John M. Spalding | |
Birth Date: | 17 December 1914 |
Death Date: | 6 November 1959 (aged 45) |
Birth Name: | John Martin Spalding Sr. |
Unit: | 1st Infantry Division |
Battles: | World War II |
Awards: | Distinguished Service Cross |
Laterwork: | Kentucky state politician |
John Martin Spalding Sr. (often misspelled Spaulding in official Army reports) (December 17, 1914 - November 6, 1959) was an officer in the U.S. 1st Infantry Division during World War II.
Spalding was a native of Owensboro, Kentucky. He is famous as one of the first officers (a lieutenant at the time for E Company, 2nd Battalion, 16th Infantry) to make it up to the top of bloody Omaha Beach and clear out German defenses from behind. He and his men, including his sergeant, Philip Streczyk, helped make the breakthrough there on D-Day possible. His platoon landed on the Easy Red sector, and made it to the seawall largely intact, unlike most in the first wave. Instead of attacking up the beach exits, as was planned, he instead helped find and clear a path up the mined bluffs, right of Exit E-1. Once at the top, his team was the first to attack the enemy fortifications from the rear, clearing out trenches and pillboxes along Exit E-1. Later on D-Day he was involved in actions further inland at Colleville-sur-Mer. For his actions on D-Day, he was later awarded the Distinguished Service Cross.[1] After the war, he returned there and served in the Kentucky House of Representatives as a Democrat.[2] He was later murdered by his wife Mary Christine Spalding.
Messenger-Inquirer, 6 November 1959, Page 1. via Newspapers.com (https://www.newspapers.com/article/messenger-inquirer/111227882/ : accessed 6 June 2024), clip page by user sethwoodward