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Sons of Liberty Museum · Military Research Collection
WW2 Award Citations — Pacific Theater 1942–1946
United States
Marine Corps
Silver Star Medal
About This Collection
The Sons of Liberty Museum has completed a multi-year digitization initiative to transcribe, index, and make publicly searchable 4,037 United States Marine Corps Silver Star Medal citation cards from the World War II era — one of the largest structured datasets of its kind made freely available to researchers, veterans' families, and the general public.
Each citation card in this collection represents a singular act of courage by a United States Marine. The awards span from the early island-hopping campaigns of 1942 through the final operations of 1945 and 1946, covering every major Pacific Theater engagement in which the Marine Corps participated — from the desperate defense of Guadalcanal and the savage fighting along its ridgelines, to the volcanic shores of Iwo Jima, the fortress cliffs of Peleliu, and the weeks-long battle of attrition across Okinawa. The Marines honored in these records served across all six Marine Divisions, numerous independent regiments, air groups, amphibious corps units, and specialist formations ranging from reconnaissance swimmers who surveyed enemy beaches under cover of darkness, to armored bulldozer operators who pioneered tank roads under point-blank artillery fire.
"For conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity… his conduct throughout reflects the highest credit upon himself and the United States Naval Service."
— Standard citation language, USMC Silver Star, WWIIThe digitization project was executed using automated Optical Character Recognition (OCR) batch processing scripts applied to scanned PDF images of the original award cards. Each record was parsed to extract eleven discrete structured data fields: the recipient's first name and last name; military rank; company, battalion, regiment, and division assignment; the geographic location and specific date of the action; and the recipient's hometown and state. Special notations — posthumous award, Missing in Action, Killed in Action, Oak Leaf Cluster (subsequent award), and superseded General Orders — were also captured wherever present on the original card.
Beyond the structured fields, the full verbatim text of each citation was preserved — the award's administrative header carrying serial numbers, command routing codes, and signing dates; the formal citation passage drafted by the awarding headquarters in language that has become one of the most recognizable voices of American military history; and the footer bearing the signature of the Secretary of the Navy, acting on behalf of the President of the United States. Together, these elements provide a complete documentary record of each award as it was officially issued.
The citation cards reveal a rich cross-section of the Pacific War. Recipients range from Private to Brigadier General, encompassing virtually every combat specialty: rifle platoon leaders who silenced enemy machine-gun nests through bold frontal assault; squad leaders who reorganized shattered units and maintained the line; aviation personnel who pressed attacks through anti-aircraft barrages; and individual Marines who, in the chaos of close combat, acted with instinctive courage that no training manual can fully anticipate. A meaningful portion of these awards were made posthumously to Marines who gave their lives in the service of their country, with the medal presented to next of kin by Marine Corps officers at ceremonies — and in some cases, as the records show, by registered mail — across communities throughout the United States.
The dataset also captures key administrative details: General Orders (GO) numbers and issuing headquarters commands, administrative card notes recording service numbers and birth information for cross-referencing with enlistment records, and notations of superseded awards where a later General Order replaced an earlier decoration. The ten sample records visible on this page represent recipients whose surnames begin with "W" — a fraction of the full dataset that collectively forms an irreplaceable documentary monument to the Marine Corps' contribution to Allied victory in the Pacific.
Official Award Criteria
The regulations governing award of the Silver Star to members of the Marine Corps are rooted in the shared Navy/Marine Corps awards framework. While the core eligibility standard remained consistent across all three conflicts, certain administrative and statutory refinements evolved over time. Select a conflict era below.
Prior to World War II, the Silver Star existed as the Citation Star, authorized in 1918 and formally redesignated the Silver Star Medal in 1932. Statutory authorization for the award to members of the Navy and Marine Corps was enacted by an Act of Congress on August 7, 1942, shortly followed by Army authorization on December 15, 1942. The award was conferred by the Secretary of the Navy on behalf of the President of the United States.
A Marine was eligible for the Silver Star for conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity in action against the enemy — heroism that clearly placed the individual above their comrades but did not reach the level required for the Medal of Honor or Navy Cross. During WWII, one primary condition of eligibility applied:
By the Korean War (1950–1953), the Silver Star had been codified into Title 10 of the United States Code following the National Security Act of 1947. The core eligibility standard for Marine Corps recipients was unchanged from WWII — gallantry in action not warranting the Medal of Honor or Navy Cross. Marines who served in Korea were awarded the Silver Star under the same fundamental framework.
By the Vietnam War era, the Silver Star's eligibility framework had been fully articulated in statute and SECNAV instructions. The Marine Corps governing standard — as published on the official marines.mil website — now formally comprised three distinct eligibility categories, the third uniquely relevant to the advisory and combined-force nature of the Vietnam conflict.
The standard of heroism required did not change across any of the three conflicts. In all three eras, the Marine's act(s) must have rendered the individual "conspicuous and well above the standard expected." An accumulation of minor acts of heroism normally does not justify the award. This language has remained consistent from the 1942 authorizing legislation to the present day.
| Criterion / Feature | World War II | Korean War | Vietnam War |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gallantry vs. Enemy of U.S. (Category 1) | |||
| Opposing Foreign Force (Category 2) | |||
| Friendly Foreign Forces (Category 3) | |||
| Heroism threshold below MOH / Navy Cross | |||
| Award authority: Secretary of the Navy | |||
| Posthumous award authorized | |||
| Multiple-award device | Gold Star | Gold Star | Gold Star |
| Statutory basis | Act of Aug. 7, 1942 | 10 U.S.C. (Post-1947) | 10 U.S.C. § 6244 |
Sample Records
This is a sampling of citation records. The full dataset of 4,037 records is accessible via the search interface. Records below represent the "W" surname section of the collection.
"…he led the platoon in a bold and daring frontal attack on the emplacements and personally participated in neutralizing the remaining Japanese and destroying their weapons, thereby enabling the company to continue its advance…" Read
"…Staff Sergeant Wagher, hearing cries for help, voluntarily exposed himself to the intense fire of hostile shells and bombs and, with several other men, set to work rescuing their imprisoned comrades…" Read
"…Private Weiss courageously moved ahead of the infantry into shattering Japanese artillery, mortar and small-arms fire to pioneer a road essential for a planned tank assault upon an enemy-held ridge line…" More
"…Platoon Sergeant Weisgerber led his group on a preliminary survey of the enemy's beaches and, despite heavy hostile artillery, mortar and small-arms fire which caused severe casualties in his section, successfully completed this hazardous mission…" More
"…Maintaining personal reconnaissance along the entire front line of his battalion during its assault against heavily fortified enemy emplacements and throughout fierce counterattacks…bravely directed mortar and howitzer fire…" More
Common Questions
Use the search interface to find a specific Marine, unit, or action location within the full dataset of transcribed WWII USMC Silver Star records.