James I. Mestrovitch | |
---|---|
Medal of Honor recipient | |
Birth name | Joko Meštrović |
Nickname(s) | "Jack" |
Born | (1894-05-22)May 22, 1894 Đuraševići, Austria-Hungary (modern-day Montenegro) |
Died | November 4, 1918(1918-11-04) (aged 24) Fismes, France |
Place of burial | Saint Jovan Serbian Orthodox Church, Đuraševići |
Allegiance | United States of America |
Service | United States Army |
Years of service | 1916–1918 |
Rank | Sergeant |
Service number | 1243675 |
Unit | Company C, 111th Infantry, 28th Division |
Battles / wars | |
Awards | Medal of Honor |
Sergeant James I. Mestrovitch (May 22, 1894 – November 4, 1918) was a United States Army soldier who received the Medal of Honor, America's highest military decoration, for his valiant actions in World War I.
Biography
Mestrovitch, an ethnic Serb, was born Joko Meštrović in Đuraševići, near Tivat, Kingdom of Dalmatia, Austria-Hungary (modern-day Montenegro) and after immigrating to the United States in 1911 he lived in Fresno, California.
He enlisted in the Pennsylvania Army National Guard's 18th Infantry in 1916 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Private Mestrovich was deployed along the Mexican border in support of the 1916 Punitive Expedition with the Pennsylvania National Guard, where his skill and experience as a soldier saw him promoted to corporal. Mestrovich was interviewed by newspaper reporters and attributed his patriotism and service as a debt repayment for the work of American doctors treating the typhoid epidemic in his native Serbia in 1914, the same year World War I began in Europe.
On April 13, 1917, a week after the American entry into World War I, the 18th Pennsylvania Infantry was called by the federal government to guard vital wartime industry in western Pennsylvania. A short time later, the men found themselves shipped to Camp Hancock, Georgia. Here, the Pittsburgh Regiment joined with the men of the 6th Pennsylvania Infantry from Philadelphia and surrounding counties to form the new 111th Infantry Regiment, part of the 28th Division. The division was deployed overseas to the Western Front in May 1918.
On August 10, 1918, while his unit was engaged in the town of Fismette, France, Sergeant Mestrovich saw his company commander, Captain James Williams, fall wounded as they moved through the ruins of the city. Without regard for his own safety, Mestrovich charged forward through a hail of machine-gun fire and falling artillery shells to rescue Williams, returning to a concealed position to provide life-saving first aid. For this action, he would become the 28th Division's first Medal of Honor recipient. Mestrovich was wounded in the fighting where he performed his heroic deed and initially reported as killed in action. He wrote to his uncle back in Fresno, telling him of being shot by machine-gun fire and recuperating in the hospital, stating, "They operated twice on me, and in another month I think I will be just as good as I was and ready for the front again."
He did recover and return to the 111th Infantry, but as fighting raged in the Meuse Argonne, Sergeant Mestrovich fell in action on November 4, 1918, with nearly 50 other men from the 111th, when their battalion encountered a concealed machine-gun position during a reconnaissance patrol just a week before the Armistice with Germany ended hostilities.
Sergeant Mestrovich's Medal of Honor citation reads as follows:
Seeing his company commander lying wounded 30 yards in front of the line after his company had withdrawn to a sheltered position behind a stone wall, Sgt. Mestrovitch voluntarily left cover and crawled through heavy machinegun and shell fire to where the officer lay. He took the officer upon his back and crawled to a place of safety, where he administered first-aid treatment, his exceptional heroism saving the officer's life.
Sergeant James Mestrovich's body was returned home to his mother in 1925 in the town of Boka, now part of Montenegro. He was buried in the cemetery of Serbian Orthodox Church of St. John in his home village of Đuraševići near Tivat. That same year the US mission to Split visited Mestrovich's mother and presented her with his Medal of Honor in the presence of a full honor guard.
See also
References
- ^ "Oni ne zaboravljaju: Predstavnici ambasade SAD obišli grob Joka Meštrovića" [They do not forget: envoys from the U.S. Embassy visited the grave of Joko Meštrović] (in Serbo-Croatian). Vijesti. November 11, 2014. Retrieved 2016-02-03.
- ^ Jack Ivo Mestrovich, “Petition for Naturalization,” February 10, 1916.
- ^ Heft, Aaron (December 2020). "Sergeant James I Mestrovich". On Point: 15–22.
- White, Carl (1916-09-24). "US Saved Typhus-Stricken Servia, so Patriotic Native Proves His Gratitude". El Paso Times.
- Pennsylvania in the World War, Vol. II. Pittsburgh, PA: State Publications Society. 1921. p. 493.
- Pennsylvania in the World War, Vol. II. Pittsburgh, PA: State Publications Society. 1921. p. 541.
- ""Mestrovich Wounded Leading Men in Battle"". Fresno Morning Republican. 1918-11-08.
- Pennsylvania in the World War, Vol. II. Pittsburgh, PA: State Publications Society. 1921. pp. 529, 541.
- "James I. Mestrovitch | World War I | U.S. Army | Medal of Honor Recipient". Congressional Medal of Honor Society. Retrieved 2021-01-05.
- ^ "World War I, United States and Montenegro: How Montenegrin Citizens Helped U.S. Soldiers". U.S. Embassy in Montenegro. 2017-04-06. Retrieved 2021-01-05.
- "Joko Meštrović, junak Crnogoraca, Srba i SAD". Danas. March 31, 2016. Retrieved 2017-10-24.
- This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the United States Army Center of Military History.
External links
Categories:- 1894 births
- 1918 deaths
- People from Tivat
- Serbs of Montenegro
- Emigrants from Austria-Hungary to the United States
- United States Army non-commissioned officers
- United States Army personnel of World War I
- United States Army Medal of Honor recipients
- Foreign-born Medal of Honor recipients
- World War I recipients of the Medal of Honor
- American military personnel killed in World War I
- American people of Serbian descent
- Burials at Serbian Orthodox monasteries and churches