Top Honor for Valor to 19 Year old

Pennsylvania native threw himself on grenade in Baghdad

ByABC News
September 19, 2008, 6:48 AM

June 2, 2008 — -- Army Pfc. Ross McGinnis is the fourth service member to receive the military's highest honor for valor, the Medal of Honor, for combat in Iraq.

McGinnis, who would have turned 21 later this month, was killed when he pinned himself against a grenade that landed in his humvee while on patrol in Baghdad in December 2006.. Instead of jumping out of the vehicle, he sat on the grenade to save the lives of four soldiers riding with him.

"From his position in the gun turret, he noticed a grenade thrown directly at the vehicle," President Bush explained at the Medal of Honor Ceremony at the White House Monday. "In an instant, the grenade dropped through the gunner's hatch. He shouted a warning to the four men inside. Confined in that tiny space, the soldiers had no chance of escaping the explosion. Private McGinnis could have easily jumped from the humvee and saved himself. Instead he dropped inside, put himself against the grenade, and absorbed the blast with his own body. By that split-second decision, Private McGinnis lost his own life, and he saved his comrades."

The president called the rural Pennsylvania native a "regular guy" who loved playing basketball, working on cars, doing great impersonations making even the drill sergeants laugh, but noted McGinnis wasn't too wild about schoolwork.

Bush reflected on McGinnis's earlier years explaining, "When Ross McGinnis was in kindergarten, the teacher asked him to draw a picture of what he wanted to be when he grew up. He drew a soldier. Today our nation recognizing -- recognizes him as a soldier, and more than that –- because he did far more than his duty. In the words of one of our commanding generals, 'Four men are alive because this soldier embodied our Army values and gave his life."'

ABC's Jonathan Karl spoke with two of the four soldiers who survived the blast that cost McGinnis his life. "I remember him yelling 'grenade,'" Staff Sergeant Ian Newland recalled. "He was more impressed by saving our lives than saving his own…he wanted to make sure we made it out of there."