aid training Camp Cook in California.
After several months Bleak
was made Corporal, and as January 1952 dawned, the 40th Division was on its way
to ‘the Korean Conflict via Japan. Somewhere north of the 38th parallel, before
long, Bleak was promoted to Sergeant filling the shoes of an-other NCO aid man
who had recently been killed. The 40th Division assignment was largely a holding
action near the 38th parallel. It was mountain country where the trees had been
cut down and used to reinforce entrenched enemy positions in the area. The only
cover was a scattering of brush three of four feet high and the rugged contour
of the land itself. In. this holding action both side set up fields of fire,
logged in. artillery concentrations and then probed from time to time to see if
the enemy was planning any surprises. The irony of it is that such situations
are usually carried as “quiet times” by the media. Yeah; quiet.
It was
one of those probes that called down .all the chaos and violence that · is
anyone’s share of hell in this life. The I & R Platoon (Intelligence and
Reconnaissance) of the 2nd Battalion drew the mission to go into enemy
territory, capture a couple of North .Koreans and/or Chinese and bring them out
for interrogation.
Of course, the assignment is easy -- it’s the
execution that's not so easy. The enemy does what we do. They set up trip
flares, plant mines, establish out-posts (listening posts at night), set up
fields of fire and all those nefarious stratagems of man that mike infiltrators
such poor insurance risks. In spite of that fact, Bleak volunteered as the medic
for the incursion. Well, when the recon patrol set out it was as black as the
proverbial ace of spades. The patrol was made up of twenty men and commanded by
a senior Tech Sergeant -- no officers on this detail.
The hour was about
0430 in the morning and Bleak took up his position at the end of the file moving
off into the darkness. The tail end is the assigned position for medics. From
that point (when light) they can observe everyone in the team and move quickly
to their aid if needed. That “if needed" would soon become the reality of this
mission.
The recon patrol pushed quietly on through the darkness, while
well of on their flank, Fox Company from the same battalion moved out in a
larger incursion. It would serve to draw attention away from the I & R patrol.
But "the die" had been cast otherwise.
A short time later, in the
grayness of a Korean dawn, the patrol was snooping around an enemy entrenchment
and took their first fire of the mission. It was intense automatic weapons and
small arms fire and several in the patrol were wounded. Bleak moved up and took
care of them, making them as comfortable as the situation permitted. He then
continued the advance with the patrol that soon came under heavy fire again. The
ensuing action is described in the text of Sergeant Bleak's Congressional Medal
of Honor award, (as printed above).
Perhaps we should tell you that Bleak
was over six foot tall and weighed about 250 pounds. He did all that in order to
get at wounded comrades. He tended to dismiss the facts by skipping over the
action and saying something to the effect "...a couple of 'em got too close"..
(the enemy).
The article continues...
Yes, they brought prisoners
back and all of the patrol came in -- even though a third of them were walking
wounded.
And on 27 October 1953, with his family proudly looking on, Sgt.
David B. Bleak received the Medal of Honor from President Dwight D. Eisenhower
at the White House.
Bleak's wound has had a long-term effect. When he was
shot in the leg, it severed a nerve. He dismisses that as "no big deal". But I
guess when you survive an 'eyeball to eyeball' firefight such as that one was,
wounded, out -numbered, in enemy territory on the far side of a Korean ridge,
just coming out alive tends to give one a different--a more tolerant perspective
on life. After he got out of the Army, he married, Lois is her name, and they
had four children, three boys and a girl. Their youngest son now has the farm,
south of Moore, Idaho. Today, the Bleaks live in Arco, Idaho since he retired
about five years ago.
Then, in 1995, Major General John A. Dubia,
Commanding General of Fort Sill, Oklahoma bestowed another. Gen. Dubia owes his
life to a combat Medic in Viet Nam and to express his gratitude decided to flame
the lat. Sill Troop Clinic in honor of a combat medic. Special permission was
obtained; April 20, 1995 was designated as Sgt. David B. Bleak day; and the new
medical facility at Ft. Sill was named the Sgt. David B. Bleak Troop Medical
Clinic. David Bleak's medal is one of the 9 accredited to Idaho.
The Arco
Advertiser is indebted to the Idaho Historical Society for this special Veterans
Day story about our friend, neighbor, and unassuming Idaho and American hero.
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