Charles DeGlopper's Medal of Honor Stand at La Fière Bridge

Apr 01 , 2026

Charles DeGlopper's Medal of Honor Stand at La Fière Bridge

Charles N. DeGlopper stood alone on a shattered ridge, bullets whipping past him like angry hornets. His squad was down, men bleeding out or pinned under Nazi fire. The enemy pressed forward in waves. Retreat was the only choice. But DeGlopper would not just run. Not on his watch.

He raised his M1 Garand high and fired into the chaos, a desperate wall of lead buying seconds—death’s shadow inches behind him. A single man holding hell at bay, so his brothers could live.


From Upstate Fields to Foreign Battlefields

Born in 1921, Charles DeGlopper was a son of New York’s rural heartland. Farming soil drilled into his hands, values hammered in equally hard—duty, honor, sacrifice. Raised Catholic, faith was his compass. It framed the battlefield and the afterlife alike.

His letters home spoke lightly of battle but heavily of belief. “God helps those who fight for what’s right,” he once wrote. That conviction carried him into the 82nd Airborne Division's 325th Glider Infantry Regiment. To him, the uniform wasn’t just cloth; it was a covenant.


The Battle That Defined Him: The Devil’s Backbone in Normandy

June 9, 1944. Three days after D-Day. The fight to secure the crucial town of La Fière Bridge was brutal. The 82nd Airborne was tasked with holding the western edge of the bridgehead against relentless German counterattacks.

DeGlopper’s unit, 2nd Battalion, was ordered to withdraw. Covering that retreat was suicide. But he volunteered for the impossible.

With rifle blazing, he moved alone to the crest of the ridge, a target for every enemy gunner. Machine guns spat like hellfire. Grenades exploded beneath him. Still, he held his position. Shouting orders, delivering withering fire, he slowed the enemy advance.

"He was the last man on that hill," recalled Lt. Col. McBride, his commanding officer. "He saved many lives with his selfless stand."¹

Minutes stretched into agony. His fire slowed the German charge enough for his comrades to slip away—only to find him mortally wounded on the ground when they returned with reinforcements.

He died not as a casualty but as a shield—his blood the price for others’ survival.


Recognition Etched in Valor

Charles DeGlopper’s sacrifice earned the Medal of Honor, awarded posthumously in 1945. The citation praises the “fearless actions” that enabled his unit’s withdrawal despite overwhelming enemy fire.

“He stood alone against the storm,” the citation reads, “taking single-handedly the full brunt of the enemy assault to secure the safety of his comrades.”²

His name is etched on the Tablets of the Missing at the Lorraine American Cemetery. Glider Field at Fort Bragg bears his name, a permanent testament hard as steel.

Third Infantry Division veteran Colonel Charles S. Dye said of him: “A man like DeGlopper reminds us why soldiers stand when others fall.”³


Legacy Carved in Blood and Honor

DeGlopper’s story is neither myth nor legend—it is raw reality. Combat’s bitter truth made clear by one man’s steel spine, his refusal to accept the easy path when brothers’ lives hung in balance.

His legacy burns beyond medals and memorials. It is a call to courage when fear seeks to paralyze, a challenge to carry others through hell’s fire. Sacrifice is never done alone.

“Greater love hath no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his friends.” —John 15:13

To remember Charles DeGlopper is to look into the face of sacrifice itself. Veterans feel it, civilians must try to understand it. In his blood, the dark made light; in his death, life for many.

The battlefield silence holds his voice still—No man is left behind.


Sources

1. U.S. Army Center of Military History, Medal of Honor Recipients: World War II 2. Congressional Medal of Honor Society, Charles N. DeGlopper Citation 3. James E. Wise Jr., Medal of Honor: Portraits of Valor Beyond the Call of Duty


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6 Comments

  • 01 Apr 2026 Joshua Collocott

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