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{{short description|American soldier (1887–1964)}} | |||
{{redirect|Sergeant York}} | {{redirect|Sergeant York}} | ||
{{Use American English|date=December 2018}} | |||
{{Use mdy dates|date=October 2023}} | |||
{{Infobox military person | {{Infobox military person | ||
| |
| name = Alvin York | ||
| image = Alvin C. York 1919.jpg | |||
|birth_date= {{Birth date|1887|12|13}} | |||
| caption = York in uniform, 1919, wearing the ] and ] with Palm | |||
|birth_place= ], ] | |||
| birth_name = Alvin Cullum York | |||
|death_date= {{Death date and age|1964|9|2|1887|12|13}} | |||
| nickname = "Sergeant York" | |||
|death_place= ] | |||
| birth_date = {{Birth date|1887|12|13}} | |||
|placeofburial= Wolf River Cemetery Pall Mall | |||
| birth_place = ], U.S. | |||
|placeofburial_label= Place of burial | |||
| death_date = {{Death date and age|1964|9|2|1887|12|13}} | |||
|image=York.jpg | |||
| death_place = ], U.S. | |||
|caption= ]<br />Sergeant Alvin York | |||
| placeofburial = Wolf River Cemetery, {{awrap|]}} | |||
|nickname= "Sergeant York" | |||
| placeofburial_coordinates = {{awrap|{{coord|36|32|50.2|N|84|57|14.8|W|region:US-TN_type:landmark|display=inline}}}} | |||
|allegiance= {{flag|United States of America}} | |||
| allegiance = United States | |||
|branch={{army|USA}} | |||
| branch = <!-- EDITORS NOTE: Please do not add the Army flag adopted by the U.S. government in 1956 (11 years after York's final discharge from active duty) as it would be historically inaccurate. Please also see MOS:INFOBOXFLAG Thank you. -->{{Unbulleted list|]|]}} | |||
|serviceyears= | |||
| serviceyears = {{Unbulleted list|1917–1919 (active)|1942–1945 (honorary)|1941–1947 {{Nowrap|(State Guard)}}}} | |||
|rank= ] (at the time of Medal of Honor action), ] (at end of war), ] (] WW II rank) | |||
| rank = {{Unbulleted list|] (active)|] (])|] (State Guard)}} | |||
|commands= 7th Regiment, ] | |||
| servicenumber = 1910421 | |||
|unit= ] | |||
| commands = 7th Regiment, Tennessee State Guard (1941–1947) | |||
|battles= ] | |||
| unit = {{Unbulleted list|Company G, ], ] (1917–1919)|] (1942–1945)}}<!-- EDITORS NOTE: Please do not add the names of York's battalion or brigade (the 164th Infantry Brigade) as it was not typical to do so at the time and is not mentioned in the Medal of Honor citation). Thank you. --> | |||
*] | |||
| battles = {{tree list}} | |||
|awards= <small> | |||
* World War I | |||
] ]<br/>] ] (Initially awarded. Later upgraded to Medal of Honor.)<br/>] ]<br/>] ]<br/>] ]<br/>] ]</small> | |||
** ] | |||
|laterwork= | |||
** ] | |||
|siblings= ] | |||
** ] | |||
* World War II | |||
** ] | |||
{{tree list/end}} | |||
| awards = {{Unbulleted list|]|<!-- EDITORS NOTE: Please do not add York's Distinguished Service Cross Medal to this list of awards since, when it was upgraded to the Medal of Honor, he was at that point no longer authorized to wear it. Thank you. -->|] with Palm (France)|{{see below|{{slink||Awards}}}}}} | |||
| spouse = {{marriage|Gracie Loretta Williams|1919}} | |||
| children = 10 | |||
| laterwork = Superintendent of the ] | |||
| website = {{URL|sgtyork.org}} | |||
}} | }} | ||
'''Alvin Cullum York''' (December 13, 1887 – September 2, 1964), also known by his rank as '''Sergeant York''', was an American soldier who was one of the most decorated ] soldiers of ].<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=s65pmBAUmD4C&pg=PA98 |title=Medal of Honor: Historical Facts & Figures |last=Owens |first=Ron |date=2004 |publisher=Turner Publishing Company |access-date=October 14, 2019 |quote=Exclusive of the five Marines who earned double awards of the Medal, Lt. ] was the most highly decorated soldier of WWI. |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191014123426/https://books.google.com/books?id=s65pmBAUmD4C&pg=PA98& |archive-date=October 14, 2019 |url-status=live|isbn=9781563119958 }}</ref> He received the ] for leading an attack on a ] ], gathering 35 machine guns, killing at least 25<ref name=nytobit /> enemy soldiers and capturing 132 prisoners. York's Medal of Honor action occurred during the United States-led portion of the ] in ], which was intended to breach the ] and force the Germans to surrender. He earned decorations from several allied countries during the war, including France, ] and ]. | |||
York was born in rural ], in what is now the community of ] in ]. His parents farmed, and his father also worked as a ]. The eleven York children had minimal schooling because they helped provide for the family, including hunting, fishing, and working as laborers. After the death of his father, York assisted in caring for his younger siblings and found work as a blacksmith. Despite being a regular churchgoer, York also drank heavily and was prone to fistfights. After a 1914 conversion experience, he vowed to improve and became even more devoted to the ]. York was drafted during World War I; he initially claimed ] status on the grounds that his religious denomination forbade violence. Persuaded that his religion was not incompatible with military service, York joined the ] as an infantry private and went to France in 1918. | |||
'''Alvin Cullum York''' (December 13, 1887 – September 2, 1964), known also by his rank, '''Sergeant York''', was one of the most decorated American soldiers in ].<ref>Ron Owens, ''Medal of Honor: Historical Facts and Figures'' (Paducah, KY: Turner Publishing, 2004), 97–8, , accessed September 21, 2010. Five Marines earned the Medal of Honor twice for World War I service, while Lt. ] is generally recognized as the most decorated serviceman of that conflict.</ref> He received the ] for leading an attack on a ] ] nest, taking 32 machine guns, killing 20 German soldiers, and capturing 132 others. This action occurred during the United States-led portion of the broader ] in ] masterminded by Marshal ] to breach the ] and make the opposing German forces surrender. | |||
In October 1918, ] (Acting Corporal) York was one of a group of seventeen soldiers assigned to infiltrate German lines and silence a machine gun position. After the American patrol had captured a large group of enemy soldiers, German small arms fire killed six Americans and wounded three. Several of the Americans returned fire while others guarded the prisoners. York and the other Americans attacked the machine gun position, killing several German soldiers.<ref name="Gregory 39–43">{{Cite journal|last=Gregory|first=James|date=Summer 2020|title=Forgotten Soldiers: The Other 16 at Chatel-Chehery|url=https://www.benning.army.mil/infantry/magazine/issues/2020/|journal=Infantry Magazine|volume=109|pages=39–43}}</ref> The German officer responsible for the machine gun position had emptied his pistol while firing at York but failed to hit him. This officer then offered to surrender and York accepted. York and his men marched back to their unit's command post with more than 130 prisoners. York was later promoted to sergeant and was awarded the ]. An investigation resulted in the upgrading of the award to the Medal of Honor. York's feat made him a national hero and international celebrity among allied nations. | |||
==Background== | |||
Alvin Cullum York was born in a two room ] near ].<ref name="tradition"> by Dr. Michael Birdwell, Ph.D.</ref>He was the third of eleven children born to Mary Elizabeth (] Brooks 1866-1943)<ref>{{Find a Grave|9789330| name=Mary Elizabeth York|accessdate=September 20, 2010}}</ref> and William Uriah York (15 May 1863 – 17 November 1911).<ref>{{Find a Grave|9789499| name=William Uriah York|accessdate=September 20, 2010}}</ref> William Uriah York was born in ], to Uriah York and Eliza Jane Livingston, both travelers from ].<ref name="laughter"/> Mary Elizabeth York was born in Pall Mall to William Brooks and Nancy Pile, and was the great-granddaughter of Conrad "Coonrod" Pile, an English settler who settled Pall Mall. William York and Mary Brooks married on December 25, 1881, and had eleven children. The York children were, in order: Henry Singleton, Joseph Marion, Alvin Cullum, Samuel John, Albert, Hattie, George Alexander, James Preston, Lillian Mae, Robert Daniel, and Lucy Erma.<ref name="laughter">Laughter & Lawter Genealogy: {{dead link|date=September 2013}}, accessed September 20, 2010</ref> The York family is of ] and ] ancestry.<ref name=yorkindian> at ancestry.com</ref> The York family resided in the Indian Creek area of Fentress County.<ref name="laughter"/> The family was impoverished, with William York working as a ] to supplement the family income. The men of the York family harvested their own food, while the mother knitted all family clothing.<ref name="laughter"/> The York sons attended school for only nine months<ref name="tradition"/> and withdrew from education because William York wanted his sons to help him work the family farm and hunt small game to feed the family.<ref name="laughter"/> | |||
After ], a group of Tennessee businessmen purchased a farm for York, his new wife, and their growing family. He later formed a charitable foundation to improve educational opportunities for children in rural Tennessee. In the 1930s and 1940s, York worked as a project superintendent for the ] and managed construction of the Byrd Lake reservoir at ], after which he served for several years as park superintendent. A 1941 film about his World War I exploits, '']'', was that year's highest-grossing film; ] won the ] for his portrayal of York, and the film was credited with enhancing American morale as the U.S. mobilized for action in World War II. In his later years, York was confined to bed by health problems. He died in ], in 1964 and was buried at Wolf River Cemetery in his hometown of Pall Mall, Tennessee. | |||
] | |||
==Early life == | |||
When William York died in November 1911, his son Alvin helped his mother in raising his younger siblings.<ref name="laughter"/> Alvin was the oldest sibling still residing in the county, since his two older brothers had married and relocated. To supplement the family income, York first worked in ],<ref name="tradition"/> first in railroad construction and then as a logger. By all accounts, he was a very skilled worker who was devoted to the welfare of his family. York was also a violent ] prone to fighting in ] and accumulated several arrests within the area.<ref name="tradition"/> His mother, a member of a ] ] denomination, tried to persuade York to change his ways.{{citation needed|date = August 2012}} | |||
Alvin Cullum York was born in a two-room ] in ].<ref name="tradition"> by Dr. Michael Birdwell.</ref> He was the third child born to William Uriah York and Mary Elizabeth (Brooks) York. William Uriah York was born in ], to Uriah York and Eliza Jane Livingston, who had moved to Tennessee from ].<ref name="laughter" /> Mary Elizabeth York was born in Pall Mall to William Brooks, who took his mother's maiden name as an alias of William H. Harrington after deserting from Company A of the 11th Michigan Cavalry Regiment during the ], and Nancy Pyle, and was the great-granddaughter of Conrad "Coonrod" Pyle, an English settler who settled Pall Mall, Tennessee. | |||
William York and Mary Brooks married on December 25, 1881, and had eleven children: Henry Singleton, Joseph Marion, Alvin Cullum, Samuel John, Albert, Hattie, George Alexander, James Preston, Lillian Mae, Robert Daniel, and Lucy Erma.<ref name="laughter">Laughter & Lawter Genealogy: , accessed September 20, 2010 {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20061021060444/http://www.laughtergenealogy.com/bin/histprof/misc/alvinyork.html |date=October 21, 2006 }}</ref> The York family is mainly of ] ancestry, with ] ancestry as well.<ref>Sergeant York and His People By Sam Kinkade Cowan page 85</ref><ref name=yorkindian> at ancestry.com</ref> The family resided in the Indian Creek area of Fentress County.<ref name="laughter" /> The family was impoverished, with William York working as a ] to supplement the family's income. The men of the York family farmed and harvested their own food, while the mother made all of the family's clothing.<ref name="laughter" /> The York sons attended school for only nine months<ref name="tradition" /> and withdrew from education because William York needed them to help work on the family farm, hunt, and fish to help feed the family.<ref name="laughter" /> When William York died in November 1911, his son Alvin helped his mother raise his younger siblings.<ref name="laughter" /> Alvin was the oldest sibling still residing in the county, since his two older brothers had married and relocated. To supplement the family's income, York worked in ],<ref name="tradition" /> first in railroad construction and then as a logger. By all accounts, he was a skilled laborer who was devoted to the welfare of his family, and a crack shot. York was also a violent ] prone to fighting in ]. In one of the saloon fights his best friend was killed.<ref name="tradition" /> His mother, a member of a ] ] denomination, tried to persuade York to change his ways.{{sfn|''Alvin York: A New Biography''|pp=16–17}} | |||
Despite his history of drinking and fighting, York attended church regularly and often led the hymn singing. A ] at the end of 1914 led him to a conversion experience on January 1, 1915. His congregation was the ], a ] denomination that shunned secular politics and disputes between Christian denominations.<ref>Lee, 1985, 9–13</ref> This church had no specific doctrine of ] but had been formed in reaction to the ]'s support for slavery, including armed conflict during the ], and opposed all forms of violence.<ref>Lee, 1985, 15–6</ref> In a lecture later in life, he reported his reaction to the outbreak of World War I: "I was worried clean through. I didn't want to go and kill. I believed in my Bible."<ref name=Capozzola67>Capozzola, 2008, p. 67</ref> On June 5, 1917, at the age of 29, Alvin York registered for the draft as all men between 21 and 31 years of age ] on that day. When he registered for the draft, he answered the question "Do you claim exemption from draft (specify grounds)?" by writing "Yes. Don't Want To Fight."<ref name=Capozzola68>Capozzola, 2008, p. 68, includes a photograph of York's Registration Card from the National Archives</ref> When his initial claim for ] status was denied, he appealed.<ref>]</ref> | |||
==World War I== | |||
In World War I, conscientious objector status did not exempt one from military duty. Such individuals could still be drafted and were given assignments that did not conflict with their anti-war principles. In November 1917, while York's application was considered, he was drafted and began his army service at ] in Georgia.<ref name=Capozzola67-9>Capozzola, 2008, pp. 67–9</ref> | |||
] | |||
Despite his history of drinking and fighting, York attended church regularly and often led the hymn singing. A ] at the end of 1914 led him to a conversion experience on January 1, 1915. His congregation was the ], a ] denomination that shunned secular politics and disputes between Christian denominations.<ref>Lee, 1985, 9–13</ref> This church had no specific doctrine of ] but it had been formed in reaction to the ]'s support of slavery, including armed conflict during the ], and it opposed all forms of violence.<ref>Lee, 1985, 15–6</ref> In a lecture later in life, York reported his reaction to the outbreak of World War I: "I was worried clean through. I didn't want to go and kill. I believed in my ]."<ref name= Capozzola67>Capozzola, 2008, p. 67</ref> | |||
On June 5, 1917, at the age of 29, Alvin York registered for the draft as all men between 21 and 30 years of age were required to do as a result of the ]. When he registered for the draft, he answered the question "Do you claim exemption from draft (specify grounds)?" by writing "Yes. Don't Want To Fight."<ref name= Capozzola68>Capozzola, 2008, p. 68, includes a photograph of York's Registration Card from the National Archives</ref> When his initial claim for ] status was denied, he appealed.<ref>]</ref> During World War I, conscientious objector status did not exempt the objector from military duty. Such individuals could still be drafted and were given assignments that did not conflict with their anti-war principles. In November 1917, while York's application was considered, he was drafted and began his army service at ], Georgia.<ref name = "Capozzola67-9">Capozzola, 2008, pp. 67–9</ref> | |||
From the day he registered for the draft until he returned from the war on May 29, 1919, York kept a diary of his activities. In his diary, York wrote that he refused to sign documents provided by his pastor seeking a discharge from the Army on religious grounds and refused to sign similar documents provided by his mother asserting a claim of exemption as the sole support of his mother and siblings. He also disclaimed ever having been a conscientious objector.<ref>Sergeant York Patriotic Foundation: , accessed September 21, 2010</ref> | |||
From the day he registered for the draft until he returned from the war on May 29, 1919, York kept a diary of his activities. In his diary, York wrote that he refused to sign documents provided by his pastor seeking a discharge from the Army on religious grounds and similar documents provided by his mother asserting a claim of exemption as the sole support of his mother and siblings. Despite his initial, signed request for an exemption, he later disclaimed ever having been a conscientious objector.<ref>Sergeant York Patriotic Foundation: {{webarchive |url= https://web.archive.org/web/20101127225820/http://sgtyork.org/sgtyorkdiary.html |date=November 27, 2010}}, accessed September 21, 2010</ref> | |||
==World War I== | |||
York was drafted into the ] and served in Company G, 328th Infantry Regiment, ] at ]. Deeply troubled by the conflict between his pacifism and his training for war, he spoke at length with his ], Captain Edward Courtney Bullock Danforth (1894–1973) of ] and his battalion commander, ] (1880–1949) of ], a devout Christian himself. Citing Biblical passages about violence ("He that hath no sword, let him sell his cloak and buy one." "Render unto Caesar ..." "... if my kingdom were of this world, then would my servants fight."), they persuaded York to reconsider the morality of his participation in the war. Granted a 10-day leave to visit home, he returned convinced that God meant for him to fight and would keep him safe, as committed to his new mission as he had been to pacifism.<ref name=Capozzola67-9 /><ref>Lee, 1985, 18–20</ref> | |||
===Entry into service=== | |||
During an attack by his battalion to capture German positions near Hill 223 ({{coord|49.28558|4.95242|type:landmark_region:FR|display=inline}}) along the ] north of ], ], on October 8, 1918, York's actions earned him the ].<ref>The events of the day are recounted in brief in ''Official History of the 82nd Division: American expeditionary Forces, "All American" Division, 1917–1919'' (Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill Company, 1919), 60–2; , accessed September 20, 2010</ref> He recalled:<ref name=diary>Tom Skeyhill, ed., ''Sergeant York: His Own Life Story and War Diary'', 1928, p. ?</ref> | |||
York served in Company G, ], ]<!-- EDITORS NOTE: Please do not add the names of York's battalion or brigade (the 164th Infantry Brigade) as it was not typical to do so at the time and is not mentioned in the Medal of Honor citation). Thank you. -->. Deeply troubled by the conflict between his pacifism and his training for war, he spoke at length with his ], Captain Edward Courtney Bullock Danforth Jr. (1894–1974) of ], and his battalion commander, Major ] of ], a devout Christian himself. Biblical passages about violence ("He that hath no sword, let him sell his cloak and buy one." "Render unto Caesar…" "…if my kingdom were of this world, then would my servants fight.") cited by Danforth persuaded York to reconsider the morality of his participation in the war. Granted a 10-day leave to visit home, he returned as committed to his new mission as he had been to pacifism, convinced that God meant him to fight and would keep him safe.<ref name="Capozzola67-9" /><ref>Lee, 1985, 18–20</ref> He served with his division in the ]. | |||
===Medal of Honor action=== | |||
{{quote|The Germans got us, and they got us right smart. They just stopped us dead in our tracks. Their machine guns were up there on the heights overlooking us and well hidden, and we couldn’t tell for certain where the terrible heavy fire was coming from... And I'm telling you they were shooting straight. Our boys just went down like the long grass before the mowing machine at home. Our attack just faded out... And there we were, lying down, about halfway across and those German machine guns and big shells getting us hard.}} | |||
], ], ]. (World War I Signal Corps Collection)]] | |||
In an October 8, 1918, attack that occurred during the ], York's battalion aimed to capture German positions near Hill 223 ({{coord|49.28558|4.95242|type:landmark_region:FR|display= inline}}) along the ] railroad north of ], ]. His actions that day earned him the ].<ref>The events of the day are recounted in brief in ''Official History of the 82nd Division: American Expeditionary Forces, "All American" Division, 1917–1919'' (Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill Company, 1919), 60–62; , accessed September 20, 2010</ref> He later recalled: | |||
{{blockquote|The Germans got us, and they got us right smart. They just stopped us dead in our tracks. Their machine guns were up there on the heights overlooking us and well hidden, and we couldn't tell for certain where the terrible heavy fire was coming from… And I'm telling you they were shooting straight. Our boys just went down like the long grass before the mowing machine at home. Our attack just faded out… And there we were, lying down, about halfway across and those German machine guns and big shells getting us hard.<ref>York 1930.</ref>}} | |||
Under the command of Sergeant Bernard Early, four non-commissioned officers, including |
Under the command of Cpl. (Acting Sergeant) Bernard Early, four non-commissioned officers, including Acting Corporal York,<ref>Lee, 1985, 25–6</ref> and thirteen privates were ordered to infiltrate the German lines to take out the machine guns. The group worked their way behind the Germans and overran the headquarters of a German unit, capturing a large group of German soldiers who were preparing a counter-attack against the U.S. troops. Early's men were contending with the prisoners when German machine gun fire suddenly peppered the area, killing six Americans and wounding three others. Several of the Americans returned fire while others guarded the prisoners. From his advantageous position, York fought the Germans.<ref name="Gregory 39–43"/> York recalled: | ||
{{ |
{{blockquote|And those machine guns were spitting fire and cutting down the undergrowth all around me something awful. And the Germans were yelling orders. You never heard such a racket in all of your life. I didn't have time to dodge behind a tree or dive into the brush… As soon as the machine guns opened fire on me, I began to exchange shots with them. There were over thirty of them in continuous action, and all I could do was touch the Germans off just as fast as I could. I was sharp shooting… All the time I kept yelling at them to come down. I didn't want to kill any more than I had to. But it was they or I. And I was giving them the best I had.<ref>Sergeant York Patriotic Foundation: {{webarchive|url= https://web.archive.org/web/20101127225820/http://sgtyork.org/sgtyorkdiary.html |date=November 27, 2010 }}, accessed September 21, 2010</ref>}} | ||
During the assault, six German soldiers in a trench near York charged him with fixed ]s. York had fired all the rounds in his M1917 Enfield rifle,<ref>http://www.nramuseum.org/the-museum/the-galleries/america-ascending/case-57-world-war-i-allies-the-world-at-war,-1914-1918/us-winchester-model-1917-bolt-action-rifle.aspx | National Firearms Museum "U.S. Army Sergeant Alvin York carried an Enfield in 1917 when he won the Medal of Honor for capturing nearly the whole German army."</ref> but drew his ]<ref>{{cite web | |||
|url=http://acacia.pair.com/Acacia.Vignettes/The.Diary.of.Alvin.York.html | |||
|archiveurl=http://web.archive.org/web/20130921055456/http://acacia.pair.com/Acacia.Vignettes/The.Diary.of.Alvin.York.html | |||
|title=The Diary of Alvin York | |||
|author=York, Alvin C. | |||
|accessdate= August 31, 2010 | |||
|archivedate= 2013-09-21 | |||
}} | |||
</ref> and shot all six soldiers before they could reach him.<ref>Sergeant York Patriotic Foundation: , accessed September 25, 2010</ref> | |||
], 1919|alt=Sgt. Alvin C. York, 327th Inf., 82nd Div., Attack made from Hill 223 – N. of Chatel-Chéhéry, Argonne Forest, near Corny, Ardennes, France, October 8, 1918.]] | |||
German First Lieutenant Paul Jürgen Vollmer, commander of the First Battalion, 120th Landwehr Infantry, emptied his pistol trying to kill York while he was contending with the machine guns. Failing to injure York, and seeing his mounting losses, he offered in English to surrender the unit to York, who accepted.<ref>Lee, 1985, 32–6</ref> By the end of the engagement, York and his seven men marched 132 German prisoners back to the American lines. His actions silenced the German machine guns and were responsible for enabling the 328th Infantry to renew its attack to capture the Decauville Railroad.<ref name=Mastriano>Mastriano, Douglas, Colonel, U.S. Army ''Brave Hearts under Red Skies''and Douglas Mastriano: , accessed September 21, 2010</ref> | |||
During the assault, a German officer led several Germans to the scene of the fighting and ran into York who shot several of them with his pistol.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Buxton|first=G. Edward|title=Official History of 82nd Division American Expeditionary Forces|publisher=The Bobbs-Merrill Company|year=1919|pages=58–62}}</ref> | |||
Imperial German Army First Lieutenant Paul Jürgen Vollmer, commanding the 120th Reserve Infantry Regiment's 1st Battalion, emptied his pistol trying to kill York while he was contending with the machine guns. Failing to injure York, and seeing his mounting losses, he offered in English to surrender the unit to York who accepted.<ref>Lee, 1985, 32–6</ref> At the end of the engagement, York and his seven men marched their German prisoners back to the American lines. Upon returning to his unit, York reported to his brigade commander, Brigadier General ], who remarked, "Well York, I hear you have captured the whole German army." York replied, "No sir. I got only 132." | |||
York was promptly promoted to Sergeant, and received the ]. A few months later, a thorough investigation resulted in an upgrade of his Distinguished Service Cross to the Medal of Honor, which was presented to York by the commanding general of the ], ]. The ] awarded him the ] and the ]. ] awarded him its ] and ] its War Medal.<ref>Lee, 1985, 39</ref><ref name=nytobit>''New York Times'': , accessed September 20, 2010</ref> He eventually received nearly 50 decorations.<ref name=nytobit /> His Medal of Honor citation reads:<ref name=ACMH>{{cite web|accessdate= August 29, 2010|url=http://www.history.army.mil/html/moh/worldwari.html |title=York, Alvin C. (Medal of Honor citation) |work=Medal of Honor recipients — World War I |publisher= ]|date= June 8, 2009| archiveurl= http://web.archive.org/web/20100901074542/http://www.history.army.mil/html/moh/worldwari.html| archivedate= 1 September 2010 <!--DASHBot-->| deadurl= no}}</ref> | |||
York's actions silenced the German machine guns and were responsible for enabling the 328th Infantry to renew its attack to capture the Decauville Railroad.<ref name=Mastriano>Mastriano, Douglas, Colonel, U.S. Army ''Brave Hearts under Red Skies''and Douglas Mastriano: {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101221033022/http://sgtyork.org/meuseargonne.html |date=December 21, 2010 }}, accessed September 21, 2010</ref> | |||
{{quote|After his platoon suffered heavy casualties and 3 other noncommissioned officers had become casualties, Cpl. York assumed command. Fearlessly leading 7 men, he charged with great daring a machine gun nest which was pouring deadly and incessant fire upon his platoon. In this heroic feat the machine gun nest was taken, together with 4 officers and 128 men and several guns.}} | |||
===Post-battle=== | |||
Of his deeds, York said to his brigade commander, General Julian Robert Lindsey, in 1919: | |||
] (February 7, 1919)]] | |||
York was promptly promoted to sergeant and received the ]. A few months later, an investigation by York's chain of command resulted in an upgrade of his Distinguished Service Cross to the ], which was presented by the commanding general of the ], ]. The ] awarded him the {{lang|fr|]}}, ] and ]. | |||
In addition to his French medals, ] awarded York the ] and ] decorated him with its ].<ref name=nytobit>''New York Times'': , accessed September 20, 2010</ref><ref>Lee, 1985, 39</ref> He eventually received nearly 50 decorations.<ref name=nytobit /> | |||
{{quote|A higher power than man guided and watched over me and told me what to do.<ref>The Sergeant York Discovery Expedition: http://sgtyorkdiscovery.com/The_York_Story.php, Accessed January 26, 2013</ref>}} | |||
York's Medal of Honor citation reads:<ref name=ACMH>{{cite web |access-date=August 29, 2010 |url=http://www.history.army.mil/html/moh/worldwari.html |title=York, Alvin C. (Medal of Honor citation) |work=Medal of Honor recipients — World War I |publisher=] |date=June 8, 2009 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100901074542/http://www.history.army.mil/html/moh/worldwari.html |archive-date=September 1, 2010 |url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
{{blockquote|After his platoon suffered heavy casualties and 3 other noncommissioned officers had become casualties, Cpl. York assumed command. Fearlessly leading seven men, he charged with great daring a machine gun nest which was pouring deadly and incessant fire upon his platoon. In this heroic feat the machine gun nest was taken, together with 4 officers and 128 men and several guns.}} | |||
<gallery widths="240" heights="175"> | |||
ChatelChéhéryFrance.JPG|Valley near Chatel Chéhéry, France, where Sgt. York fought. | |||
In attempting to explain his actions during the 1919 investigation that resulted in the Medal of Honor, York told General Lindsey, "A higher power than man guided and watched over me and told me what to do." Lindsey replied, "York, you are right."<ref>{{cite web |url=http://sgtyorkdiscovery.com/The_York_Story.php |title=Trust Amidst Doubt and Adversity |first=Douglas |last=Mastriano |website=The Sergeant York Discovery Expedition |access-date= January 27, 2013 |url-status=dead |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20130106081212/http://sgtyorkdiscovery.com/The_York_Story.php |archive-date=January 6, 2013}}</ref> | |||
Hill 223, Meuse-Argonne Offensive.jpg|328th Infantry Regiment of 82nd Division advances in preparation to capture Hill 223 on October 7, 1918. | |||
Alvin C. York shows hill on which raid took place HD-SN-99-02157.JPEG|York at the hill where his actions earned him the Medal of Honor, three months after the end of World War I, February 7, 1919 | |||
Biographer David D. Lee (2000) wrote: | |||
</gallery> | |||
{{blockquote|Initially York's exploit attracted little public attention, but on 26 April 1919, ''Saturday Evening Post'' correspondent George Pattullo published "The Second Elder Gives Battle," an account of the firefight that made York a national hero overnight. York's explanation that God had been with him during the fight meshed neatly with the popular attitude that American involvement in the war was truly a holy crusade, and he returned to the United States in the spring of 1919 amid a tumultuous public welcome and a flood of business offers from people eager to capitalize on the soldier's reputation.<ref name= "Lee, 2000">Lee, ''American National Biography'' (2000)</ref>}} | |||
==Homecoming and fame== | ==Homecoming and fame== | ||
Before leaving France, York was his division's noncommissioned officer delegate to the |
Before leaving France, York was his division's noncommissioned officer delegate to the caucus which created the ], of which York was a charter member.<ref>{{cite book |last=Perry |first=John |date=2010 |title=Sergeant York |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2JYVW7LMq0MC&q=%22alvin%20york%22%20%22american%20legion%22%20%22charter%20member%22&pg=PA58 |location=Nashville, TN |publisher=Thomas Nelson, Inc. |page=58 |isbn=978-1-59555-025-5}}</ref> | ||
] | |||
York's heroism went unnoticed in the United States press, even in Tennessee, until the publication of the April 26, 1919 issue of the '']'', which had a circulation in excess of 2 million. In an article titled "The Second Elder Gives Battle", journalist George Patullo, who had learned of York's story while touring battlefields earlier in the year, laid out the themes that have dominated York's story ever since: the mountaineer, his religious faith and skill with firearms, patriotic, plainspoken and unsophisticated, an uneducated man who "seems to do everything correctly by intuition."<ref>Lee, 1985, 53–5</ref> In response, the Tennessee Society, a group of Tennesseans living in ], arranged celebrations to greet York upon his return to the United States, including a 5-day furlough to allow for visits to New York City and Washington, D.C. York arrived in ] on May 22, stayed at the ], and attended a formal banquet in his honor. He toured the subway system in a special car before continuing to Washington, where the House of Representatives gave him a standing ovation and he met Secretary of War ] and the President's secretary ], as President ] was still in Paris.<ref>Lee, 185, 58–60</ref> | |||
York's heroism went unnoticed in the United States press, even in Tennessee, until the publication of the April 26, 1919, issue of the '']'', which had a circulation in excess of 2 million. In an article titled "The Second Elder Gives Battle", journalist ], who had learned of York's story while touring battlefields earlier in the year, laid out the themes that have dominated York's story ever since: the mountaineer, his religious faith and skill with firearms, patriotic, plainspoken and unsophisticated, an uneducated man who "seems to do everything correctly by intuition."<ref>Lee, 1985, 53–5</ref> In response, the Tennessee Society, a group of Tennesseans living in ], arranged celebrations to greet York upon his return to the United States, including a 5-day furlough to allow for visits to New York City and Washington, D.C. York arrived in ], on May 22, stayed at the ], and attended a formal banquet in his honor. He toured the subway system in a special car before continuing to Washington, where the House of Representatives gave him a standing ovation and he met Secretary of War ] and the President's secretary ], as President ] was still in Paris.<ref>Lee, 185, 58–60</ref> | |||
] | |||
York proceeded to ], where he was discharged from the service, and then to Tennessee for more celebrations. He had been home for barely a week when, on June 7, 1919, York and Gracie Loretta Williams (February 7, 1900 – September 27, 1984)<ref name=findagraveglw>{{Find a Grave|11378969| name=Gracie Loretta Williams York| author=Karlene Kost| date=July 18, 2005|accessdate=August 31, 2010}}</ref> were married by Tennessee Governor ] in Pall Mall. More celebrations followed the wedding, including a week-long trip to Nashville where York accepted a special medal awarded by the state.<ref>Lee, 185, 60–62</ref> | |||
York proceeded to ], where he was discharged from the service, and then to Tennessee for more celebrations. He had been home for barely a week when, on June 7, 1919, York and Gracie Loretta Williams were married by Tennessee Governor ] in Pall Mall. More celebrations followed the wedding, including a week-long trip to Nashville where York accepted a special medal awarded by the state.<ref>Lee, 185, 60–62</ref> | |||
York refused many offers to profit from his fame, including thousands of dollars offered for appearances, product endorsements, newspaper articles, and movie rights to his life story. Instead, he lent his name to various charitable and civic causes.<ref>Lee, 1985, 62–4</ref> To support economic development, he campaigned for the Tennessee government to build a road to service his native region, succeeding when a highway through the mountains was completed in the mid-1920s and named Alvin C. York Highway.<ref>Lee, 1985, 63–4, 74–5</ref> The Nashville ] organized the purchase, by public subscription, of a {{convert|400|acre|km2|adj=on}} farm, the one gift that York accepted. However, it was not the fully equipped farm he was promised, requiring York to borrow money to stock it. He subsequently lost money in the farming depression that followed the war. Then the Rotary was unable to continue the installment payments on the property, leaving York to pay them himself. In 1921, he had no option but to seek public help, resulting in an extended discussion of his finances in the press, some of it sharply critical. Debt in itself was a trial: "I could get used to most any kind of hardship, but I'm not fitted for the hardship of owing money." Only an appeal to Rotary Clubs nationwide and an account of York's plight in the ''New York World'' brought in the required contributions by Christmas 1921.<ref>Lee, 1985, 64, 71–4, quote 73; {{cite web|url=http://query.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F20E1FFA3C551A738DDDA80A94DF405B818EF1D3& |title=Hero York Harassed, Can't Make Farm Pay |date=July 21, 1921 |publisher=New York Times |accessdate=September 13, 2010}}</ref> | |||
York refused many offers to profit from his fame, including thousands of dollars offered for appearances, product endorsements, newspaper articles, and movie rights to his life story. Instead, he lent his name to various charitable and civic causes.<ref>Lee, 1985, 62–4</ref> To support economic development, he campaigned for the Tennessee government to build a road to service his native region, succeeding when a highway through the mountains was completed in the mid-1920s and named Alvin C. York Highway.<ref>Lee, 1985, 63–4, 74–5</ref> The Nashville ] organized the purchase, by public subscription, of a {{convert|400|acre|km2|adj=on}} farm, the one gift that York accepted. However, it was not the fully equipped farm he was promised, requiring York to borrow money to stock it. He subsequently lost money in the farming depression that followed the war. Then the Rotary was unable to continue the installment payments on the property, leaving York to pay them himself. In 1921, he had no option but to seek public help, resulting in an extended discussion of his finances in the press, some of it sharply critical. Debt in itself was a trial: "I could get used to most any kind of hardship, but I'm not fitted for the hardship of owing money." Only an appeal to Rotary Clubs nationwide and an account of York's plight in the ''New York World'' brought in the required contributions by Christmas 1921.<ref>Lee, 1985, 64, 71–4, quote 73; {{cite news |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1921/07/21/archives/hero-york-harassed-cant-make-farm-pay-sergeant-who-got-128-germans.html |title=Hero York Harassed, Can't Make Farm Pay |date=July 21, 1921 |newspaper=New York Times |access-date=September 13, 2010}}</ref> | |||
==After the war== | ==After the war== | ||
In the 1920s, York formed the Alvin C. York Foundation with the mission of increasing educational opportunities in his region of Tennessee. Board members included the area's congressman, ], who later became Secretary of State under President ], Secretary of the Treasury ], who was ]'s son-in-law, and Tennessee Governor ]. Plans called for a non-sectarian institution providing vocational training to be called the ]. York concentrated on fund-raising, though he disappointed audiences who wanted to hear about the Argonne when he instead explained that "I occupied one space in a fifty mile front. I saw so little it hardly seems worthwhile discussing it. I'm trying to forget the war in the interest of the mountain boys and girls that I grew up among."<ref>Lee, 1985, 76</ref> He fought first to win financial support from the state and county, then battled local leaders about the school's location. Refusing to compromise, he resigned and developed plans for a rival York Industrial School. After a series of lawsuits he gained control of the original institution and was its president when it opened in December 1929. As the ] deepened, the state government failed to provide promised funds, and York mortgaged his farm to fund bus transportation for students. Even after he was ousted as president in 1936 by political and bureaucratic rivals, he continued to donate money.<ref>Lee, 1985, 75–90. On the political context of the disputes about school funding, see David D. Lee, ''Tennessee in Turmoil: Politics in the Volunteer State, 1920–1932'' (Memphis State University Press, 1979) {{ISBN|0-87870-048-X}}</ref><ref>{{cite magazine |url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,756113,00.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081215082904/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,756113,00.html |url-status=dead |archive-date=December 15, 2008 |title=Education: Fentress Feud, May 25, 1936 |magazine=] |date=May 25, 1936 |access-date=September 20, 2010}}</ref> | |||
] | |||
In the 1920s, York formed the Alvin C. York Foundation with the mission of increasing education opportunities in his region of Tennessee. Board members included the area's congressman, ], who later became Secretary of State under President ], Secretary of the Treasury ], and Tennessee Governor ]. Plans called for a non-sectarian institution providing vocational training to be called the ]. York concentrated on fund-raising, though he disappointed audiences who wanted to hear about the Argonne when he instead explained that "I occupied one space in a fifty mile front. I saw so little it hardly seems worthwhile discussing it. I'm trying to forget the war in the interest of the mountain boys and girls that I grew up among."<ref>Lee, 1985, 76</ref> He fought first to win financial support from the state and county, then battled local leaders about the school's location. Refusing to compromise, he resigned and developed plans for a rival York Industrial School. After a series of lawsuits he gained control of the original institution and was its president when it opened in December 1929. As the ] deepened, the state government failed to provide promised funds, and York mortgaged his farm to fund bus transportation for students. Even after he was ousted as president in 1936 by political and bureaucratic rivals, he continued to donate money.<ref>Lee, 1985, 75–90. On the political context of the disputes about school funding, see David D. Lee, ''Tennessee in Turmoil: Politics in the Volunteer State, 1920–1932'' (Memphis State University Press, 1979) ISBN 0-87870-048-X</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,756113,00.html |title=Education: Fentress Feud, May 25, 1936 |publisher=TIME |date=May 25, 1936 |accessdate=September 20, 2010}}</ref> | |||
] | |||
During ], York attempted to re-enlist in the Army,<ref name="David E. Lee 1985">David E. Lee, Sergeant York: An American Hero (Lexington, 1985). ISBN 0-8131-1517-5</ref><ref>"Sergeant York Signs Up Again" Life (11 May 1942): 12: 26+.</ref> however at fifty-four years of age, overweight,<ref name="David E. Lee 1985"/> near-diabetic,<ref name="sgtyork.org">http://www.sgtyork.org/PDF/article-Dr%20Birdwell-YorkWWIIH-C.pdf</ref> and with evidence of arthritis, he was denied enlistment as a combat soldier. Instead, he was commissioned a major in the Army Signal Corps<ref name="David E. Lee 1985"/><ref name="sgtyork.org"/> and he toured training camps and participated in bond drives in support of the war effort, usually paying his own travel expenses. Gen. ] later recalled that York "created in the minds of farm boys and clerks...the conviction that an aggressive soldier, well-trained and well-armed, can fight his way out of any situation." He also raised funds for war-related charities, including the Red Cross. He served on his county draft board, and when literacy requirements forced the rejection of large numbers of Fentress County men, he offered to lead a battalion of illiterates himself, saying they were "crack shots."<ref>Lee, 1985, 116–20</ref> Although York served during the war with the honorary rank of Colonel in the Army Signal Corps<ref name="David E. Lee 1985"/><ref name="sgtyork.org"/> and as a Colonel with the Seventh Infantry of the ],<ref>Barry M. Stentiford, ''The American Home Guard: The State Militia in the Twentieth Century'' (Texas A & M University Press, 2002), 94 ISBN 1-58544-181-3; , accessed September 20, 2010</ref> newspapers continued to refer to him as "Sgt. York."<ref>{{cite web|url=http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=FB0716FF3F5D167B93CBA81789D85F468485F9& |title=Sgt. York Urges Aid for Red Cross |date=February 19, 1942 |publisher=New York Times |accessdate=September 12, 2010}}</ref> | |||
In 1935, York, sensing the end of his time with the institute, began to work as a project superintendent with the ] overseeing the creation of ]'s Byrd Lake, one of the largest masonry projects the program ever undertook.<ref>{{YouTube|id=J2xzLO_Zntg|title=Cumberland Mountain State Park: A Civilian Conservation Corps Legacy}}</ref> York served as the park's superintendent until 1940.<ref>{{cite book |last=Van West |first=Carroll |date=2001 |title=Tennessee's New Deal Landscape: A Guidebook |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=wcnl3roLG0AC&q=alvin%20york%20superintendent%20%22cumberland%22%20%22state%20park%22&pg=PA166 |location=Knoxville, TN |publisher=University of Tennessee Press |page=166 |isbn=978-1-57233-107-5}}</ref> In the second half of 1930s and early 1940s, in the run-up to the America's entry in ], York was a forceful and public advocate for ], calling for U.S. involvement in the war against Germany, Italy and Japan.<ref name=Mastriano176>Mastriano, pp. 176–177.</ref> At the time, U.S. public opinion was overwhelmingly in favor of the isolationist and non-interventionist approach, and York's unpopular views led to accusations that he was engaged in war-mongering. York became a relatively rare high-profile public voice for intervention. In a speech at the ] in May 1941, York said: "We must fight again! The time is not now ripe, nor will it ever be, to compromise with Hitler, or the things he stands for."<ref name=Mastriano176/> | |||
York's speeches attracted the attention of ], who frequently quoted York, particularly a passage from York's Tomb of the Unknown Soldier speech: | |||
===Legacy and film story=== | |||
{{blockquote|By our victory in the last war, we won a lease on liberty, not a deed to it. Now after 23 years, Adolf Hitler tells us that lease is expiring, and after the manner of all leases, we have the privilege of renewing it, or letting it go by default ... . We are standing at the crossroads of history. The important capitals of the world in a few years will either be Berlin and Moscow, or Washington and London. I, for one, prefer Congress and Parliament to Hitler's Reichstag and Stalin's Kremlin. And because we were for a time, side by side, I know this Unknown Soldier does too. We owe it to him to renew that lease of liberty he helped us to get.<ref name=Mastriano176/>}} | |||
York cooperated with journalists in telling his life story twice in the 1920s. York allowed Nashville-born freelance journalist Sam Cowan to see his diary and submitted to interviews. The resulting 1922 biography focused on York’s Appalachian background, describing his upbringing among the "purest Anglo-Saxons to be found today," emphasizing popular stereotypes without bringing the man to life.<ref>Lee, 1985, 93–4</ref><ref>''New York Times'': , accessed September 20, 2010. Review of ({{cite web | |||
|url=http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/19117 | |||
|title=Sergeant York And His People | |||
|author=Cowan, Sam K. | |||
|year=1922 | |||
}}). Called "worthwhile", adding "careful restraint is one of its charms," and objecting "The attempt to picture him as tearfully prayerful as he fought against merciless butchers for his own life and the lives of his American comrades verges on to mawkish twaddle."</ref> A few years later, York contacted a publisher about an edition of his war diary, but the publisher wanted additional material to flesh out the story. Then Tom Skeyhill, an Australian-born veteran of the ],<ref>''New York Times'': , accessed September 20, 2010, calls Skeyhill the author of York's "official biography."</ref> visited York in Tennessee and the two became friends. On York's behalf, Skeyhill wrote an "autobiography" in the first person and was credited as the editor of ''Sergeant York: His Own Life Story and War Diary''. With a preface by ], Secretary of War in World War I, it presented a one-dimensional York supplemented with tales of life in the Tennessee mountains.<ref>Lee, 1985, 94–5</ref> Reviews noted that York only promoted his life story in the interest of funding educational programs: "Perhaps York's bearing after his famous exploit in the Argonne best reveals his native greatness....He will not exploit himself except for his own people. All of which gives his book an appeal beyond its contents."<ref>''New York Times'': , accessed September 20, 2010, review of ''Sergeant York: His Own Life Story and War Diary'', edited by Tom Skeyhill (NY: Doubleday, Doran & Co., 1928). On Williamson see ''New York Times'': , accessed September 20, 2010. Skeyhill wrote a version for children ''Sergeant York: Last of the Long Hunters'' (John C. Winston Company, 1930)</ref> | |||
During ], York attempted to re-enlist in the Army.<ref name="David E. Lee 1985">David E. Lee, Sergeant York: An American Hero (Lexington, 1985). {{ISBN|0-8131-1517-5}}</ref><ref>{{cite magazine|title=Sergeant York Signs Up Again |url= https://books.google.com/books?id=CVAEAAAAMBAJ&q=Sergeant%20York%20Signs%20Up%20Again&pg=PA26 | |||
The mountaineer myth that Cowan and Skeyhill promoted reflected York's own beliefs. In a speech at the ], he said:<ref>''New York City'': , accessed September 20, 2010</ref> | |||
|magazine=] |date=May 11, 1942|volume=12|page=26+ |access-date=November 17, 2017 }}</ref> | |||
However, at fifty-four years of age, overweight,<ref name="David E. Lee 1985" /> near-],<ref name="sgtyork.org">{{cite web|url=http://www.sgtyork.org/PDF/article-Dr%20Birdwell-YorkWWIIH-C.pdf |title=Sergeant York and World War II |first=Michael E. |last=Birdwell |website=Sergeant York |access-date=June 1, 2011 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111003010600/http://www.sgtyork.org/PDF/article-Dr%20Birdwell-YorkWWIIH-C.pdf |archive-date=October 3, 2011 }}</ref> and with evidence of ], he was denied enlistment as a combat soldier. Instead, he was commissioned as a ] in the Army Signal Corps<ref name="David E. Lee 1985" /><ref name="sgtyork.org" /> and he toured training camps and participated in bond drives in support of the war effort, usually paying his own travel expenses. Gen. ] later recalled that York "created in the minds of farm boys and clerks ... the conviction that an aggressive soldier, well-trained and well-armed, can fight his way out of any situation." He also raised funds for war-related charities, including the Red Cross. He served on his county draft board and, when literacy requirements forced the rejection of large numbers of Fentress County men, he offered to lead a battalion of illiterates himself, saying they were "crack shots".<ref>Lee, 1985, 116–20</ref> Although York served during the war as a Signal Corps major<ref name="David E. Lee 1985" /><ref name="sgtyork.org" /> and as a ] with the 7th Regiment of the ],<ref>Barry M. Stentiford, ''The American Home Guard: The State Militia in the Twentieth Century'' (Texas A & M University Press, 2002), 94 {{ISBN|1-58544-181-3}}; , accessed September 20, 2010</ref> newspapers continued to refer to him as "Sergeant York".<ref>{{cite news |url=https://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=FB0716FF3F5D167B93CBA81789D85F468485F9 |title=Sgt. York Urges Aid for Red Cross |date=February 19, 1942 |newspaper=New York Times |access-date=September 12, 2010}}</ref> | |||
===Legacy and film story=== | |||
:We, the descendants of the pioneer long hunters of the mountains, have been called Scotch-Irish and pure Anglo-Saxon, and that is complimentary, I reckon. But we want the world to know that we are Americans. The spiritual environment and our religious life in the mountains have made our spirit wholly American, and that true pioneer American spirit still exists in the Tennessee mountains. | |||
Biographer David Lee explored the reason Americans responded so favorably to his story: | |||
{{blockquote|York's Appalachian heritage was central to his popularity because the media portrayed him as the archetypical mountain man. At a time of domestic upheaval and international uncertainty, York's pioneer-like skill with a rifle, his homespun manner, and his fundamentalist piety endeared him to millions of Americans as a "contemporary ancestor" fresh from the backwoods of the southern mountains. As such, he seemed to affirm that the traditional virtues of the agrarian United States still had meaning in the new era. York represented not what Americans were but what they wanted to think they were. He lived in one of the most rural parts of the country when a majority of Americans lived in cities; he rejected riches when the tenor of the nation was crassly commercial; he was pious when secularism was on the rise. For millions of people, York was the incarnation of their romanticized understanding of the nation's past when men and women supposedly lived plainer, sterner, and more virtuous lives. Ironically, while York endured as a symbol of an older America, he spent most of his adult life working to bring roads, schools, and industrial development to the mountains, changes that were destroying the society he had come to represent.<ref name="Lee, 2000">Lee, ''American National Biography'' (2000)</ref>}} | |||
] | |||
:Even today, I want you all to know, with all the clamor of the world and its evil attractions, you still find in the little humble log cabins in the Tennessee mountains that old-fashioned ] of prayer–the same that they used to have in grandma's and grandpa's day–which is the true spirit of the long hunters. | |||
York cooperated with journalists in telling his life story twice in the 1920s. He allowed Nashville-born freelance journalist Sam Cowan to see his diary and submitted to interviews. The resulting 1922 biography focused on York's Appalachian background, describing his upbringing among the "purest Anglo-Saxons to be found today", emphasizing popular stereotypes without bringing the man to life.<ref>Lee, 1985, 93–4</ref><ref>''New York Times'': , accessed September 20, 2010. Review of ({{cite book |url=https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/19117 |title=Sergeant York And His People |author=Cowan, Sam K. |year=1922}}). Called "worthwhile", adding "careful restraint is one of its charms", and objecting "The attempt to picture him as tearfully prayerful as he fought against merciless butchers for his own life and the lives of his American comrades verges on to mawkish twaddle."</ref> A few years later, York contacted a publisher about an edition of his war diary, but the publisher wanted additional material to flesh out the story. Then ], an Australian-born veteran of the ],<ref>''New York Times'': , accessed September 20, 2010, calls Skeyhill the author of York's "official biography."</ref> visited York in Tennessee and the two became friends. On York's behalf, Skeyhill wrote an "autobiography" in the first person and was credited as the editor of ''Sergeant York: His Own Life Story and War Diary''. With a preface by ], Secretary of War in World War I, it presented a one-dimensional York supplemented with tales of life in the Tennessee mountains.<ref>Lee, 1985, 94–5</ref> Reviews noted that York only promoted his life story in the interest of funding educational programs: "Perhaps York's bearing after his famous exploit in the Argonne best reveals his native greatness. ... He will not exploit himself except for his own people. All of which gives his book an appeal beyond its contents."<ref>''New York Times'': , accessed September 20, 2010, review of ''Sergeant York: His Own Life Story and War Diary'', edited by Tom Skeyhill (NY: Doubleday, Doran & Co., 1928). On Williamson see ''New York Times'': , accessed September 20, 2010. Skeyhill wrote a version for children ''Sergeant York: Last of the Long Hunters'' (John C. Winston Company, 1930)</ref> | |||
:We in the Tennessee mountains are not transplanted Europeans; every fiber in our body and every emotion in our hearts is American. | |||
The mountaineer persona Cowan and Skeyhill promoted reflected York's own beliefs. In a speech at the ], he said: | |||
For many years, York employed a secretary, Arthur S. Bushing, who wrote the lectures and speeches York delivered. Bushing prepared York's correspondence as well. Like the works of Cowan and Skeyhill, words commonly ascribed to York, though doubtless representing his thinking, were often composed by professional writers.<ref>Lee, 1985, xi–xii</ref> | |||
{{blockquote|We, the descendants of the pioneer ] of the mountains, have been called Scotch-Irish and pure Anglo-Saxon, and that is complimentary, I reckon. But we want the world to know that we are Americans. The spiritual environment and our religious life in the mountains have made our spirit wholly American, and that true pioneer American spirit still exists in the Tennessee mountains. | |||
York had refused several times to authorize a film version of his life story.<ref>Lee, 1985, 101–2</ref> Finally, in 1940, as York was looking to finance an interdenominational Bible school, he yielded to a persistent Hollywood producer and negotiated the contract himself.<ref>Lee, 1985, 102–4</ref> In 1941, the movie '']'' directed by ] with ] in the title role told about his life and Medal of Honor action.<ref>The story that York insisted on Gary Cooper in the title role derives from the fact that producer ], who wanted Cooper for the role, recruited Cooper by writing a plea that he accept the role and then signing York's name to the telegram. Lee, 1985, 105ff.</ref> The screenplay included much fictitious material though it was based on York's ''Diary''.<ref name=allmovie /><ref>Lee, 1985, 114</ref> The marketing of the film included a visit by York to the White House where FDR praised the film.<ref>Lee, 1985, 110</ref> Some of the response to the film divided along political lines, with advocates of preparedness and aid to Great Britain enthusiastic ("Hollywood's first solid contribution to the national defense," said '']'') and isolationists calling it "propaganda" for the administration.<ref>Lee, 1985, 110–1</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,884426,00.html |title=Cinema: New Picture, Aug. 4, 1941 |publisher=TIME |date=August 4, 1941 |accessdate=September 13, 2010}}</ref> It received 11 ] nominations and won two, including the ] for Cooper. It was the highest-grossing picture of 1941.<ref name=allmovie>{{cite web|url=http://www.allmovie.com/work/43758 |title=Plot Synopsis |publisher=] |accessdate=September 10, 2010}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0034167/ |title=Sergeant York (1941) |publisher=Internet Movie Database |accessdate=September 10, 2010| archiveurl= http://web.archive.org/web/20100729153315/http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0034167/| archivedate= 29 July 2010 <!--DASHBot-->| deadurl= no}}</ref> York's earnings from the film, about $150,000 in the first 2 years as well as later royalties, resulted in a decade-long battle with the ].<ref>Lee, 1985, 128–9</ref> York eventually built part of his planned Bible school, which hosted 100 students until the late 1950s.<ref>Lee, 1985, 113, 128</ref> | |||
Even today, I want you all to know, with all the clamor of the world and its evil attractions, you still find in the little humble log cabins in the Tennessee mountains that old-fashioned ] of prayer—the same that they used to have in grandma's and grandpa's day—which is the true spirit of the long hunters. We in the Tennessee mountains are not transplanted Europeans; every fiber in our body and every emotion in our hearts is American.<ref>''New York Times'': , accessed September 20, 2010</ref>}} | |||
===Political views=== | |||
For many years, York employed a secretary, Arthur S. Bushing, who wrote the lectures and speeches York delivered. Bushing prepared York's correspondence as well. Like the works of Cowan and Skeyhill, words commonly ascribed to York, though doubtless representing his thinking, were often composed by professional writers.<ref>Lee, 1985, xi–xii</ref> York had refused several times to authorize a film version of his life story.<ref>Lee, 1985, 101–2</ref> Finally, in 1940, as York was looking to finance an interdenominational Bible school, he yielded to a persistent Hollywood producer and negotiated the contract himself.<ref>Lee, 1985, 102–4</ref> In 1941 the movie '']'', directed by ] with ] in the title role, told about his life and Medal of Honor action.<ref>The story that York insisted on Gary Cooper in the title role derives from the fact that producer ], who wanted Cooper for the role, recruited Cooper by writing a plea that he accept the role and then signing York's name to the telegram. Lee, 1985, 105ff.</ref> The screenplay included much fictitious material, though it was based on York's ''Diary''.<ref name=allmovie /><ref>Lee, 1985, 114</ref> The marketing of the film included a visit by York to the White House, where President ] praised the film.<ref>Lee, 1985, 110</ref> Some of the response to the film divided along political lines, with advocates of preparedness and aid to Great Britain enthusiastic ("Hollywood's first solid contribution to the national defense", said '']'') and isolationists calling it "propaganda" for the administration.<ref>Lee, 1985, 110–1</ref><ref>{{cite magazine |url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,884426,00.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100622042726/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,884426,00.html |url-status=dead |archive-date=June 22, 2010 |title=Cinema: New Picture, Aug. 4, 1941 |magazine=Time |date=August 4, 1941 |access-date=September 13, 2010}}</ref> It received 11 ] nominations and won two, including the ] for Cooper. It was the highest-grossing picture of 1941.<ref name=allmovie>{{cite web |url=http://www.allmovie.com/work/43758 |title=Plot Synopsis |website=] |access-date=September 10, 2010}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0034167/ |title=Sergeant York (1941) |website=Internet Movie Database |access-date=September 10, 2010 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100729153315/http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0034167/ |archive-date=July 29, 2010 |url-status=live}}</ref> York's earnings from the film, about $150,000 in the first two years as well as later royalties, resulted in a decade-long battle with the ].<ref>Lee, 1985, 128–9</ref> York eventually built part of his planned Bible school, which hosted 100 students until the late 1950s.<ref>Lee, 1985, 113, 128</ref> | |||
York originally believed in the morality of America's intervention in World War I.<ref>Lee, 1985, 58, 67</ref> By the mid-1930s, he looked back more critically: "I can't see that we did any good. There’s as much trouble now as there was when we were over there. I think the slogan 'A war to end war.' is all wrong."<ref>Lee, 1985, 100</ref> He fully endorsed American preparedness, but showed sympathy for isolationism in saying he would fight only if war came to America.<ref>Lee, 1985, 100–1; ''New York Times'': , accessed September 14, 2010; ''New York Times'': , accessed September 14, 2010</ref> | |||
===Political views=== | |||
A consistent ] – "I'm a Democrat first, last, and all the time,"<ref>Lee, 1985, 120</ref> he said—in January 1941 he praised FDR's support for Great Britain and in an address at the ] on ] of that year attacked isolationists and said veterans understood that "liberty and freedom are so very precious that you do not fight and win them once and stop." They are "prizes awarded only to those peoples who fight to win them and then keep fighting eternally to hold them!"<ref>Lee, 1985, 109–10. FDR quoted York's speech at length in an address to the nation on November 11, 1941. See also ''TIME'': , accessed September 14, 2010</ref> At times he was blunt: "I think any man who talks against the interests of his own country ought to be arrested and put in jail, not excepting senators and colonels." Everyone knew the colonel in question was ].<ref>Lee, 1985, 109</ref> During ] York urged the ], particularly the Japanese who "whether native or foreign born, all look alike and we can't take any chances."<ref>Lee, 1985, 119</ref> | |||
York originally believed in the morality of America's intervention in World War I.<ref>Lee, 1985, 58, 67</ref> By the mid-1930s, he looked back more critically: "I can't see that we did any good. There's as much trouble now as there was when we were over there. I think the slogan 'A war to end war' is all wrong."<ref>Lee, 1985, 100</ref> He fully endorsed American preparedness, but showed sympathy for ] by saying that he would fight only if war came to America.<ref>Lee, 1985, 100–1; ''New York Times'': , accessed September 14, 2010; ''New York Times'': , accessed September 14, 2010</ref> | |||
A consistent ] – "I'm a Democrat first, last, and all the time",<ref>Lee, 1985, 120</ref> he said – in January 1941 he praised President Roosevelt's support for ], and in an address at the ] on ] of that year, he attacked isolationists and said that veterans understood that "liberty and freedom are so very precious that you do not fight and win them once and stop." They are "prizes awarded only to those peoples who fight to win them and then keep fighting eternally to hold them!"<ref>Lee, 1985, 109–10. FDR quoted York's speech at length in an address to the nation on November 11, 1941. See also ''Time'': , accessed September 14, 2010</ref> At times he was blunt: "I think any man who talks against the interests of his own country ought to be arrested and put in jail, not excepting senators and colonels." Everyone knew that the colonel in question was ].<ref>Lee, 1985, 109</ref> | |||
In the late 1940s he called for toughness in dealing with the ] and did not hesitate to recommend using the atomic bomb in a ]: "If they can't find anyone else to push the button, I will."<ref name=lee125>Lee, 1985, 125</ref> He questioned the failure of ] forces to use the atomic bomb in Korea.<ref name=lee125 /> In the 1960s he criticized Secretary of Defense ]'s plans to reduce the ranks of the National Guard and reserves: "Nothing would please ] better."<ref>Lee, 1985, 132</ref> | |||
In the late 1940s he called for toughness in dealing with the ] and did not hesitate to recommend using the ] in a ], stating, "If they can't find anyone else to push the button, I will."<ref name=lee125>Lee, 1985, 125</ref> He questioned the failure of ] forces to use the atomic bomb in ].<ref name=lee125 /> In the 1960s he criticized Secretary of Defense ]'s plans to reduce the ranks of the ] and reserves, saying, "Nothing would please ] better."<ref>Lee, 1985, 132</ref> | |||
==Personal life== | |||
] | |||
York suffered from health problems throughout his life. He had gallbladder surgery in the 1920s and suffered from pneumonia in 1942. Described in 1919 as a "red-haired giant with the ruddy complexion of the outdoors" and "standing more than 6 feet... and tipping the beam at more than 200 pounds,"<ref>''New York Times'': , accessed September 20, 2010</ref> by 1945 he weighed 250 pounds and in 1948 he had a stroke. More strokes and another case of pneumonia followed, and he was confined to bed from 1954, further handicapped by failing eyesight. He was hospitalized several times during his last two years.<ref>Lee, 1985, 127, 133–4</ref><ref>''Time'' said he weighed 275 in 1941. {{cite news|url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,884426,00.html |title=Cinema: New Picture, Aug. 4, 1941 |publisher=TIME |date=August 4, 1941 |accessdate=September 13, 2010}}</ref> York died at the Veterans Hospital in ], on September 2, 1964, of a ]. After a funeral service in his Jamestown church, with Gen. ] representing President ],<ref>Lee, 1985, 134</ref> York was buried at the ] in Pall Mall.<ref name=FindAGrave>{{Find a Grave|1135|Alvin Cullum York}}</ref> His funeral sermon was delivered by Richard G. Humble, General Superintendent of the Churches of Christ in Christian Union.<ref>"A Goodly Heritage: a History of the Churches of Christ in Christian Union," Circleville, Ohio, pg. 122. http://www.cccuhq.org/e-books/doc_download/7-a-goodly-heritage-e-book (retrieved 24 November 2014)</ref> Humble also preached Mrs. York's funeral in 1984.{{Citation needed|date=August 2010}} | |||
==Personal life and death== | |||
York and his wife Grace had eight children, six sons and two daughters, most named after American historical figures: Alvin Cullum, Jr. (1921–83), George Edward Buxton (1923– ), Woodrow Wilson (1925–1998), Sam Houston (1928–1929), Andrew Jackson (1930– ), Betsy Ross (1933– ), Mary Alice (1935–1994), Thomas Jefferson (1938–72).<ref>Lee, 1985, 150 n31. G. Edward Buxton was York's battalion commander in the 328th Infantry.</ref> | |||
] | |||
York and his wife Gracie had ten children, seven sons and three daughters, most named after American historical figures: an infant son (1920, died at 4 days), Alvin Cullum Jr. (1921–1983), George Edward Buxton (1923–2018), Woodrow Wilson (1925–1998), Samuel Huston (1928–1929), Andrew Jackson (1930–2022), Betsy Ross (born 1933), Mary Alice (1935–1991), Thomas Jefferson (1938–1972), and an infant daughter (1940, died the same day).<ref>Lee, 1985, 150 n31. G. Edward Buxton was York's battalion commander in the 328th Infantry.</ref><ref>{{cite news |date=January 7, 2018 |title=Obituary, George E. York |url=http://www.jenningsfh.com/notices/George-York |work=Jennings Funeral Home |location=Jamestown, TN}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.odmp.org/officer/14612-constable-thomas-jefferson-york |title=Constable Thomas Jefferson York |publisher=]}}</ref> | |||
York had health problems throughout his life. He had gallbladder surgery in the late 1920s and had ] in 1942. Described in 1919 as a "red-haired giant with the ruddy complexion of the outdoors" and "standing more than 6 feet ... and tipping the scale at more than 200 pounds",<ref>''New York Times'': , accessed September 20, 2010</ref> by 1945 he weighed 250 pounds and in 1948 he had a ]. More strokes and another case of pneumonia followed, and he was confined to bed from 1954, further impaired by failing eyesight. He was hospitalized several times during his last two years.<ref>Lee, 1985, 127, 133–4</ref><ref>''Time'' said he weighed 275 in 1941. {{cite magazine |url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,884426,00.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100622042726/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,884426,00.html |url-status=dead |archive-date=June 22, 2010 |title=Cinema: New Picture, Aug. 4, 1941 |magazine=Time |date=August 4, 1941 |access-date=September 13, 2010}}</ref> York died at the Veterans Hospital in ], on September 2, 1964, of a ] at age 76. After a funeral service in his Jamestown church, with Gen. ] representing President ],<ref>Lee, 1985, 134</ref> York was buried at the Wolf River Cemetery in Pall Mall. His funeral sermon was delivered by Richard G. Humble, General Superintendent of the Churches of Christ in Christian Union.<ref>{{cite book |last=Brown |first=Kenneth Rev. |date=1980 |title=A Goodly Heritage: a History of the Churches of Christ in Christian Union |url=http://www.cccuhq.org/e-books/doc_download/7-a-goodly-heritage-e-book |via=Wayback Machine |location=Circleville, OH |publisher=Circle Press, Inc. |page=122|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150923201120/http://www.cccuhq.org/e-books/doc_download/7-a-goodly-heritage-e-book |archive-date=September 23, 2015 }}</ref> Humble also preached Mrs. York's funeral sermon in 1984.<ref>{{cite news |last=Fontenay |first=Charles L. |date=September 28, 1984 |title=Sgt. York's Widow Dies; Rites Set |url=https://www.newspapers.com/clip/50051134/yorks-widow/ |work=The Tennessean |location=Nashville, TN |page=2B |via=]}}</ref> | |||
After York's death, his wife sold most of the York farm to the State of Tennessee. The farm is now open to visitors as the ]. | |||
==Awards== | |||
York's son Thomas Jefferson York was killed in the line of duty on May 7, 1972, while serving as a ] in Tennessee.<ref name=FindagraveTJ>{{Find a Grave|8100577|name=Thomas Jefferson York|date=November 18, 2003|accessdate=August 31, 2010}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.odmp.org/officer/14612-constable-thomas-jefferson-york|title=Constable Thomas Jefferson York|publisher='']''}}</ref> | |||
York was the recipient of the following awards: | |||
{| style="margin:1em auto; text-align:center;" | |||
==Honors and awards== | |||
|{{ribbon devices|number=0|type=oak|name=Medal of Honor ribbon|width=106}} | |||
<!-- EDITORS NOTE: Please do not add York's Distinguished Service Cross Ribbon to this list of awards since, when it was upgraded to the Medal of Honor, he was at that point no longer authorized to wear it. Thank you. --> | |||
===Military awards=== | |||
|{{ribbon devices|number=3|type=service-star|name=World War I Victory Medal ribbon|width=106}} | |||
{| | |||
|{{ribbon devices|number=0|type= |
|{{ribbon devices|number=0|type=service-star|name=American Campaign Medal ribbon|width=106}} | ||
|] | |||
|- | |- | ||
|{{ribbon devices|number=0|type=oak| |
|{{ribbon devices|number=0|type=oak|name=World War II Victory Medal ribbon|width=106}} | ||
|{{ribbon devices|number=0|type=oak|name=Legion Honneur Chevalier ribbon|width=106}} | |||
|] (Initially awarded. Later upgraded to Medal of Honor.) | |||
|{{ribbon devices|number=0|type=oak|name=Medaille militaire ribbon|width=106}} | |||
|- | |- | ||
|{{ribbon devices|number=0|type=oak|ribbon= |
|{{ribbon devices|number=0|type=oak|ribbon=Croix de guerre 1914-1918 with palm.jpg|width=106}} | ||
|{{ribbon devices|number=0|type=oak|name=Croce di guerra al merito BAR|width=106}} | |||
|] | |||
|{{ribbon devices|number=0|type=oak|name=ME Order of Danilo I Member BAR|width=106}} | |||
|} | |||
{| class="wikitable" style="margin:1em auto; text-align:center;" | |||
|- | |- | ||
|] | |||
|{{ribbon devices|number=0|type=oak|ribbon=American Campaign Medal ribbon.svg|width=80}} | |||
<!-- EDITORS NOTE: Please do not add York's Distinguished Service Cross to this list of awards since, when it was upgraded to the Medal of Honor, he was at that point no longer authorized to wear it. Thank you. --> | |||
|]<br><small>with three ]s</small> | |||
|] | |] | ||
|- | |- | ||
|] | |||
|{{ribbon devices|number=0|type=oak|ribbon=Legion Honneur Chevalier ribbon.svg|width=80}} | |||
|] |
|]<br><small>(])</small> | ||
|]<br><small>(])</small> | |||
|- | |||
|{{ribbon devices|number=0|type=oak|ribbon=Croix de guerre 1914-1918 with palm.jpg|width=80}} | |||
|] with Palm (France) | |||
|- | |||
|{{ribbon devices|number=0|type=oak|ribbon=Croce di guerra al merito BAR.svg|width=80}} | |||
|] (Italy) | |||
|- | |- | ||
|]<br><small>with Palm (])</small> | |||
|{{ribbon devices|number=0|type=oak|ribbon=ME Order of Danilo I Member BAR.svg|width=80}} | |||
|]<br><small>(])</small> | |||
|] (Montenegro) | |||
|]<br><small>(])</small> | |||
|} | |} | ||
== |
==Legacy== | ||
Seven public buildings have been named for Alvin York, including the Alvin C. York Veterans Hospital located in Murfreesboro, Tennessee.<ref>{{cite web|accessdate=August 30, 2010|url=http://www2.va.gov/directory/guide/facility.asp?id=94|title=Tennessee Valley Healthcare System – Alvin C. York (Murfreesboro) Campus|publisher= ]| archiveurl= http://web.archive.org/web/20100903043011/http://www2.va.gov/directory/guide/facility.asp?ID=94| archivedate= 3 September 2010 <!--DASHBot-->| deadurl= no}}</ref> The ] was founded in 1926 as a private agricultural high school by Alvin York and residents of Fentress County. Due to the depression in 1937 the school became public and continues to serve as Jamestown's high school.<ref name=Handbook>{{cite web|url=http://www2.york.k12.tn.us/handbook.htm |work=York Institute Student Handbook|title=York Institute: Student Handbook 2007–2008|accessdate= December 29, 2008}}</ref> | |||
===Controversy=== | |||
On May 5, 2000, the ] issued the "Distinguished Soldiers" stamps, one of which honored York.<ref name=USPS>{{cite web|accessdate=October 24, 2007|url=http://www.usps.com/images/stamps/2000/soldiers.htm|title=Distinguished Soldiers|work=America's 2000 Stamp Program |publisher= ] |archiveurl = http://web.archive.org/web/20071201193323/http://www.usps.com/images/stamps/2000/soldiers.htm <!-- Bot retrieved archive --> |archivedate = December 1, 2007}}</ref> | |||
Beginning soon after York's return to the United States at the end of the war, doubt and controversy periodically surfaced over whether the events detailed in his Medal of Honor documents had taken place as officially described, and whether other soldiers in York's unit should also have been recognized for their heroism.<ref name=Mastriano153>Mastriano, p. 153.</ref><ref>{{cite news |last=Talley |first=Robert |date=November 11, 1929 |title=Eleven Years After War Finds Members in Different Jobs: Still Can't Understand why Sergeant York Got all the Credit for Winning |url=http://fultonhistory.com/newspaper%208/Niagara%20Falls%20NY%20Gazette/Niagara%20Falls%20NY%20Gazette%201929%20Nov-Dec%20Grayscale/Niagara%20Falls%20NY%20Gazette%201929%20Nov-Dec%20Grayscale%20-%200231.pdf |newspaper=Niagara Falls Gazette |location=Niagara Falls, NY |page=4}}</ref> Otis Merrithew (William Cutting) and Bernard Early were among those who argued against the official version.<ref>{{cite news |last=Talley |first=Robert |date=November 11, 1929 |title=Controversy Still On Between Members Of Heroic Band of Soldiers In Argonne Fight |url=http://fultonhistory.com/newspaper%208/Niagara%20Falls%20NY%20Gazette/Niagara%20Falls%20NY%20Gazette%201929%20Nov-Dec%20Grayscale/Niagara%20Falls%20NY%20Gazette%201929%20Nov-Dec%20Grayscale%20-%200231.pdf |work=] |location=Niagara Falls, NY |page=4 |via=Fulton History.com |access-date=February 10, 2018}}</ref> Of the 17 American soldiers who were involved in York's Medal of Honor action, six were killed.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.historynet.com/alvin-york-hero-argonne.htm |title=Alvin York: Hero of the Argonne |last=Mastriano |first=Douglas |date=March 14, 2017 |website=History Net.com |publisher=Weider History Group |location=Leesburg, VA}}</ref> York received the Medal of Honor, and over the years, three of the others who lived through that day's fighting also received valor awards,<ref>{{cite news|last=Krimsky |first=George |date=May 5, 2008 |title=Move over, Sgt. York |url=http://www.rep-am.com/articles/2008/05/06/news/doc481b641ecef0a202539427.txt |newspaper=The Republican-American |location=Waterbury, CT |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304190434/http://www.rep-am.com/articles/2008/05/06/news/doc481b641ecef0a202539427.txt |archive-date=March 4, 2016 }}</ref> including the Distinguished Service Cross for Early in 1929,<ref>{{cite news |last=International News Service |date=October 5, 1929 |title=Sergeant Early to get Distinguished Service Cross Today |url=https://www.newspapers.com/image/50164763/ |newspaper=The Kane Republican |location=Kane, PA |page=1 |url-access=subscription}}</ref> and the ] for Merrithew in 1965.<ref>{{cite news |last=Associated Press |date=September 20, 1965 |title=Medal Comes 47 Years Late: "York and I fought Side by Side" |url=https://www.newspapers.com/image/23496089/ |newspaper=The Daily Citizen |location=Tucson, AZ |page=33 |url-access=subscription}}</ref> | |||
Considerable red tape hampered the other men's attempts to get recognized as well as conflicts of interest by those reviewing their files. Later in life Gen. Lindsey would have a change of heart and support the other men's claims for recognition, which were again blocked by military officials citing a 1929 cutoff date for recommendation. Historian James P. Gregory's 2023 book ''Unraveling the Myth of Sgt. Alvin York'' and related academic lectures<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tvTBsv5WtoI&list=RDCMUCikj7PQyCCtoBMy9r7PvG3g&start_radio=1&ab_channel=NationalWWIMuseumandMemorial | title=Unraveling the Myth of SGT. York - James P. Gregory, Jr | website=] | date=January 24, 2023 }}</ref> has brought about new scrutiny on the subject and renewed calls for the men involved other than York to be honored. | |||
York's record became the subject of controversy in Germany in 1928, after a Swedish journal published an article about York's exploits which some Germans felt impugned the honor of the German armed forces. In 1929, the ] investigated the claims made about York's battlefield exploits by reviewing military records and interviewing surviving German officers of the ] who had fought against York.<ref>Taylor V. Beattie with Ronald Bowman, "In Search of York: Man, Myth & Legend," Army History, Summer-Fall 2000 (PB-2B-0B-3 (No. 50)), https://history.army.mil/armyhistory/AH50newOCR.pdf</ref> The German report, which was not published at the time, concluded that "York was a brave and fearless soldier" and that the official U.S. Army report on York's actions "corresponds with the facts," but also found that some of the details of York's first report from the battlefield had been "grossly exaggerated." In particular, the German investigators found that York's unit had likely captured fewer than 132 prisoners and 35 machine guns, as Germans records showed the loss of only 79 prisoners in the sector that day, and German officers reported there were less than 35 machine guns present. The German investigators shared their report with the U.S. Army, which did not take any action as the report confirmed York's role in valorously leading assaults on German positions and did not contradict any of the specific details of York's Medal of Honor citation.<ref>Typescript, "Testimony of German Officers and Men anent Sergeant York: A Translation of The Origin of War Legends, An Investigation of the Alleged Feat of Sgt York, October 8, 19J8," trans. F. W. Merten, p. II, copies in U.S. Army Military History Institute, Carlisle Barracks, Pa., and in file 4658. box 40. Entry 310C. records ("Thomas File") of the Historical Section, Anny War College, RG 165. Available online at http://www.digitalhistoryarchive.com/free-items.html.</ref> | |||
] on the ] of ], ] was named for the Sergeant in 1928.<ref name=PollackNYT >{{Cite news|accessdate=October 23, 2007|url=http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/07/nyregion/thecity/07fyi.html?_r=1&oref=slogin|title=The Great Race — "A Tennesseean Honored" | |||
|author=Pollak, Michael|work=New York Times |date=August 7, 2005}}</ref> In the 1980s, the ] named its ] weapon system "Sergeant York"; the project was canceled because of technical problems and massive cost overruns.<ref name=Wilentz>{{Cite journal|accessdate=October 23, 2007 |url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,959780,00.html|title=No More Time for Sergeant York | |||
|author=Wilentz, Amy|work=TIME magazine|date=September 9, 1985}}</ref> ]'s song "Old Downtown" talks about York in depth.<ref name=LauraCantrell>{{cite web|accessdate=October 23, 2007|url=http://www.matadorrecords.com/laura_cantrell/biography.html|title=Laura Cantrell Biography | |||
|date=June 21, 2005|publisher=Matador Records| archiveurl= http://web.archive.org/web/20071115223101/http://www.matadorrecords.com/laura_cantrell/biography.html| archivedate= 15 November 2007 <!--DASHBot-->| deadurl= no}}</ref> The ] in the funeral procession of President ] was named Sergeant York.<ref name=Kindred>{{cite web|accessdate=October 23, 2007 |url=http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1208/is_25_228/ai_n6126991 | |||
|title=A proud performer after all |author=Kindred, Dave |date=June 21, 2004|work=The Sporting News |author=Dave Kindred }}</ref> The ] Division's movie theater at ], ] is named York Theater.<ref name=YorkTheater>{{cite web|accessdate=October 23, 2007|url=http://www.aafes.com/ems/conus/bragg.htm|title=Ft Bragg — York Theatre | |||
|publisher=Army and Air Force Exchange Service (AAFES)| archiveurl= http://web.archive.org/web/20071011070412/http://aafes.com/ems/conus/bragg.htm| archivedate= 11 October 2007 <!--DASHBot-->| deadurl= no}}</ref> The traveling ] trophy between ], ], ] and ] is called the Alvin C. York trophy.<ref name=YorkTrophy>{{cite web|accessdate=October 23, 2007 | |||
|url=http://media.www.theallstate.com/media/storage/paper801/news/2007/10/03/Sports/The-New.Sergeant.York.Trophy.Series-3009039.shtml | |||
|title=The New Sergeant York Trophy Series |author=Scott, Marlon |date=October 23, 2007 |work=The All State}}</ref> A monumental statue of York by sculptor ] was placed on the grounds of the ] in 1968.<ref>Robert Ewing Corlew, Stanley John Folmsbee, and Enoch L. Mitchell, ''Tennessee: A Short History'', 2nd ed. (Knoxville, TN: University of Tennessee Press, 1981), 442</ref> The ] program has a ribbon award for its cadets that is named after York.<ref>University of Texas: {{dead link|date=September 2013}}, accessed November 21, 2010; Awarded to the cadet who does the most to support the ROTC program.</ref> A memorial to graduates of the East Tennessee State University ROTC program who have given their lives for their country carries a quotation from York.<ref>Waymarking.com: , accessed August 29, 2010</ref> The Third Regiment of the ] is named for York.<ref>Tennessee State Guard, Third Regiment: , accessed September 20, 2010</ref> | |||
===Discovery of "lost" battlefield=== | |||
]-winning author ] used York as the model for characters in two of his novels, both explorations of the burden of fame faced by battlefield heroes in peacetime. In '']'' (1943), a Tennessee mountaineer who was awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor in World War I returns from combat, becomes a state legislator, and then a bank president. Others exploit his decency and fame for their own selfish ends as the novel explores the real-life experience of an old-fashioned hero in a cynical world. In '']'' (1959), a similar hero from a comparable background has aged and become an invalid. He struggles to maintain his identity as his real self diverges from the robust legend of his youth.<ref>Lee, 1985, 130–2; {{Cite news|accessdate=September 12, 2010 |url=http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F40B1FFB3E54107B93C0AB1783D85F478485F9& |work=New York Times |title=The Pattern of Dry Rot in Dixie |author=Maxwell Geismar |date=August 22, 1943}}; {{Cite news|accessdate=September 12, 2010 |url=http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F30E10F73458137B93C6AB1783D85F4D8585F9& |work=New York Times |title=Books of The Times |author=Orville Prescott |date=August 24, 1959}}</ref> | |||
] battlefield in 2010]] | |||
In October 2006, United States Army Colonel ], head of the Sergeant York Discovery Expedition (SYDE), conducted research to locate the York battle site.<ref>{{Cite news |access-date=June 16, 2010 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2006/10/26/world/americas/26iht-york.3300183.html |work=The New York Times |title=Proof offered of Sergeant York's war exploits |first=Craig S. |last=Smith |date=October 26, 2006 |ref={{sfnRef|"Proof offered of Sergeant York's war exploits"}}}}</ref> Among the Mastriano expedition's finds were 46 American rifle rounds.<ref>{{cite news |last=Montgomery |first=Nancy |date=May 26, 2008 |title=Officer says he's pinpointed Sgt. York's stand: 5,000 artifacts and exhausting research help American zero in on where a marker will be |url=https://www.stripes.com/news/officer-says-he-s-pinpointed-sgt-york-s-stand-1.79280 |work=Stars and Stripes |location=Washington, DC |ref={{sfnRef|"Officer says he's pinpointed Sgt. York's stand"}}}}</ref> In addition, his research located pieces of German ammunition and weaponry.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Mastriano |first1=Col. Douglas |title=The York Artifacts Gallery |url=http://www.sgtyorkdiscovery.com/The_York_Gallery.php |website=www.sgtyorkdiscovery.com |publisher=Self-published |access-date=July 7, 2015 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150707095113/http://www.sgtyorkdiscovery.com/The_York_Gallery.php |archive-date=July 7, 2015 }}</ref> Without the official support of the French government, Mastriano excavated the site and bulldozed the area in order to build two monuments and a historic trail.<ref>{{Cite news|author=Tom Nolan|date=November 17, 2008|title=Search for Sgt. York site turns into modern media battle|work=The Record (Middle Tennessee State University)|url=http://www.mtsu.edu/news/Record/Rec_v17/rec1710.pdf|access-date=November 17, 2008}}</ref> Mastriano's research has been strongly disputed by other historians who point out numerous errors in the history dissertation and subsequent book that he published on York.<ref>{{cite news| last=Scolforo | first=Mark | date=September 9, 2022 | title= Amid campaign, Mastriano's disputed dissertation made public |newspaper = AP News | access-date = September 14, 2022 | url = https://apnews.com/article/2022-midterm-elections-science-donald-trump-new-brunswick-york-16b74c34b1902864f9fe205184830f94}}</ref> | |||
Another team led by Dr. Tom Nolan, head of the Sergeant York Project and a geographer at the R.O. Fullerton Laboratory for Spatial Technology at ], placed the site 600 meters south of the location identified by Mastriano.<ref>University of South Caroline: {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100614215333/http://www.cas.sc.edu/sciaa/legacy/legacy_v14n1.pdf|date=June 14, 2010}}, accessed June 13, 2010</ref><ref>Texas State University: {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100703032513/http://ecommons.txstate.edu/geogtad/5|date=July 3, 2010}}, accessed June 13, 2010</ref> Nolan's research relied on contemporary army graves registration Forms, the 82nd Division's wartime history, and maps drawn by Colonel ] and Captain Edward C. B. Danforth, both of whom walked the ground with York during the Medal of Honor investigation.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Kelly|first=Michael|title=Hero on the Western Front: Discovering Alvin York's WWI Battlefield|publisher=Frontline Books|year=2018|isbn=978-1-52670-075-9}}</ref> | |||
==Search for Medal of Honor action site== | |||
In October 2006, US Army Colonel ], head of the Sergeant York Discovery Expedition (SYDE), conducted research to locate the York battle site. After forensic ballistic analysis verified that the rifle and pistol cartridges that his team recovered matched York's weapons, French and American government officials determined that he had pinpointed the location of York's exploits.<ref>{{Cite news|accessdate=June 16, 2010 |url=http://www.nytimes.com/2006/10/26/world/americas/26iht-york.3300183.html |work=The New York Times |title=Proof offered of Sergeant York's war exploits |author=Craig S. Smith |date=October 26, 2006 | |||
}}</ref><ref>Sergeant York Discovery Expedition: , accessed June 13, 2010</ref> Dr. Tom Nolan, head of the Sergeant York Project and a geographer at the R.O. Fullerton Laboratory for Spatial Technology at ], had earlier placed the site 500 meters south of the location identified by Mastriano.<ref></ref><ref>University of South Caroline: , accessed June 13, 2010</ref><ref>Texas State University: , accessed June 13, 2010</ref> With the support and endorsement of the French government, two monuments and a historic trail were built on the Mastriano site.<ref>{{Cite news|accessdate=November 17, 2008 |url=http://www.mtsu.edu/news/Record/Rec_v17/rec1710.pdf |work=The Record (Middle Tennessee State University) |title=Search for Sgt. York site turns into modern media battle |author=Dr. Tom Nolan |date=November 17, 2008}}</ref> Battlefield guides are available at the Sergeant York Historic Trail.<ref name=YorkDiscovery>{{cite web|accessdate=October 23, 2007|url=http://www.sgtyorkdiscovery.com/SYDE_NEWS.php |title=York trail-work begins! SYDE honors York, soldiers and preserves a piece of history |work=SYDE News |publisher=Sergeant York Discovery Expedition| archiveurl= http://web.archive.org/web/20071014064933/http://sgtyorkdiscovery.com/SYDE_NEWS.php| archivedate= 14 October 2007 <!--DASHBot-->| deadurl= no}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_3ARJ5ZjjZk/ |title=The Sergeant York Historic Trail|year=2010|author=Army Media Center|accessdate=August 31, 2010}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.sergeantyorkproject.com/ |title=The Sergeant York Project|year=2008|author=Nolan, Tom; Kelly, M.|accessdate=August 31, 2010}}</ref> | |||
=== |
===Monuments and memorials=== | ||
Many places and monuments throughout the world have been named in honor of York: | |||
Even as early as 1919 when York returned to the United States, doubt and speculation began to surface over whether or not the seemingly miraculous events he described had actually taken place. The ] reported in 2006 that groups of researchers attempted to map out the various points and geographical locations that York's diary had mentioned, and while some locations matched, others did not. The lack of consistency in describing locations, along with other self-contradictions found within York's published diary, led to debate over where exactly the Action Site was, and if the Site and York's acts were even legitimate. Corporal William Cutting, whom was present with York at the time, claimed that the Germans had surrendered to him and not York personally, and official German research stated that York could not have accomplished what his diary claimed he had single-handedly in that one instance, as there were fewer Germans stationed that day in the area York mentioned than was claimed in the diary to have been killed or captured. | |||
* The ] preserves his farm in Pall Mall. | |||
* The ] across the ] between ] and ]. | |||
* Several government buildings have been named for York, including the ] located in ].<ref>{{cite web |access-date=August 30, 2010 |url=http://www2.va.gov/directory/guide/facility.asp?id=94 |title=Tennessee Valley Healthcare System – Alvin C. York (Murfreesboro) Campus |publisher=] |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100903043011/http://www2.va.gov/directory/guide/facility.asp?ID=94 |archive-date=September 3, 2010 |url-status=dead }}</ref> | |||
* The ] was founded in 1926 as an agricultural high school by York and residents of Fentress County and continues to serve as Jamestown's high school.<ref name=Handbook>{{cite web|url=http://www2.york.k12.tn.us/handbook.htm |work=York Institute Student Handbook |title=York Institute: Student Handbook 2007–2008 |access-date=December 29, 2008 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090429091841/http://www2.york.k12.tn.us/handbook.htm |archive-date=April 29, 2009 }}</ref> | |||
* ] on the ] of ], ] was named for York in 1928.<ref name=PollackNYT>{{Cite news |access-date=October 23, 2007 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/07/nyregion/thecity/07fyi.html |title=The Great Race – "A Tennesseean Honored" |author=Pollak, Michael |work=] |date=August 7, 2005}}</ref> | |||
* A statue of York by sculptor ] was placed on the grounds of the ] in 1968.<ref>Robert Ewing Corlew, Stanley John Folmsbee, and Enoch L. Mitchell, ''Tennessee: A Short History'', 2nd ed. (Knoxville, TN: University of Tennessee Press, 1981), 442</ref> | |||
* In 2007, the ]'s movie theater at ], ], was named York Theater.<ref name=YorkTheater>{{cite web |access-date=October 23, 2007 |url=http://www.aafes.com/ems/conus/bragg.htm |title=Ft Bragg – York Theatre |publisher=Army and Air Force Exchange Service (AAFES) |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071011070412/http://aafes.com/ems/conus/bragg.htm |archive-date=October 11, 2007 |url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
York is also the namesake for awards and military assets: | |||
York himself was bemused by the mythical status attributed to him and rejected his image as a hero. Though he penned a true diary of his actions in the War, his family never allowed it to be published; instead, Tom Skeyhill, an Australian soldier, author, and friend of York, assisted him in writing up another version of his diary meant for publication and sale, which today makes up most available knowledge of York and his exploits. Skeyhill later admitted to embellishing the published "diary" with exaggerations and modifications in order to create a more exciting book that would attract more readers.<ref>{{cite web|last1=Smith|first1=Craig S|title=Revisiting Sgt. York and a Time When Heroes Stood Tall|url=http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/18/world/europe/18hero.html?pagewanted=all|website=www.nytimes.com|publisher=The New York Times|accessdate=7 July 2015}}</ref> | |||
* In the 1980s, the ] named its ] weapon system "Sergeant York"; the project was cancelled because of technical problems and cost overruns.<ref name=Wilentz>{{Cite magazine |access-date=October 23, 2007 |url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,959780,00.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091207055223/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,959780,00.html |url-status=dead |archive-date=December 7, 2009 |title=No More Time for Sergeant York |author=Wilentz, Amy |magazine=Time |date=September 9, 1985}}</ref> | |||
* In 1993, York was among 35 Medal of Honor recipients whose portraits were painted and biographies included in a boxed set of "Congressional Medal of Honor Trading Cards," issued by ] under license from the Medal of Honor Society. The text is by Kent DeLong, the paintings by Tom Simonton, and the set edited by ].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.nslists.com/congmed.htm |title=Jeff Alexander's House of Checklists: Congressional Medal of Honor, Eclipse, 1993 |access-date=October 21, 2017 }}</ref> | |||
* On May 5, 2000, the ] issued the "Distinguished Soldiers" stamps, one of which honored York.<ref name="American War Hero Stamps">{{cite web |url=http://www.history.army.mil/html/reference/amewarhs.html |title=The Pentagram: U.S. Postal Service salutes four American war heroes |last=Ford |first=Spc. Keisha |date=May 5, 2000 |website=Center of Military History |publisher=U.S. Army |access-date=October 10, 2016 |archive-date=September 15, 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120915225334/http://www.history.army.mil/html/reference/amewarhs.html |url-status=dead }}</ref> | |||
* The ] in the 2004 funeral procession of President ] was named Sergeant York.<ref name=Kindred>{{cite web |access-date=October 23, 2007 |url=http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1208/is_25_228/ai_n6126991 |title=A proud performer after all |author=Kindred, Dave |date=June 21, 2004 |work=The Sporting News}}</ref> | |||
* The traveling ] trophy between ], ], ], and ] is called the Alvin C. York trophy.<ref name=YorkTrophy>{{cite web |access-date=October 23, 2007 |url=http://media.www.theallstate.com/media/storage/paper801/news/2007/10/03/Sports/The-New.Sergeant.York.Trophy.Series-3009039.shtml |title=The New Sergeant York Trophy Series |author=Scott, Marlon |date=October 23, 2007 |work=The All State}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=OVCSports.com – Sgt. York Trophy presented by Delta Dental of Tennessee |url=http://ovcsports.com/sports/2012/6/14/GEN_0614125712.aspx |website=ovcsports.com |access-date=October 9, 2015}}</ref> | |||
* The ]'s Sergeant York Award is presented to cadets who excel in the program and devote additional time and effort to maintaining and expanding it.<ref>University of Texas: , accessed November 21, 2010; Awarded to the cadet who does the most to support the ROTC program. {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121020062145/http://www.utexas.edu/cola/depts/arotc/_files/pdf/Cadets/cadet_ribbons.pdf |date=October 20, 2012 }}</ref> | |||
* A memorial to graduates of the East Tennessee State University ROTC program who have given their lives for their country carries a quotation from York.<ref>Waymarking.com: , accessed August 29, 2010</ref> | |||
* The Third Regiment of the Tennessee State Guard is named for York.<ref>Tennessee State Guard, Third Regiment: {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130419125857/http://tsg3.us/mission.html |date=April 19, 2013 }}, accessed September 20, 2010</ref> | |||
Appearances and references in literature: | |||
After extensive research and a geological survey of the area in which York's feats were supposedly accomplished, a group known as "The Sergeant York Discovery Expedition" found 46 American rifle rounds at or around the position York claimed to have fired from, and later identified 23 ] rounds fired from a ] handgun, where York claimed to have repelled a German bayonet charge of six soldiers with his pistol. The rounds were linked back to York's own firearms, and pieces of German ammunition and weaponry were found where the men York claimed to have captured laid down their arms. While it remained unknown whether or not York had done all he claimed in exact detail, it was determined that his location and reported firearm discharges were truthful, as was a German surrender to York or another group.<ref>{{cite web|last1=Mastriano|first1=Col. Douglas|title=The York Artifacts Gallery|url=http://www.sgtyorkdiscovery.com/The_York_Gallery.php|website=www.sgtyorkdiscovery.com|publisher=Self-published|accessdate=7 July 2015}}</ref> | |||
* ]-winning author ] used York as the model for characters in two of his novels, both explorations of the burden of fame faced by battlefield heroes in peacetime. In '']'' (1943), a Tennessee mountaineer who was awarded the Medal of Honor in World War I returns from combat, becomes a state legislator, and then a bank president. Others exploit his decency and fame for their own selfish ends as the novel explores the real-life experience of an old-fashioned hero in a cynical world. In ''The Cave'' (1959), a similar hero from a similar background has aged and become an invalid. He struggles to maintain his identity as his real self diverges from the robust legend of his youth.<ref>Lee, 1985, 130–2; {{Cite news |access-date=September 12, 2010 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1943/08/22/archives/the-pattern-of-dry-rot-in-dixie-at-heavens-gate-by-robert-penn.html |work=] |title=The Pattern of Dry Rot in Dixie |author=Maxwell Geismar |date=August 22, 1943}}; {{Cite news |access-date=September 12, 2010 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1959/08/24/archives/books-of-the-times.html |work=] |title=Books of The Times |author=Orville Prescott |date=August 24, 1959}}</ref> | |||
* The ] published a digital graphic novel about York in 2018.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.ausa.org/resources/book-program | title=AUSA Book Program| date=December 17, 2015}}</ref> | |||
* ]'s 2005 song "Old Downtown" talks about York in depth.<ref name=LauraCantrell>{{cite web |access-date=October 23, 2007 |url=http://www.matadorrecords.com/laura_cantrell/biography.html |title=Laura Cantrell Biography |date=June 21, 2005 |publisher=Matador Records |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071115223101/http://www.matadorrecords.com/laura_cantrell/biography.html |archive-date=November 15, 2007 |url-status=dead }}</ref> | |||
* Swedish power metal band ]'s 2019 album '']'' contained a track titled "82nd All the Way" ("What Sergeant York achieved that day, echoes from France to the USA, It's 82nd all the way!"), a tribute to York's Medal of Honor action.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.sabaton.net/discography/the-great-war/82nd-all-the-way/|title = 82nd All the Way - Lyrics}}</ref> The song is then covered by another Swedish band, ], before both bands toured together in Europe.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Childers |first=Chad|date=2020-01-03 |title=Amaranthe Salute Tourmates Sabaton With '82nd All the Way' Cover |url=https://loudwire.com/amaranthe-sabaton-82nd-all-the-way-cover/ |access-date=2024-03-01 |website=Loudwire |language=en}}</ref> | |||
* In the ] novel '']'' by ] and ], Alvin York is pitted against the well-known German commando ], who in the book's plot raids York's native Tennessee with the aim of destroying the American ] program in ]. As depicted in the book, York - though no longer young - gives a very good account of himself, rallying local militias to fight the unexpected German attack. | |||
* | |||
==See also== <!-- EDITORS NOTE: This section should primarily contain lists linked to the main article which are directly related to the person. Thank you. --> | |||
==Bibliography== | |||
* ] | |||
*{{Cite book | |||
* ] | |||
|editor= Tom Skeyhill | |||
* ] | |||
|title=Sergeant York: His Own Life Story and War Diary | |||
* ] | |||
|url= https://archive.org/details/hisownlifestorya013634mbp | |||
|location=NY | |||
|publisher=Doubleday, Doran (]) | |||
|year=1928 | |||
}} | |||
== |
==Notes== | ||
{{Reflist}} | |||
{{Portal|Biography|United States Army|World War I}} | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
==References== | ==References== | ||
{{ |
{{Div col|colwidth=30em}} | ||
* {{Cite book |author=Birdwell, Michael E. |title=Celluloid Soldiers: The Warner Bros. Campaign against Nazism |location=New York, N.Y. |publisher=New York University Press |year=1999 |isbn=0-8147-9871-3}} | |||
*{{Cite book | |||
* {{Cite book |author=Capozzola, Christopher |title=Uncle Sam Wants You: World War I and the Making of the Modern American Citizen |location=New York, N.Y. |publisher=Oxford University Press |year=2008 |isbn=978-0-19-533549-1}} | |||
|author=Birdwell, Michael E. | |||
* Lee, David D. (2000) "York, Alvin Cullum" ''American National Biography'' (online 2000) | |||
|title=Celluloid Soldiers: The Warner Bros. Campaign against Nazism | |||
* {{Cite book |author=Lee, David D. |title=Sergeant York: An American Hero |location=Lexington, Ky. |publisher=University Press of Kentucky |year=1985 |isbn=0-8131-1517-5}} | |||
|location=New York | |||
* {{Cite book |last=Mastriano |first=Douglas V. |title=Alvin York: A New Biography of the Hero of the Argonne |publisher=University Press of Kentucky |date=2014 |isbn=9780813145198 |oclc=858901754 |ref={{sfnRef|''Alvin York: A New Biography''}}|title-link=Alvin York: A New Biography of the Hero of the Argonne }} | |||
|publisher=New York University Press | |||
* {{Cite book |author=Perry, John |title=Sgt. York: His Life, Legend & Legacy |publisher=B&H Books |year=1997 |isbn=0-8054-6074-8}} | |||
|year=1999 | |||
* {{Cite book |author=Toplin, Robert Brent |title=History by Hollywood: The Use and Abuse of the American Past |publisher=University of Illinois Press |location=Chicago, Ill. |year=1996 |isbn=0-252-02073-1 |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/historybyhollywo00topl }} | |||
|isbn=0-8147-9871-3 | |||
* {{Cite book |editor=Wheeler, Richard |title=Sergeant York and the Great War |publisher=Mantle Ministries |location=Bulverde, Tex. |year=1998 |isbn=1-889128-46-5}} | |||
}} | |||
* {{cite web |access-date=August 31, 2010 |url=http://volweb.utk.edu/Schools/York/biography.html |title=Alvin C. York |author=Williams, Gladys |publisher=York Institute |archive-date=March 26, 2005 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20050326202450/http://volweb.utk.edu/Schools/York/biography.html}} | |||
*{{Cite book | |||
{{Div col end}} | |||
|author=Capozzola, Christopher | |||
|title=Uncle Sam Wants You: World War I and the Making of the Modern American Citizen | |||
==Further reading== | |||
|location=New York | |||
* {{cite book |url=https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/19117 |title=Sergeant York And His People |author=Cowan, Sam K. |year=1922 |publisher=Funk & Wagnall's Company ] }} | |||
|publisher=Oxford University Press | |||
* Gregory, James Patrick. (2022). ''Unraveling the Myth of Sgt. Alvin York:The Other Sixteen.'' College Station, Texas, Texas A&M University Press. | |||
|year=2008 | |||
* {{cite web |url=http://www.americanheritage.com/people/articles/web/20071008-sgt-alvin-york-world-war-I-wwII-aef-medal-of-honor-tennessee.shtml |title=How Sergeant York Became America's Hero |author=Kelly, Jack |year=2007 |work=American Heritage |access-date=September 20, 2010 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110112113742/http://www.americanheritage.com/people/articles/web/20071008-sgt-alvin-york-world-war-I-wwII-aef-medal-of-honor-tennessee.shtml |archive-date=January 12, 2011 }} | |||
|isbn=978-0-19-533549-1 | |||
* Skeyhill, Thomas. ''Sergeant York: Last of the Long Hunters'' (1930); | |||
}} | |||
*{{cite book|last=Willbanks|first=James H.|date=2011|title=America's Heroes: Medal of Honor Recipients from the Civil War to Afghanistan|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Y-FQ_ueG4AwC&pg=PA215|location=]|publisher=]|isbn=978-1-5988-4394-1}} | |||
*{{Cite book | |||
* ]. ''Forty-Seven Days: How Pershing's Warriors Came of Age to Defeat at the German Army in World War I''. New York: NAL, Caliber, 2016. {{ISBN|978-0-451-46695-2}}. | |||
|author=Lee, David D. | |||
* {{cite book |editor1=York, Alvin C. |editor2=Skeyhill, Tom |date=1928 |title=His Own Life Story and War Diary |location=Garden City, N.Y. |publisher=] |publication-date=1930 |url=https://archive.org/details/hisownlifestorya013634mbp |access-date=July 19, 2015}} | |||
|title=Sergeant York: An American Hero | |||
|location=Lexington, Kentucky | |||
|publisher=University Press of Kentucky | |||
|year=1985 | |||
|isbn=0-8131-1517-5 | |||
}} | |||
*{{Cite book | |||
|author=Perry, John | |||
|title=Sgt. York: His Life, Legend & Legacy | |||
|location= | |||
|publisher=B&H Books | |||
|year=1997 | |||
|isbn=0-8054-6074-8 | |||
}} | |||
*{{Cite book | |||
|author=Toplin, Robert Brent | |||
|title=History by Hollywood: The Use and Abuse of the American Past | |||
|publisher=University of Illinois Press | |||
|location=Chicago | |||
|year=1996 | |||
|isbn=0-252-02073-1 | |||
}} | |||
*{{Cite book | |||
|editor=Wheeler, Richard | |||
|title=Sergeant York and the Great War | |||
|publisher=Mantle Ministries | |||
|location=Bulverde, Texas | |||
|year=1998 | |||
|isbn=1-889128-46-5 | |||
}} | |||
*{{cite web|accessdate=August 31, 2010 | |||
|url=http://volweb.utk.edu/Schools/York/biography.html | |||
|title=Alvin C. York | |||
|author=Williams, Gladys | |||
|publisher=York Institute | |||
|archivedate=March 26, 2005 | |||
|archiveurl=http://web.archive.org/web/20050326202450/http://volweb.utk.edu/Schools/York/biography.html | |||
}} | |||
==External links== | ==External links== | ||
{{ |
{{Library resources box|viaf=51880323|label=Alvin C. York}} | ||
*{{Hall of Valor|134|accessdate=September 3, 2010}} | |||
*{{Worldcat id|id=lccn-n84-48479}} | |||
*{{cite web | |||
|url=http://state.tn.us/environment/parks/SgtYork/ | |||
|title=Sgt. Alvin C. York State Historic Park in Tennessee | |||
|accessdate=August 31, 2010 | |||
| archiveurl= http://web.archive.org/web/20100811061938/http://www.state.tn.us/environment/parks/SgtYork/| archivedate= 11 August 2010 <!--DASHBot-->| deadurl= no}} | |||
*{{cite web | |||
|url=http://www.americanheritage.com/people/articles/web/20071008-sgt-alvin-york-world-war-I-wwII-aef-medal-of-honor-tennessee.shtml | |||
|title=How Sergeant York Became America's Hero | |||
|author=Jack Kelly | |||
|year=2007 | |||
|work=American Heritage | |||
|accessdate=September 20, 2010 | |||
}} | |||
*{{cite web | |||
|url=http://www.sgtyorkdiscovery.com/ | |||
|title=Mastriano's Sergeant York Discovery Expedition and historic trail | |||
|accessdate=August 31, 2010 | |||
| archiveurl= http://web.archive.org/web/20100811123706/http://www.sgtyorkdiscovery.com/| archivedate= 11 August 2010 <!--DASHBot-->| deadurl= no}} | |||
*{{cite web | |||
|url=http://www.sgtyork.org | |||
|title=Sergeant York Patriotic Foundation | |||
|accessdate= August 31, 2010 | |||
| archiveurl= http://web.archive.org/web/20100824155220/http://www.sgtyork.org/| archivedate= 24 August 2010 <!--DASHBot-->| deadurl= no}} | |||
*{{cite web | |||
|url=http://www.sergeantyorkproject.com/ | |||
|title=Dr Nolan's Sergeant York Project and battlefield guide | |||
|accessdate=August 31, 2010 | |||
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*{{cite web | |||
|url=http://www.archives.gov/atlanta/wwi-draft/york.html | |||
|title=World War I Selective Service Registration Card: Alvin York | |||
|work=Records of the Selective Service System (World War I) | |||
|publisher= U.S. National Archives | |||
|accessdate= August 31, 2010 | |||
}} | |||
*{{cite web | |||
|url=http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/19117 | |||
|title=Sergeant York And His People | |||
|author=Cowan, Sam K. | |||
|year=1922 | |||
|publisher=Funk & Wagnall's Company ] | |||
|accessdate= August 31, 2010 | |||
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* {{Find a Grave|1135|accessdate=November 7, 2013}} | |||
===Official=== | |||
* {{Official website}} | |||
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=== General information=== | |||
* {{Hall of Valor|134|name=Alvin Cullum York}} | |||
* at Medal of Honor Recipients Portrayed On Film (lylefrancispadilla.com) | |||
* {{IMDb name|id=948663|name=Alvin C. York}} | |||
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* {{Internet Archive author|sname=Alvin C. York|birth=1887|death=1964|sopt=t}} | |||
{{Subject bar|portal1=Biography|portal2=Film |portal3=Literature|portal4=United States|commons=y|commons-search=Category:Alvin York|q=y|q-search=Alvin C. York}} | |||
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{{Persondata | |||
| NAME = York, Alvin C. | |||
| ALTERNATIVE NAMES = | |||
| SHORT DESCRIPTION = United States Army Medal of Honor recipient | |||
| DATE OF BIRTH = December 13, 1887 | |||
| PLACE OF BIRTH = Pall Mall, Tennessee, USA | |||
| DATE OF DEATH = September 2, 1964 | |||
| PLACE OF DEATH = Nashville, Tennessee, USA | |||
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Latest revision as of 18:39, 3 January 2025
American soldier (1887–1964) "Sergeant York" redirects here. For other uses, see Sergeant York (disambiguation).
Alvin York | |
---|---|
York in uniform, 1919, wearing the Medal of Honor and French Croix de Guerre with Palm | |
Birth name | Alvin Cullum York |
Nickname(s) | "Sergeant York" |
Born | (1887-12-13)December 13, 1887 Fentress County, Tennessee, U.S. |
Died | September 2, 1964(1964-09-02) (aged 76) Nashville, Tennessee, U.S. |
Buried | Wolf River Cemetery, Pall Mall, Tennessee 36°32′50.2″N 84°57′14.8″W / 36.547278°N 84.954111°W / 36.547278; -84.954111 |
Allegiance | United States |
Service | |
Years of service |
|
Rank | |
Service number | 1910421 |
Unit |
|
Commands | 7th Regiment, Tennessee State Guard (1941–1947) |
Battles / wars |
|
Awards |
|
Spouse(s) |
Gracie Loretta Williams
(m. 1919) |
Children | 10 |
Other work | Superintendent of the Cumberland Mountain State Park |
Website | sgtyork |
Alvin Cullum York (December 13, 1887 – September 2, 1964), also known by his rank as Sergeant York, was an American soldier who was one of the most decorated United States Army soldiers of World War I. He received the Medal of Honor for leading an attack on a German machine gun nest, gathering 35 machine guns, killing at least 25 enemy soldiers and capturing 132 prisoners. York's Medal of Honor action occurred during the United States-led portion of the Meuse–Argonne offensive in France, which was intended to breach the Hindenburg line and force the Germans to surrender. He earned decorations from several allied countries during the war, including France, Italy and Montenegro.
York was born in rural Tennessee, in what is now the community of Pall Mall in Fentress County. His parents farmed, and his father also worked as a blacksmith. The eleven York children had minimal schooling because they helped provide for the family, including hunting, fishing, and working as laborers. After the death of his father, York assisted in caring for his younger siblings and found work as a blacksmith. Despite being a regular churchgoer, York also drank heavily and was prone to fistfights. After a 1914 conversion experience, he vowed to improve and became even more devoted to the Church of Christ in Christian Union. York was drafted during World War I; he initially claimed conscientious objector status on the grounds that his religious denomination forbade violence. Persuaded that his religion was not incompatible with military service, York joined the 82nd Division as an infantry private and went to France in 1918.
In October 1918, Private First Class (Acting Corporal) York was one of a group of seventeen soldiers assigned to infiltrate German lines and silence a machine gun position. After the American patrol had captured a large group of enemy soldiers, German small arms fire killed six Americans and wounded three. Several of the Americans returned fire while others guarded the prisoners. York and the other Americans attacked the machine gun position, killing several German soldiers. The German officer responsible for the machine gun position had emptied his pistol while firing at York but failed to hit him. This officer then offered to surrender and York accepted. York and his men marched back to their unit's command post with more than 130 prisoners. York was later promoted to sergeant and was awarded the Distinguished Service Cross. An investigation resulted in the upgrading of the award to the Medal of Honor. York's feat made him a national hero and international celebrity among allied nations.
After Armistice Day, a group of Tennessee businessmen purchased a farm for York, his new wife, and their growing family. He later formed a charitable foundation to improve educational opportunities for children in rural Tennessee. In the 1930s and 1940s, York worked as a project superintendent for the Civilian Conservation Corps and managed construction of the Byrd Lake reservoir at Cumberland Mountain State Park, after which he served for several years as park superintendent. A 1941 film about his World War I exploits, Sergeant York, was that year's highest-grossing film; Gary Cooper won the Academy Award for Best Actor for his portrayal of York, and the film was credited with enhancing American morale as the U.S. mobilized for action in World War II. In his later years, York was confined to bed by health problems. He died in Nashville, Tennessee, in 1964 and was buried at Wolf River Cemetery in his hometown of Pall Mall, Tennessee.
Early life
Alvin Cullum York was born in a two-room log cabin in Fentress County, Tennessee. He was the third child born to William Uriah York and Mary Elizabeth (Brooks) York. William Uriah York was born in Jamestown, Tennessee, to Uriah York and Eliza Jane Livingston, who had moved to Tennessee from Buncombe County, North Carolina. Mary Elizabeth York was born in Pall Mall to William Brooks, who took his mother's maiden name as an alias of William H. Harrington after deserting from Company A of the 11th Michigan Cavalry Regiment during the American Civil War, and Nancy Pyle, and was the great-granddaughter of Conrad "Coonrod" Pyle, an English settler who settled Pall Mall, Tennessee.
William York and Mary Brooks married on December 25, 1881, and had eleven children: Henry Singleton, Joseph Marion, Alvin Cullum, Samuel John, Albert, Hattie, George Alexander, James Preston, Lillian Mae, Robert Daniel, and Lucy Erma. The York family is mainly of English ancestry, with Scots-Irish ancestry as well. The family resided in the Indian Creek area of Fentress County. The family was impoverished, with William York working as a blacksmith to supplement the family's income. The men of the York family farmed and harvested their own food, while the mother made all of the family's clothing. The York sons attended school for only nine months and withdrew from education because William York needed them to help work on the family farm, hunt, and fish to help feed the family. When William York died in November 1911, his son Alvin helped his mother raise his younger siblings. Alvin was the oldest sibling still residing in the county, since his two older brothers had married and relocated. To supplement the family's income, York worked in Harriman, Tennessee, first in railroad construction and then as a logger. By all accounts, he was a skilled laborer who was devoted to the welfare of his family, and a crack shot. York was also a violent alcoholic prone to fighting in saloons. In one of the saloon fights his best friend was killed. His mother, a member of a pacifist Protestant denomination, tried to persuade York to change his ways.
World War I
Despite his history of drinking and fighting, York attended church regularly and often led the hymn singing. A revival meeting at the end of 1914 led him to a conversion experience on January 1, 1915. His congregation was the Church of Christ in Christian Union, a Protestant denomination that shunned secular politics and disputes between Christian denominations. This church had no specific doctrine of pacifism but it had been formed in reaction to the Methodist Episcopal Church, South's support of slavery, including armed conflict during the American Civil War, and it opposed all forms of violence. In a lecture later in life, York reported his reaction to the outbreak of World War I: "I was worried clean through. I didn't want to go and kill. I believed in my Bible."
On June 5, 1917, at the age of 29, Alvin York registered for the draft as all men between 21 and 30 years of age were required to do as a result of the Selective Service Act. When he registered for the draft, he answered the question "Do you claim exemption from draft (specify grounds)?" by writing "Yes. Don't Want To Fight." When his initial claim for conscientious objector status was denied, he appealed. During World War I, conscientious objector status did not exempt the objector from military duty. Such individuals could still be drafted and were given assignments that did not conflict with their anti-war principles. In November 1917, while York's application was considered, he was drafted and began his army service at Camp Gordon, Georgia.
From the day he registered for the draft until he returned from the war on May 29, 1919, York kept a diary of his activities. In his diary, York wrote that he refused to sign documents provided by his pastor seeking a discharge from the Army on religious grounds and similar documents provided by his mother asserting a claim of exemption as the sole support of his mother and siblings. Despite his initial, signed request for an exemption, he later disclaimed ever having been a conscientious objector.
Entry into service
York served in Company G, 328th Infantry, 82nd Division. Deeply troubled by the conflict between his pacifism and his training for war, he spoke at length with his company commander, Captain Edward Courtney Bullock Danforth Jr. (1894–1974) of Augusta, Georgia, and his battalion commander, Major G. Edward Buxton of Providence, Rhode Island, a devout Christian himself. Biblical passages about violence ("He that hath no sword, let him sell his cloak and buy one." "Render unto Caesar…" "…if my kingdom were of this world, then would my servants fight.") cited by Danforth persuaded York to reconsider the morality of his participation in the war. Granted a 10-day leave to visit home, he returned as committed to his new mission as he had been to pacifism, convinced that God meant him to fight and would keep him safe. He served with his division in the St. Mihiel Offensive.
Medal of Honor action
In an October 8, 1918, attack that occurred during the Meuse–Argonne offensive, York's battalion aimed to capture German positions near Hill 223 (49°17′08″N 4°57′09″E / 49.28558°N 4.95242°E / 49.28558; 4.95242) along the Decauville railroad north of Chatel-Chéhéry, France. His actions that day earned him the Medal of Honor. He later recalled:
The Germans got us, and they got us right smart. They just stopped us dead in our tracks. Their machine guns were up there on the heights overlooking us and well hidden, and we couldn't tell for certain where the terrible heavy fire was coming from… And I'm telling you they were shooting straight. Our boys just went down like the long grass before the mowing machine at home. Our attack just faded out… And there we were, lying down, about halfway across and those German machine guns and big shells getting us hard.
Under the command of Cpl. (Acting Sergeant) Bernard Early, four non-commissioned officers, including Acting Corporal York, and thirteen privates were ordered to infiltrate the German lines to take out the machine guns. The group worked their way behind the Germans and overran the headquarters of a German unit, capturing a large group of German soldiers who were preparing a counter-attack against the U.S. troops. Early's men were contending with the prisoners when German machine gun fire suddenly peppered the area, killing six Americans and wounding three others. Several of the Americans returned fire while others guarded the prisoners. From his advantageous position, York fought the Germans. York recalled:
And those machine guns were spitting fire and cutting down the undergrowth all around me something awful. And the Germans were yelling orders. You never heard such a racket in all of your life. I didn't have time to dodge behind a tree or dive into the brush… As soon as the machine guns opened fire on me, I began to exchange shots with them. There were over thirty of them in continuous action, and all I could do was touch the Germans off just as fast as I could. I was sharp shooting… All the time I kept yelling at them to come down. I didn't want to kill any more than I had to. But it was they or I. And I was giving them the best I had.
During the assault, a German officer led several Germans to the scene of the fighting and ran into York who shot several of them with his pistol.
Imperial German Army First Lieutenant Paul Jürgen Vollmer, commanding the 120th Reserve Infantry Regiment's 1st Battalion, emptied his pistol trying to kill York while he was contending with the machine guns. Failing to injure York, and seeing his mounting losses, he offered in English to surrender the unit to York who accepted. At the end of the engagement, York and his seven men marched their German prisoners back to the American lines. Upon returning to his unit, York reported to his brigade commander, Brigadier General Julian Robert Lindsey, who remarked, "Well York, I hear you have captured the whole German army." York replied, "No sir. I got only 132."
York's actions silenced the German machine guns and were responsible for enabling the 328th Infantry to renew its attack to capture the Decauville Railroad.
Post-battle
York was promptly promoted to sergeant and received the Distinguished Service Cross. A few months later, an investigation by York's chain of command resulted in an upgrade of his Distinguished Service Cross to the Medal of Honor, which was presented by the commanding general of the American Expeditionary Forces, General John J. Pershing. The French Republic awarded him the Croix de Guerre, Medaille Militaire and Legion of Honor.
In addition to his French medals, Italy awarded York the Croce al Merito di Guerra and Montenegro decorated him with its War Medal. He eventually received nearly 50 decorations. York's Medal of Honor citation reads:
After his platoon suffered heavy casualties and 3 other noncommissioned officers had become casualties, Cpl. York assumed command. Fearlessly leading seven men, he charged with great daring a machine gun nest which was pouring deadly and incessant fire upon his platoon. In this heroic feat the machine gun nest was taken, together with 4 officers and 128 men and several guns.
In attempting to explain his actions during the 1919 investigation that resulted in the Medal of Honor, York told General Lindsey, "A higher power than man guided and watched over me and told me what to do." Lindsey replied, "York, you are right."
Biographer David D. Lee (2000) wrote:
Initially York's exploit attracted little public attention, but on 26 April 1919, Saturday Evening Post correspondent George Pattullo published "The Second Elder Gives Battle," an account of the firefight that made York a national hero overnight. York's explanation that God had been with him during the fight meshed neatly with the popular attitude that American involvement in the war was truly a holy crusade, and he returned to the United States in the spring of 1919 amid a tumultuous public welcome and a flood of business offers from people eager to capitalize on the soldier's reputation.
Homecoming and fame
Before leaving France, York was his division's noncommissioned officer delegate to the caucus which created the American Legion, of which York was a charter member.
York's heroism went unnoticed in the United States press, even in Tennessee, until the publication of the April 26, 1919, issue of the Saturday Evening Post, which had a circulation in excess of 2 million. In an article titled "The Second Elder Gives Battle", journalist George Pattullo, who had learned of York's story while touring battlefields earlier in the year, laid out the themes that have dominated York's story ever since: the mountaineer, his religious faith and skill with firearms, patriotic, plainspoken and unsophisticated, an uneducated man who "seems to do everything correctly by intuition." In response, the Tennessee Society, a group of Tennesseans living in New York City, arranged celebrations to greet York upon his return to the United States, including a 5-day furlough to allow for visits to New York City and Washington, D.C. York arrived in Hoboken, New Jersey, on May 22, stayed at the Waldorf Astoria, and attended a formal banquet in his honor. He toured the subway system in a special car before continuing to Washington, where the House of Representatives gave him a standing ovation and he met Secretary of War Newton D. Baker and the President's secretary Joe Tumulty, as President Wilson was still in Paris.
York proceeded to Fort Oglethorpe, Georgia, where he was discharged from the service, and then to Tennessee for more celebrations. He had been home for barely a week when, on June 7, 1919, York and Gracie Loretta Williams were married by Tennessee Governor Albert H. Roberts in Pall Mall. More celebrations followed the wedding, including a week-long trip to Nashville where York accepted a special medal awarded by the state.
York refused many offers to profit from his fame, including thousands of dollars offered for appearances, product endorsements, newspaper articles, and movie rights to his life story. Instead, he lent his name to various charitable and civic causes. To support economic development, he campaigned for the Tennessee government to build a road to service his native region, succeeding when a highway through the mountains was completed in the mid-1920s and named Alvin C. York Highway. The Nashville Rotary organized the purchase, by public subscription, of a 400-acre (1.6 km) farm, the one gift that York accepted. However, it was not the fully equipped farm he was promised, requiring York to borrow money to stock it. He subsequently lost money in the farming depression that followed the war. Then the Rotary was unable to continue the installment payments on the property, leaving York to pay them himself. In 1921, he had no option but to seek public help, resulting in an extended discussion of his finances in the press, some of it sharply critical. Debt in itself was a trial: "I could get used to most any kind of hardship, but I'm not fitted for the hardship of owing money." Only an appeal to Rotary Clubs nationwide and an account of York's plight in the New York World brought in the required contributions by Christmas 1921.
After the war
In the 1920s, York formed the Alvin C. York Foundation with the mission of increasing educational opportunities in his region of Tennessee. Board members included the area's congressman, Cordell Hull, who later became Secretary of State under President Franklin D. Roosevelt, Secretary of the Treasury William G. McAdoo, who was President Wilson's son-in-law, and Tennessee Governor Albert Roberts. Plans called for a non-sectarian institution providing vocational training to be called the York Agricultural Institute. York concentrated on fund-raising, though he disappointed audiences who wanted to hear about the Argonne when he instead explained that "I occupied one space in a fifty mile front. I saw so little it hardly seems worthwhile discussing it. I'm trying to forget the war in the interest of the mountain boys and girls that I grew up among." He fought first to win financial support from the state and county, then battled local leaders about the school's location. Refusing to compromise, he resigned and developed plans for a rival York Industrial School. After a series of lawsuits he gained control of the original institution and was its president when it opened in December 1929. As the Great Depression deepened, the state government failed to provide promised funds, and York mortgaged his farm to fund bus transportation for students. Even after he was ousted as president in 1936 by political and bureaucratic rivals, he continued to donate money.
In 1935, York, sensing the end of his time with the institute, began to work as a project superintendent with the Civilian Conservation Corps overseeing the creation of Cumberland Mountain State Park's Byrd Lake, one of the largest masonry projects the program ever undertook. York served as the park's superintendent until 1940. In the second half of 1930s and early 1940s, in the run-up to the America's entry in World War II, York was a forceful and public advocate for interventionism, calling for U.S. involvement in the war against Germany, Italy and Japan. At the time, U.S. public opinion was overwhelmingly in favor of the isolationist and non-interventionist approach, and York's unpopular views led to accusations that he was engaged in war-mongering. York became a relatively rare high-profile public voice for intervention. In a speech at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in May 1941, York said: "We must fight again! The time is not now ripe, nor will it ever be, to compromise with Hitler, or the things he stands for."
York's speeches attracted the attention of President Roosevelt, who frequently quoted York, particularly a passage from York's Tomb of the Unknown Soldier speech:
By our victory in the last war, we won a lease on liberty, not a deed to it. Now after 23 years, Adolf Hitler tells us that lease is expiring, and after the manner of all leases, we have the privilege of renewing it, or letting it go by default ... . We are standing at the crossroads of history. The important capitals of the world in a few years will either be Berlin and Moscow, or Washington and London. I, for one, prefer Congress and Parliament to Hitler's Reichstag and Stalin's Kremlin. And because we were for a time, side by side, I know this Unknown Soldier does too. We owe it to him to renew that lease of liberty he helped us to get.
During World War II, York attempted to re-enlist in the Army. However, at fifty-four years of age, overweight, near-diabetic, and with evidence of arthritis, he was denied enlistment as a combat soldier. Instead, he was commissioned as a major in the Army Signal Corps and he toured training camps and participated in bond drives in support of the war effort, usually paying his own travel expenses. Gen. Matthew Ridgway later recalled that York "created in the minds of farm boys and clerks ... the conviction that an aggressive soldier, well-trained and well-armed, can fight his way out of any situation." He also raised funds for war-related charities, including the Red Cross. He served on his county draft board and, when literacy requirements forced the rejection of large numbers of Fentress County men, he offered to lead a battalion of illiterates himself, saying they were "crack shots". Although York served during the war as a Signal Corps major and as a colonel with the 7th Regiment of the Tennessee State Guard, newspapers continued to refer to him as "Sergeant York".
Legacy and film story
Biographer David Lee explored the reason Americans responded so favorably to his story:
York's Appalachian heritage was central to his popularity because the media portrayed him as the archetypical mountain man. At a time of domestic upheaval and international uncertainty, York's pioneer-like skill with a rifle, his homespun manner, and his fundamentalist piety endeared him to millions of Americans as a "contemporary ancestor" fresh from the backwoods of the southern mountains. As such, he seemed to affirm that the traditional virtues of the agrarian United States still had meaning in the new era. York represented not what Americans were but what they wanted to think they were. He lived in one of the most rural parts of the country when a majority of Americans lived in cities; he rejected riches when the tenor of the nation was crassly commercial; he was pious when secularism was on the rise. For millions of people, York was the incarnation of their romanticized understanding of the nation's past when men and women supposedly lived plainer, sterner, and more virtuous lives. Ironically, while York endured as a symbol of an older America, he spent most of his adult life working to bring roads, schools, and industrial development to the mountains, changes that were destroying the society he had come to represent.
York cooperated with journalists in telling his life story twice in the 1920s. He allowed Nashville-born freelance journalist Sam Cowan to see his diary and submitted to interviews. The resulting 1922 biography focused on York's Appalachian background, describing his upbringing among the "purest Anglo-Saxons to be found today", emphasizing popular stereotypes without bringing the man to life. A few years later, York contacted a publisher about an edition of his war diary, but the publisher wanted additional material to flesh out the story. Then Tom Skeyhill, an Australian-born veteran of the Gallipoli campaign, visited York in Tennessee and the two became friends. On York's behalf, Skeyhill wrote an "autobiography" in the first person and was credited as the editor of Sergeant York: His Own Life Story and War Diary. With a preface by Newton D. Baker, Secretary of War in World War I, it presented a one-dimensional York supplemented with tales of life in the Tennessee mountains. Reviews noted that York only promoted his life story in the interest of funding educational programs: "Perhaps York's bearing after his famous exploit in the Argonne best reveals his native greatness. ... He will not exploit himself except for his own people. All of which gives his book an appeal beyond its contents."
The mountaineer persona Cowan and Skeyhill promoted reflected York's own beliefs. In a speech at the 1939 New York World's Fair, he said:
We, the descendants of the pioneer long hunters of the mountains, have been called Scotch-Irish and pure Anglo-Saxon, and that is complimentary, I reckon. But we want the world to know that we are Americans. The spiritual environment and our religious life in the mountains have made our spirit wholly American, and that true pioneer American spirit still exists in the Tennessee mountains. Even today, I want you all to know, with all the clamor of the world and its evil attractions, you still find in the little humble log cabins in the Tennessee mountains that old-fashioned family altar of prayer—the same that they used to have in grandma's and grandpa's day—which is the true spirit of the long hunters. We in the Tennessee mountains are not transplanted Europeans; every fiber in our body and every emotion in our hearts is American.
For many years, York employed a secretary, Arthur S. Bushing, who wrote the lectures and speeches York delivered. Bushing prepared York's correspondence as well. Like the works of Cowan and Skeyhill, words commonly ascribed to York, though doubtless representing his thinking, were often composed by professional writers. York had refused several times to authorize a film version of his life story. Finally, in 1940, as York was looking to finance an interdenominational Bible school, he yielded to a persistent Hollywood producer and negotiated the contract himself. In 1941 the movie Sergeant York, directed by Howard Hawks with Gary Cooper in the title role, told about his life and Medal of Honor action. The screenplay included much fictitious material, though it was based on York's Diary. The marketing of the film included a visit by York to the White House, where President Franklin D. Roosevelt praised the film. Some of the response to the film divided along political lines, with advocates of preparedness and aid to Great Britain enthusiastic ("Hollywood's first solid contribution to the national defense", said Time) and isolationists calling it "propaganda" for the administration. It received 11 Oscar nominations and won two, including the Academy Award for Best Actor for Cooper. It was the highest-grossing picture of 1941. York's earnings from the film, about $150,000 in the first two years as well as later royalties, resulted in a decade-long battle with the Internal Revenue Service. York eventually built part of his planned Bible school, which hosted 100 students until the late 1950s.
Political views
York originally believed in the morality of America's intervention in World War I. By the mid-1930s, he looked back more critically: "I can't see that we did any good. There's as much trouble now as there was when we were over there. I think the slogan 'A war to end war' is all wrong." He fully endorsed American preparedness, but showed sympathy for isolationism by saying that he would fight only if war came to America.
A consistent Democrat – "I'm a Democrat first, last, and all the time", he said – in January 1941 he praised President Roosevelt's support for Great Britain, and in an address at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier on Memorial Day of that year, he attacked isolationists and said that veterans understood that "liberty and freedom are so very precious that you do not fight and win them once and stop." They are "prizes awarded only to those peoples who fight to win them and then keep fighting eternally to hold them!" At times he was blunt: "I think any man who talks against the interests of his own country ought to be arrested and put in jail, not excepting senators and colonels." Everyone knew that the colonel in question was Charles Lindbergh.
In the late 1940s he called for toughness in dealing with the Soviet Union and did not hesitate to recommend using the atomic bomb in a first strike, stating, "If they can't find anyone else to push the button, I will." He questioned the failure of United Nations forces to use the atomic bomb in Korea. In the 1960s he criticized Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara's plans to reduce the ranks of the National Guard and reserves, saying, "Nothing would please Khrushchev better."
Personal life and death
York and his wife Gracie had ten children, seven sons and three daughters, most named after American historical figures: an infant son (1920, died at 4 days), Alvin Cullum Jr. (1921–1983), George Edward Buxton (1923–2018), Woodrow Wilson (1925–1998), Samuel Huston (1928–1929), Andrew Jackson (1930–2022), Betsy Ross (born 1933), Mary Alice (1935–1991), Thomas Jefferson (1938–1972), and an infant daughter (1940, died the same day).
York had health problems throughout his life. He had gallbladder surgery in the late 1920s and had pneumonia in 1942. Described in 1919 as a "red-haired giant with the ruddy complexion of the outdoors" and "standing more than 6 feet ... and tipping the scale at more than 200 pounds", by 1945 he weighed 250 pounds and in 1948 he had a stroke. More strokes and another case of pneumonia followed, and he was confined to bed from 1954, further impaired by failing eyesight. He was hospitalized several times during his last two years. York died at the Veterans Hospital in Nashville, Tennessee, on September 2, 1964, of a cerebral hemorrhage at age 76. After a funeral service in his Jamestown church, with Gen. Matthew Ridgway representing President Lyndon Johnson, York was buried at the Wolf River Cemetery in Pall Mall. His funeral sermon was delivered by Richard G. Humble, General Superintendent of the Churches of Christ in Christian Union. Humble also preached Mrs. York's funeral sermon in 1984.
Awards
York was the recipient of the following awards:
Legacy
Controversy
Beginning soon after York's return to the United States at the end of the war, doubt and controversy periodically surfaced over whether the events detailed in his Medal of Honor documents had taken place as officially described, and whether other soldiers in York's unit should also have been recognized for their heroism. Otis Merrithew (William Cutting) and Bernard Early were among those who argued against the official version. Of the 17 American soldiers who were involved in York's Medal of Honor action, six were killed. York received the Medal of Honor, and over the years, three of the others who lived through that day's fighting also received valor awards, including the Distinguished Service Cross for Early in 1929, and the Silver Star for Merrithew in 1965. Considerable red tape hampered the other men's attempts to get recognized as well as conflicts of interest by those reviewing their files. Later in life Gen. Lindsey would have a change of heart and support the other men's claims for recognition, which were again blocked by military officials citing a 1929 cutoff date for recommendation. Historian James P. Gregory's 2023 book Unraveling the Myth of Sgt. Alvin York and related academic lectures has brought about new scrutiny on the subject and renewed calls for the men involved other than York to be honored.
York's record became the subject of controversy in Germany in 1928, after a Swedish journal published an article about York's exploits which some Germans felt impugned the honor of the German armed forces. In 1929, the Reichsarchiv investigated the claims made about York's battlefield exploits by reviewing military records and interviewing surviving German officers of the 2nd Württemberg Landwehr Division who had fought against York. The German report, which was not published at the time, concluded that "York was a brave and fearless soldier" and that the official U.S. Army report on York's actions "corresponds with the facts," but also found that some of the details of York's first report from the battlefield had been "grossly exaggerated." In particular, the German investigators found that York's unit had likely captured fewer than 132 prisoners and 35 machine guns, as Germans records showed the loss of only 79 prisoners in the sector that day, and German officers reported there were less than 35 machine guns present. The German investigators shared their report with the U.S. Army, which did not take any action as the report confirmed York's role in valorously leading assaults on German positions and did not contradict any of the specific details of York's Medal of Honor citation.
Discovery of "lost" battlefield
In October 2006, United States Army Colonel Douglas Mastriano, head of the Sergeant York Discovery Expedition (SYDE), conducted research to locate the York battle site. Among the Mastriano expedition's finds were 46 American rifle rounds. In addition, his research located pieces of German ammunition and weaponry. Without the official support of the French government, Mastriano excavated the site and bulldozed the area in order to build two monuments and a historic trail. Mastriano's research has been strongly disputed by other historians who point out numerous errors in the history dissertation and subsequent book that he published on York.
Another team led by Dr. Tom Nolan, head of the Sergeant York Project and a geographer at the R.O. Fullerton Laboratory for Spatial Technology at Middle Tennessee State University, placed the site 600 meters south of the location identified by Mastriano. Nolan's research relied on contemporary army graves registration Forms, the 82nd Division's wartime history, and maps drawn by Colonel G. Edward Buxton Jr. and Captain Edward C. B. Danforth, both of whom walked the ground with York during the Medal of Honor investigation.
Monuments and memorials
Many places and monuments throughout the world have been named in honor of York:
- The Sgt. Alvin C. York State Historic Park preserves his farm in Pall Mall.
- The Alvin C. York Bridge across the Tennessee River between Perry County, Tennessee and Decatur County, Tennessee.
- Several government buildings have been named for York, including the Alvin C. York Veterans Hospital located in Murfreesboro.
- The Alvin C. York Institute was founded in 1926 as an agricultural high school by York and residents of Fentress County and continues to serve as Jamestown's high school.
- York Avenue on the Upper East Side of Manhattan, New York City was named for York in 1928.
- A statue of York by sculptor Felix de Weldon was placed on the grounds of the Tennessee State Capitol in 1968.
- In 2007, the 82nd Airborne Division's movie theater at Fort Bragg, North Carolina, was named York Theater.
York is also the namesake for awards and military assets:
- In the 1980s, the United States Army named its DIVAD weapon system "Sergeant York"; the project was cancelled because of technical problems and cost overruns.
- In 1993, York was among 35 Medal of Honor recipients whose portraits were painted and biographies included in a boxed set of "Congressional Medal of Honor Trading Cards," issued by Eclipse Enterprises under license from the Medal of Honor Society. The text is by Kent DeLong, the paintings by Tom Simonton, and the set edited by Catherine Yronwode.
- On May 5, 2000, the United States Postal Service issued the "Distinguished Soldiers" stamps, one of which honored York.
- The riderless horse in the 2004 funeral procession of President Ronald Reagan was named Sergeant York.
- The traveling American football trophy between UT Martin, Austin Peay, Tennessee State, and Tennessee Tech is called the Alvin C. York trophy.
- The U.S. Army ROTC's Sergeant York Award is presented to cadets who excel in the program and devote additional time and effort to maintaining and expanding it.
- A memorial to graduates of the East Tennessee State University ROTC program who have given their lives for their country carries a quotation from York.
- The Third Regiment of the Tennessee State Guard is named for York.
Appearances and references in literature:
- Pulitzer Prize-winning author Robert Penn Warren used York as the model for characters in two of his novels, both explorations of the burden of fame faced by battlefield heroes in peacetime. In At Heaven's Gate (1943), a Tennessee mountaineer who was awarded the Medal of Honor in World War I returns from combat, becomes a state legislator, and then a bank president. Others exploit his decency and fame for their own selfish ends as the novel explores the real-life experience of an old-fashioned hero in a cynical world. In The Cave (1959), a similar hero from a similar background has aged and become an invalid. He struggles to maintain his identity as his real self diverges from the robust legend of his youth.
- The Association of the United States Army published a digital graphic novel about York in 2018.
- Laura Cantrell's 2005 song "Old Downtown" talks about York in depth.
- Swedish power metal band Sabaton's 2019 album The Great War contained a track titled "82nd All the Way" ("What Sergeant York achieved that day, echoes from France to the USA, It's 82nd all the way!"), a tribute to York's Medal of Honor action. The song is then covered by another Swedish band, Amaranthe, before both bands toured together in Europe.
- In the alternate history novel 1945 by Newt Gingrich and William R. Forstchen, Alvin York is pitted against the well-known German commando Otto Skorzeny, who in the book's plot raids York's native Tennessee with the aim of destroying the American atomic bomb program in Oak Ridge National Laboratory. As depicted in the book, York - though no longer young - gives a very good account of himself, rallying local militias to fight the unexpected German attack.
See also
- List of Medal of Honor recipients for World War I
- List of members of the American Legion
- List of people from Tennessee
- List of people on stamps of the United States
Notes
- Owens, Ron (2004). Medal of Honor: Historical Facts & Figures. Turner Publishing Company. ISBN 9781563119958. Archived from the original on October 14, 2019. Retrieved October 14, 2019.
Exclusive of the five Marines who earned double awards of the Medal, Lt. Samuel Parker was the most highly decorated soldier of WWI.
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- ^ Legends and Traditions of the Great War: Sergeant Alvin York by Dr. Michael Birdwell.
- ^ Laughter & Lawter Genealogy: Gladys Williams, "Alvin C. York", accessed September 20, 2010 Archived October 21, 2006, at the Wayback Machine
- Sergeant York and His People By Sam Kinkade Cowan page 85
- York Indian Heritage at ancestry.com
- Alvin York: A New Biography, pp. 16–17.
- Lee, 1985, 9–13
- Lee, 1985, 15–6
- Capozzola, 2008, p. 67
- Capozzola, 2008, p. 68, includes a photograph of York's Registration Card from the National Archives
- "Claim of Appeal for Conscientious Objector Status by Alvin Cullum York"
- ^ Capozzola, 2008, pp. 67–9
- Sergeant York Patriotic Foundation: "Sgt. Alvin C. York's Diary: November 17, 1917" Archived November 27, 2010, at the Wayback Machine, accessed September 21, 2010
- Lee, 1985, 18–20
- The events of the day are recounted in brief in Official History of the 82nd Division: American Expeditionary Forces, "All American" Division, 1917–1919 (Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill Company, 1919), 60–62; available online, accessed September 20, 2010
- York 1930.
- Lee, 1985, 25–6
- Sergeant York Patriotic Foundation: "Sgt. Alvin C. York's Diary: October 8, 1918" Archived November 27, 2010, at the Wayback Machine, accessed September 21, 2010
- Buxton, G. Edward (1919). Official History of 82nd Division American Expeditionary Forces. The Bobbs-Merrill Company. pp. 58–62.
- Lee, 1985, 32–6
- Mastriano, Douglas, Colonel, U.S. Army Brave Hearts under Red Skiesand Douglas Mastriano: "A Day for Heroes" Archived December 21, 2010, at the Wayback Machine, accessed September 21, 2010
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- Mastriano, Douglas. "Trust Amidst Doubt and Adversity". The Sergeant York Discovery Expedition. Archived from the original on January 6, 2013. Retrieved January 27, 2013.
- ^ Lee, American National Biography (2000)
- Perry, John (2010). Sergeant York. Nashville, TN: Thomas Nelson, Inc. p. 58. ISBN 978-1-59555-025-5.
- "Be It Ever So Humble". Underwood & Underwood. June 7, 1919. Retrieved December 20, 2014.
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- Lee, 185, 60–62
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- Lee, 1985, 63–4, 74–5
- Lee, 1985, 64, 71–4, quote 73; "Hero York Harassed, Can't Make Farm Pay". New York Times. July 21, 1921. Retrieved September 13, 2010.
- Lee, 1985, 76
- Lee, 1985, 75–90. On the political context of the disputes about school funding, see David D. Lee, Tennessee in Turmoil: Politics in the Volunteer State, 1920–1932 (Memphis State University Press, 1979) ISBN 0-87870-048-X
- "Education: Fentress Feud, May 25, 1936". Time. May 25, 1936. Archived from the original on December 15, 2008. Retrieved September 20, 2010.
- Cumberland Mountain State Park: A Civilian Conservation Corps Legacy on YouTube
- Van West, Carroll (2001). Tennessee's New Deal Landscape: A Guidebook. Knoxville, TN: University of Tennessee Press. p. 166. ISBN 978-1-57233-107-5.
- ^ Mastriano, pp. 176–177.
- ^ David E. Lee, Sergeant York: An American Hero (Lexington, 1985). ISBN 0-8131-1517-5
- "Sergeant York Signs Up Again". Life. Vol. 12. May 11, 1942. p. 26+. Retrieved November 17, 2017.
- ^ Birdwell, Michael E. "Sergeant York and World War II" (PDF). Sergeant York. Archived from the original (PDF) on October 3, 2011. Retrieved June 1, 2011.
- Lee, 1985, 116–20
- Barry M. Stentiford, The American Home Guard: The State Militia in the Twentieth Century (Texas A & M University Press, 2002), 94 ISBN 1-58544-181-3; available online, accessed September 20, 2010
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- New York Times: "Tennessee's War Hero", July 16, 1922, accessed September 20, 2010. Review of (Cowan, Sam K. (1922). Sergeant York And His People.). Called "worthwhile", adding "careful restraint is one of its charms", and objecting "The attempt to picture him as tearfully prayerful as he fought against merciless butchers for his own life and the lives of his American comrades verges on to mawkish twaddle."
- New York Times: "Tom Skeyhill, Author, Dies in Plane Crash", May 23, 1932, accessed September 20, 2010, calls Skeyhill the author of York's "official biography."
- Lee, 1985, 94–5
- New York Times: S. T. Williamson, "Sergeant York Tells His Own Story", December 23, 1928, accessed September 20, 2010, review of Sergeant York: His Own Life Story and War Diary, edited by Tom Skeyhill (NY: Doubleday, Doran & Co., 1928). On Williamson see New York Times: "Samuel T. Williamson, 70, Dies", June 19, 1962, accessed September 20, 2010. Skeyhill wrote a version for children Sergeant York: Last of the Long Hunters (John C. Winston Company, 1930)
- New York Times: "Hull 'Nominated' on Tennessee Day", July 23, 1939, accessed September 20, 2010
- Lee, 1985, xi–xii
- Lee, 1985, 101–2
- Lee, 1985, 102–4
- The story that York insisted on Gary Cooper in the title role derives from the fact that producer Jesse L. Lasky, who wanted Cooper for the role, recruited Cooper by writing a plea that he accept the role and then signing York's name to the telegram. Lee, 1985, 105ff.
- ^ "Plot Synopsis". Allmovie. Retrieved September 10, 2010.
- Lee, 1985, 114
- Lee, 1985, 110
- Lee, 1985, 110–1
- "Cinema: New Picture, Aug. 4, 1941". Time. August 4, 1941. Archived from the original on June 22, 2010. Retrieved September 13, 2010.
- "Sergeant York (1941)". Internet Movie Database. Archived from the original on July 29, 2010. Retrieved September 10, 2010.
- Lee, 1985, 128–9
- Lee, 1985, 113, 128
- Lee, 1985, 58, 67
- Lee, 1985, 100
- Lee, 1985, 100–1; New York Times: "Sergeant York Hopes We Will Avoid Wars", November 11, 1934, accessed September 14, 2010; New York Times: "Peace to be Theme on Armistice Day", November 9, 1936, accessed September 14, 2010
- Lee, 1985, 120
- Lee, 1985, 109–10. FDR quoted York's speech at length in an address to the nation on November 11, 1941. See also Time: "Army & Navy and Civilian Defense: Old Soldiers", May 18, 1942, accessed September 14, 2010
- Lee, 1985, 109
- ^ Lee, 1985, 125
- Lee, 1985, 132
- Lee, 1985, 150 n31. G. Edward Buxton was York's battalion commander in the 328th Infantry.
- "Obituary, George E. York". Jennings Funeral Home. Jamestown, TN. January 7, 2018.
- "Constable Thomas Jefferson York". The Officer Down Memorial Page.
- New York Times: "Sergt. York Home, His Girl Says 'Yes'", June 1, 1919, accessed September 20, 2010
- Lee, 1985, 127, 133–4
- Time said he weighed 275 in 1941. "Cinema: New Picture, Aug. 4, 1941". Time. August 4, 1941. Archived from the original on June 22, 2010. Retrieved September 13, 2010.
- Lee, 1985, 134
- Brown, Kenneth Rev. (1980). A Goodly Heritage: a History of the Churches of Christ in Christian Union. Circleville, OH: Circle Press, Inc. p. 122. Archived from the original on September 23, 2015 – via Wayback Machine.
- Fontenay, Charles L. (September 28, 1984). "Sgt. York's Widow Dies; Rites Set". The Tennessean. Nashville, TN. p. 2B – via Newspapers.com.
- Mastriano, p. 153.
- Talley, Robert (November 11, 1929). "Eleven Years After War Finds Members in Different Jobs: Still Can't Understand why Sergeant York Got all the Credit for Winning" (PDF). Niagara Falls Gazette. Niagara Falls, NY. p. 4.
- Talley, Robert (November 11, 1929). "Controversy Still On Between Members Of Heroic Band of Soldiers In Argonne Fight" (PDF). Niagara Falls Gazette. Niagara Falls, NY. p. 4. Retrieved February 10, 2018 – via Fulton History.com.
- Mastriano, Douglas (March 14, 2017). "Alvin York: Hero of the Argonne". History Net.com. Leesburg, VA: Weider History Group.
- Krimsky, George (May 5, 2008). "Move over, Sgt. York". The Republican-American. Waterbury, CT. Archived from the original on March 4, 2016.
- International News Service (October 5, 1929). "Sergeant Early to get Distinguished Service Cross Today". The Kane Republican. Kane, PA. p. 1.
- Associated Press (September 20, 1965). "Medal Comes 47 Years Late: "York and I fought Side by Side"". The Daily Citizen. Tucson, AZ. p. 33.
- "Unraveling the Myth of SGT. York - James P. Gregory, Jr". YouTube. January 24, 2023.
- Taylor V. Beattie with Ronald Bowman, "In Search of York: Man, Myth & Legend," Army History, Summer-Fall 2000 (PB-2B-0B-3 (No. 50)), https://history.army.mil/armyhistory/AH50newOCR.pdf
- Typescript, "Testimony of German Officers and Men anent Sergeant York: A Translation of The Origin of War Legends, An Investigation of the Alleged Feat of Sgt York, October 8, 19J8," trans. F. W. Merten, p. II, copies in U.S. Army Military History Institute, Carlisle Barracks, Pa., and in file 4658. box 40. Entry 310C. records ("Thomas File") of the Historical Section, Anny War College, RG 165. Available online at http://www.digitalhistoryarchive.com/free-items.html.
- Smith, Craig S. (October 26, 2006). "Proof offered of Sergeant York's war exploits". The New York Times. Retrieved June 16, 2010.
- Montgomery, Nancy (May 26, 2008). "Officer says he's pinpointed Sgt. York's stand: 5,000 artifacts and exhausting research help American zero in on where a marker will be". Stars and Stripes. Washington, DC.
- Mastriano, Col. Douglas. "The York Artifacts Gallery". www.sgtyorkdiscovery.com. Self-published. Archived from the original on July 7, 2015. Retrieved July 7, 2015.
- Tom Nolan (November 17, 2008). "Search for Sgt. York site turns into modern media battle" (PDF). The Record (Middle Tennessee State University). Retrieved November 17, 2008.
- Scolforo, Mark (September 9, 2022). "Amid campaign, Mastriano's disputed dissertation made public". AP News. Retrieved September 14, 2022.
- University of South Caroline: James B. Legg, "Finding Sgt. York", 18–21 Archived June 14, 2010, at the Wayback Machine, accessed June 13, 2010
- Texas State University: Nolan, "Battlefield Landscapes" Archived July 3, 2010, at the Wayback Machine, accessed June 13, 2010
- Kelly, Michael (2018). Hero on the Western Front: Discovering Alvin York's WWI Battlefield. Frontline Books. ISBN 978-1-52670-075-9.
- "Tennessee Valley Healthcare System – Alvin C. York (Murfreesboro) Campus". United States Department of Veterans Affairs. Archived from the original on September 3, 2010. Retrieved August 30, 2010.
- "York Institute: Student Handbook 2007–2008". York Institute Student Handbook. Archived from the original on April 29, 2009. Retrieved December 29, 2008.
- Pollak, Michael (August 7, 2005). "The Great Race – "A Tennesseean Honored"". The New York Times. Retrieved October 23, 2007.
- Robert Ewing Corlew, Stanley John Folmsbee, and Enoch L. Mitchell, Tennessee: A Short History, 2nd ed. (Knoxville, TN: University of Tennessee Press, 1981), 442
- "Ft Bragg – York Theatre". Army and Air Force Exchange Service (AAFES). Archived from the original on October 11, 2007. Retrieved October 23, 2007.
- Wilentz, Amy (September 9, 1985). "No More Time for Sergeant York". Time. Archived from the original on December 7, 2009. Retrieved October 23, 2007.
- "Jeff Alexander's House of Checklists: Congressional Medal of Honor, Eclipse, 1993". Retrieved October 21, 2017.
- Ford, Spc. Keisha (May 5, 2000). "The Pentagram: U.S. Postal Service salutes four American war heroes". Center of Military History. U.S. Army. Archived from the original on September 15, 2012. Retrieved October 10, 2016.
- Kindred, Dave (June 21, 2004). "A proud performer after all". The Sporting News. Retrieved October 23, 2007.
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- "OVCSports.com – Sgt. York Trophy presented by Delta Dental of Tennessee". ovcsports.com. Retrieved October 9, 2015.
- University of Texas: "Cadet Ribbons", accessed November 21, 2010; Awarded to the cadet who does the most to support the ROTC program. Archived October 20, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
- Waymarking.com: "ETSU Army ROTC 50th Anniversary – Johnson City", accessed August 29, 2010
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- Lee, 1985, 130–2; Maxwell Geismar (August 22, 1943). "The Pattern of Dry Rot in Dixie". The New York Times. Retrieved September 12, 2010.; Orville Prescott (August 24, 1959). "Books of The Times". The New York Times. Retrieved September 12, 2010.
- "AUSA Book Program". December 17, 2015.
- "Laura Cantrell Biography". Matador Records. June 21, 2005. Archived from the original on November 15, 2007. Retrieved October 23, 2007.
- "82nd All the Way - Lyrics".
- Childers, Chad (January 3, 2020). "Amaranthe Salute Tourmates Sabaton With '82nd All the Way' Cover". Loudwire. Retrieved March 1, 2024.
References
- Birdwell, Michael E. (1999). Celluloid Soldiers: The Warner Bros. Campaign against Nazism. New York, N.Y.: New York University Press. ISBN 0-8147-9871-3.
- Capozzola, Christopher (2008). Uncle Sam Wants You: World War I and the Making of the Modern American Citizen. New York, N.Y.: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-533549-1.
- Lee, David D. (2000) "York, Alvin Cullum" American National Biography (online 2000) online
- Lee, David D. (1985). Sergeant York: An American Hero. Lexington, Ky.: University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 0-8131-1517-5.
- Mastriano, Douglas V. (2014). Alvin York: A New Biography of the Hero of the Argonne. University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 9780813145198. OCLC 858901754.
- Perry, John (1997). Sgt. York: His Life, Legend & Legacy. B&H Books. ISBN 0-8054-6074-8.
- Toplin, Robert Brent (1996). History by Hollywood: The Use and Abuse of the American Past. Chicago, Ill.: University of Illinois Press. ISBN 0-252-02073-1.
- Wheeler, Richard, ed. (1998). Sergeant York and the Great War. Bulverde, Tex.: Mantle Ministries. ISBN 1-889128-46-5.
- Williams, Gladys. "Alvin C. York". York Institute. Archived from the original on March 26, 2005. Retrieved August 31, 2010.
Further reading
- Cowan, Sam K. (1922). Sergeant York And His People. Funk & Wagnall's Company Project Gutenberg. online free
- Gregory, James Patrick. (2022). Unraveling the Myth of Sgt. Alvin York:The Other Sixteen. College Station, Texas, Texas A&M University Press.
- Kelly, Jack (2007). "How Sergeant York Became America's Hero". American Heritage. Archived from the original on January 12, 2011. Retrieved September 20, 2010.
- Skeyhill, Thomas. Sergeant York: Last of the Long Hunters (1930);
- Willbanks, James H. (2011). America's Heroes: Medal of Honor Recipients from the Civil War to Afghanistan. Santa Barbara, California: ABC-Clio. ISBN 978-1-5988-4394-1.
- Yockelson, Mitchell. Forty-Seven Days: How Pershing's Warriors Came of Age to Defeat at the German Army in World War I. New York: NAL, Caliber, 2016. ISBN 978-0-451-46695-2.
- York, Alvin C.; Skeyhill, Tom, eds. (1928). His Own Life Story and War Diary. Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday, Doran & Company, Inc. (published 1930). Retrieved July 19, 2015.
External links
Library resources aboutAlvin C. York
Official
General information
- "Alvin Cullum York". Hall of Valor. Military Times.
- Alvin Cullum York (1887–1964) at Medal of Honor Recipients Portrayed On Film (lylefrancispadilla.com)
- Alvin C. York at IMDb
- Sergeant York Project
- The Sergeant York Discovery Expedition (SYDE)
- Works by or about Alvin York at the Internet Archive
- Media from Commons
- Quotations from Wikiquote
- 1887 births
- 1964 deaths
- American anti-communists
- American community activists
- American conscientious objectors
- 20th-century American diarists
- American people of English descent
- American people of Scotch-Irish descent
- American Protestants
- Knights of the Legion of Honour
- Civilian Conservation Corps people
- Military personnel from Tennessee
- Organization founders
- People from Harriman, Tennessee
- People from Pall Mall, Tennessee
- American recipients of the Croix de Guerre 1914–1918 (France)
- Recipients of the War Merit Cross (Italy)
- Sharpshooters
- Tennessee Democrats
- United States Army Medal of Honor recipients
- United States Army personnel of World War I
- United States Army personnel of World War II
- United States Army non-commissioned officers
- World War I recipients of the Medal of Honor