Bill Text: TX HCR164 | 2019-2020 | 86th Legislature | Introduced


Bill Title: Directing the governor of the State of Texas to posthumously award the Texas Legislative Medal of Honor to First Lieutenant Andrew Jackson Lummus Jr.

Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Republican 1-0)

Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2019-05-06 - Referred to Defense & Veterans' Affairs [HCR164 Detail]

Download: Texas-2019-HCR164-Introduced.html
  86R20016 JGH-D
 
  By: Wray H.C.R. No. 164
 
 
 
CONCURRENT RESOLUTION
         WHEREAS, The Texas Legislative Medal of Honor was established
  to recognize gallant and intrepid service by a member of the state
  or federal military forces, and U.S. Marine Corps First Lieutenant
  Andrew Jackson Lummus Jr., who was killed in action in the Battle of
  Iwo Jima during World War II, proved himself a deserving recipient
  of this prestigious award; and
         WHEREAS, Jack Lummus was born in Ennis on October 22, 1915,
  and he grew up on his family's cotton farm during the Great
  Depression; a gifted athlete, he earned scholarships to Texas
  Military College and to Baylor University, where he played baseball
  and football for the Bears; in early 1941, he left college to enlist
  in the U.S. Army Air Corps but was given an honorable discharge when
  he failed to complete flight school; he then accepted an offer to
  play professional football with the New York Giants, and it was
  during the team's game on December 7, 1941, that he learned of the
  attack on Pearl Harbor; determined to serve his country, he
  enlisted in the U.S. Marine Corps, and after a series of training
  and duty assignments in the United States, he was deployed to the
  Pacific theater as an officer in the 2nd Battalion, 27th Marines,
  5th Marine Division; and
         WHEREAS, Lieutenant Lummus led his rifle platoon ashore at
  Iwo Jima as part of the initial contingent of marine forces to land
  on the island; on March 8, 1945, his unit advanced against a line of
  Japanese pillboxes along the island's rugged Nishi Ridge; moving
  ahead of his men under fierce enemy fire, he destroyed one pillbox
  with grenades even as he was wounded and knocked off his feet by a
  blast from an enemy grenade; undaunted, he eliminated a second
  pillbox and returned to his platoon before attacking and knocking
  out a third pillbox; he urged his fellow marines forward while
  continuing to fire into enemy foxholes with his carbine; and
         WHEREAS, This courageous Texan's one-man assault was ended
  when he stepped on a land mine; though he lost both of his legs in
  the explosion, he continued to shout to his men, "Don't stop now!
  Keep going!" and by nightfall, his unit had taken the ridge;
  Lieutenant Lummus died on the operating table in a field hospital
  and was buried in the Fifth Marine Division cemetery on the island;
  and
         WHEREAS, On May 30, 1946, First Lieutenant Jack Lummus was
  posthumously honored with the Medal of Honor, the nation's highest
  commendation for valor in combat, by President Harry S. Truman, and
  two years later, he was reinterred in his hometown cemetery; in the
  decades since, his heroism has been recognized many times; in 1986,
  the U.S. Navy named a ship after him, and that same year, Jack
  Lummus Memorial Park was dedicated in Ennis, where there is also an
  intermediate school that bears his name; his Medal of Honor
  citation is on display at Baylor University, and on October 11,
  2015, the New York Giants inducted him into the Ring of Honor at
  MetLife Stadium; and
         WHEREAS, During one of the most savage battles of World War
  II, First Lieutenant Jack Lummus demonstrated extraordinary
  bravery and leadership and made the ultimate sacrifice while
  defending our nation, and he is indeed deserving of this state's
  supreme military commendation; now, therefore, be it
         RESOLVED, That the 86th Legislature of the State of Texas
  hereby direct the governor of the State of Texas to posthumously
  award the Texas Legislative Medal of Honor to Andrew Jackson Lummus
  Jr. in recognition of his valiant service during World War II.
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