Ross Lindsey Iams
Ross Lindsey Iams was a United States Marine who was awarded the Medal of Honor for actions during the Battle of Fort Rivière in Haiti on November 17, 1915. Iams served for over 30 years in the Marine Corps, retiring as a major.
Biography
Iams was born in Graysville, Pennsylvania. He enlisted the Marine Corps in Pittsburgh on January 29, 1901. By 1906, Iams had been promoted to corporal and was stationed in Norfolk, Virginia.During the United States occupation of Haiti in 1915, Sergeant Iams was assigned to the 5th Marine Company. During the Battle of Fort Rivière on November 17, Iams was part of Major Smedley Butler's 100-man task force charged with destroying the mountaintop stronghold of Cacos rebels, mercenaries who had been threatening the Haitian government. Butler, Iams, and Butler's orderly, Private Samuel Gross, located a partially sealed drain 4 feet wide, 3 feet tall, and 15 feet deep in the fort's wall, which served as a Cacos entrance. Butler hesitated in entering the hole, knowing the Marines would be exposed to concentrated enemy fire. After a pause, Iams said, "Oh, hell, I'm going through," and was immediately followed by Gross and Butler.
Crawling out the other side, the trio of Marines began firing on the surprised Cacos rebels, and were followed by the rest of Butler's company. After ten minutes of intense close quarters combat, the American force had killed the entire Cacos garrison, and later dynamited the fort, ending the First Caco War. For his heroism in combat, Iams—along with Gross and Butler—was awarded the Medal of Honor.
Iams was stationed in France in 1918–1919 during World War I, and also served in Mexico, China, the Philippines and Nicaragua. After several temporary appointments as a junior officer, Iams was permanently commissioned as a captain in June 1920. He retired from the Marine Corps in November 1932, but in 1942, he briefly returned to duty as a major during World War II. He died at the U.S. Naval Hospital in San Diego, California on March 29, 1952, aged 70. He was buried at Fort Rosecrans National Cemetery in San Diego.
Medal of Honor citation
Rank and organization: Sergeant, US Marine Corps, 5th CompanyBorn: 5 May 1879, Graysville, Pennsylvania. Accredited to: Pennsylvania.
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