Burt, James M. - Captain Company B, 66th Armored Regiment US Army WW II
Posted by: Groundspeak Regular Member GAGELSIE
N 42° 18.416 W 073° 14.997
18T E 644238 N 4685338
Medal of Honor Recipiant Captain James M. Burt was born in Hillsdale, MA and entered service in Lee, MA.
Waymark Code: WM8RKE
Location: Massachusetts, United States
Date Posted: 05/07/2010
Published By:Groundspeak Regular Member condor1
Views: 4

The Memorial is located on Main St. in a small park next to the Lee Library, Lee, MA.

Burt was born in Massachusetts and graduated from Norwich University in 1939 where he was a member of Theta Chi Fraternity. The Norwich Corps of Cadets is known historically as a source of cavalry officers and Burt was commissioned as an armor officer - then the new mechanized form of cavalry. He entered active service in 1941 and was assigned to the 2nd Armored Division at Fort Benning, Georgia. He served in North Africa, Sicily, and Northern Europe. Promoted to captain, Burt commanded Company B, 66th Armor Regiment in near continuous combat from the day the unit landed at the Normandy beachhead in June 1944 through the end of the war.

Captain Burt's Medal of Honor citation is unique in that he was awarded the medal not for a single act of valor, but instead for his actions during a 10 day period in October 1944 as the 2nd Armored Division fought to capture Aachen, Germany.

The official citation reads:

Rank and organization: Captain, U.S. Army, Company B, 66th Armored Regiment, 2d Armored Division. Place and date: Near Wurselen, Germany, October 13, 1944. Entered service at: Lee, Mass. Birth: Hinsdale, Mass. G.O. No.: 95, October 30, 1945.

Citation:

Capt. James M. Burt was in command of Company B, 66th Armored Regiment on the western outskirts of Wurselen, Germany, on 13 October 1944, when his organization participated in a coordinated infantry-tank attack destined to isolate the large German garrison which was tenaciously defending the city of Aachen. In the first day's action, when infantrymen ran into murderous small-arms and mortar fire, Capt. Burt dismounted from his tank about 200 yards to the rear and moved forward on foot beyond the infantry positions, where, as the enemy concentrated a tremendous volume of fire upon him, he calmly motioned his tanks into good firing positions. As our attack gained momentum, he climbed aboard his tank and directed the action from the rear deck, exposed to hostile volleys which finally wounded him painfully in the face and neck. He maintained his dangerous post despite pointblank self-propelled gunfire until friendly artillery knocked out these enemy weapons, and then proceeded to the advanced infantry scouts' positions to deploy his tanks for the defense of the gains which had been made. The next day, when the enemy counterattacked, he left cover and went 75 yards through heavy fire to assist the infantry battalion commander who was seriously wounded. For the next 8 days, through rainy, miserable weather and under constant, heavy shelling, Capt. Burt held the combined forces together, dominating and controlling the critical situation through the sheer force of his heroic example. To direct artillery fire, on 15 October, he took his tank 300 yards into the enemy lines, where he dismounted and remained for 1 hour giving accurate data to friendly gunners. Twice more that day he went into enemy territory under deadly fire on reconnaissance. In succeeding days he never faltered in his determination to defeat the strong German forces opposing him. Twice the tank in which he was riding was knocked out by enemy action, and each time he climbed aboard another vehicle and continued the fight. He took great risks to rescue wounded comrades and inflicted prodigious destruction on enemy personnel and materiel even though suffering from the wounds he received in the battle's opening phase. Capt. Burt's intrepidity and disregard of personal safety were so complete that his own men and the infantry who attached themselves to him were inspired to overcome the wretched and extremely hazardous conditions which accompanied one of the most bitter local actions of the war. The victory achieved closed the Aachen gap.

From (visit link)
Website pertaining to the memorial: [Web Link]

List if there are any visiting hours:
none


Entrance fees (if it applies): none

Type of memorial: Plaque

Visit Instructions:

*(1.)* Please submit a photo(s) taken by you of your visit to the location (non-copyrighted photos only). GPS photos are also accepted with the location in the background, and old vacation photos are accepted. If you are not able to provide a photo, then please describe your visit or give a story about the visit.
*(2.)* If you have additional information about the memorial which is not listed in the waymark description, please notify the waymark owner to have it added, and please post the information in your visit log.
Search for...
Geocaching.com Google Map
Google Maps
MapQuest
Bing Maps
Nearest Waymarks
Nearest Specific Veteran Memorials
Nearest Geocaches
Create a scavenger hunt using this waymark as the center point
Recent Visits/Logs:
Date Logged Log User Rating  
Ourspolaire&Gemeloj visited Burt, James M. - Captain Company B, 66th Armored Regiment US Army WW II 07/22/2014 Ourspolaire&Gemeloj visited it
gemeloj visited Burt, James M. - Captain Company B, 66th Armored Regiment US Army WW II 07/22/2014 gemeloj visited it
run26.2 visited Burt, James M. - Captain Company B, 66th Armored Regiment US Army WW II 07/30/2010 run26.2 visited it
GAGELSIE visited Burt, James M. - Captain Company B, 66th Armored Regiment US Army WW II 05/07/2010 GAGELSIE visited it

View all visits/logs