Navy corpsmen have been a valuable asset to the Navy Hospital Corps since it came
into existence in 1898. The first member of the Hospital Corps to be awarded
the Medal of Honor was Hospital Apprentice Stanley Robert. This was during the
Boxer Uprising in

During World War 1, there were 16,000 enlisted men in the Hospital Corps.
They earned a reputation for performance of duty. Those serving with the Marine Corps
in the field especially demonstrated this reputation. The Hospital
corps performed admirably and many members were cited for valor and performance
of duty under fire by both the
Fifteen corpsman were killed in action, 2 died of wounds, and 146 others were wounded or gassed.
460 awards and citations were given to members of the
Hospital Corps. These include 2 Medals of Honor, 55 Navy Crosses, 31
Distinguished Service Medals,
2
During World War 2, approximately 200,000 men and women
served in the Hospital Corps. Out of every 100 men of the Navy and Marine Corps
wounded, 97 recovered. This is an impressive record.
889 corpsmen were killed
or mortally wounded. In all, there were 1,724 casualties among corpsmen.
7
corpsmen were awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor. Members of the Hospital
Corps received 820 major awards and citations. The Navy Cross, Silver Star, and
Bronze Star were awarded to corpsmen in numbers too numerous to count.
On
February 22, 1945, Pharmacist
mate John Bradley proudly assisted in the raising of the American flag on Mount
Suribachi,
During the Korean Conflict, members of the Medical again performed brilliantly. During the Inchon-Seoul operation, medical units attached to the 1st Marine Division treated 2, 844 casualties during the 22-day period of 15 SEP to 7 OCT 1950. Wherever marines were fighting, corpsmen were there. The percentage of casualties among medical personnel was greater than that of the Marines they supported.
5 Corpsmen were awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor.
During the Vietnam Conflict, hospital corpsmen served in Marine Corps, Navy
Air and Ground forces and Riverine Warfare. They also were assigned to small
teams that provided care and preventive health advice
to Vietnamese civilians. Others were assigned to Vietnamese military
units as advisors.
620 corpsmen were killed or mortally wounded. 3,353 were wounded in action 3 corpsmen earned the Congressional Medal of Honor, 29 were awarded Navy Crosses. Other awards include 127 Silver Stars, 2 Legions of merit, 290 Bronze Stars, and 4, 563 Purple Hearts.
Contributions of hospital
corpsmen in
HM3 Donald E. Ballard
HM3 Wayne M. Caron
HM2 David R.
Ray
earned the Medal of Honor for heroism.
HM3 Robert R. Ingram
received his
Medal of Honor for
Additionally, 30 hospital corpsmen received the Navy Cross, 127 the
Silver Star Medal, and 290 the Bronze Star Medal. The names of 638 hospital
corpsmen were killed in action there, more than in any other war except World
War II.
Too many more--4,563--would earn the Purple Heart.