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        |  | HOUSE CONCURRENT RESOLUTION | 
      
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        |  | WHEREAS, The Texas Legislative Medal of Honor was established | 
      
        |  | to recognize gallant and intrepid service by a member of the state | 
      
        |  | or federal military forces, and U.S. Army Master Sergeant Travis E. | 
      
        |  | Watkins proved himself a deserving recipient of this prestigious | 
      
        |  | award for his heroism during the Korean War; and | 
      
        |  | WHEREAS, Born in Waldo, Arkansas, Travis Watkins grew up in | 
      
        |  | Troup, Texas; answering his nation's call to duty, he enlisted in | 
      
        |  | the U.S. Army in 1939, and he served with distinction in the Pacific | 
      
        |  | theater during World War II, earning the Bronze Star for his actions | 
      
        |  | at Guadalcanal; after the war, he was honorably discharged, and in | 
      
        |  | 1948, he married Madie Sue Barnett; the couple became the parents of | 
      
        |  | two daughters; and | 
      
        |  | WHEREAS, During the Korean War, Master Sergeant Watkins | 
      
        |  | reenlisted, and he was deployed to Korea with Company H, Ninth | 
      
        |  | Infantry Regiment, Second Infantry Division; on August 31, 1950, | 
      
        |  | the company was stationed near Yongsan when an overwhelming North | 
      
        |  | Korean force broke through the United Nations lines, and Sergeant | 
      
        |  | Watkins and 30 other men found themselves under siege and cut off | 
      
        |  | from the rest of their unit; and | 
      
        |  | WHEREAS, Over the next three days, Sergeant Watkins displayed | 
      
        |  | both remarkable leadership and extraordinary bravery; he took | 
      
        |  | command, established perimeter defenses to repel the constant enemy | 
      
        |  | assaults, and continually exposed himself to enemy fire by moving | 
      
        |  | from foxhole to foxhole to give instructions and encouragement to | 
      
        |  | his fellow soldiers; and | 
      
        |  | WHEREAS, When the unit's ammunition began to run out, | 
      
        |  | Sergeant Watkins shot two North Korean soldiers 50 yards beyond the | 
      
        |  | perimeter and went out alone to retrieve their weapons and | 
      
        |  | ammunition; he was wounded while doing so, but still managed to fell | 
      
        |  | all three of his enemy attackers; he collected their weapons and | 
      
        |  | ammunition as well and made it back to his astonished men; and | 
      
        |  | WHEREAS, Later, six of the enemy began to lob grenades into | 
      
        |  | the American perimeter, endangering the position; Sergeant Watkins | 
      
        |  | stood up from his foxhole and fired his rifle at the attackers; he | 
      
        |  | was immediately struck by machine gun fire, but he continued | 
      
        |  | shooting until he had killed all six North Koreans; he then | 
      
        |  | collapsed, paralyzed from the waist down; and | 
      
        |  | WHEREAS, Despite his grave injuries, Sergeant Watkins | 
      
        |  | continued to encourage his men, refusing to accept any food from | 
      
        |  | their dwindling supply; when it became clear that help would not | 
      
        |  | arrive in time, he ordered his men to withdraw, and he further | 
      
        |  | refused to let them take him with them, since his inability to walk | 
      
        |  | would only slow their retreat; in the last moments of his life, he | 
      
        |  | wished his comrades luck and remained at his post until the end; he | 
      
        |  | died two days before his 30th birthday; and | 
      
        |  | WHEREAS, Sergeant Watkins's leadership throughout this | 
      
        |  | ordeal helped to keep his men alive and enabled his troops to mount | 
      
        |  | a strong defense that killed approximately 500 enemy soldiers; in | 
      
        |  | recognition of his monumental courage, President Harry S. Truman | 
      
        |  | posthumously awarded him the Medal of Honor, the nation's highest | 
      
        |  | military award; the medal was presented to his wife in a ceremony in | 
      
        |  | Washington, D.C., on January 9, 1951; and | 
      
        |  | WHEREAS, In the years since, Sergeant Watkins has been | 
      
        |  | further honored in the state he called home; a housing complex at | 
      
        |  | Fort Sam Houston in San Antonio was named in his memory in 1961, and | 
      
        |  | the Watkins-Logan State Veterans Home in Tyler was also named in his | 
      
        |  | honor in 2011; in 2000 a supply ship, the USNS Watkins, was | 
      
        |  | christened in his name; his remains are interred at Gladewater | 
      
        |  | Memorial Park in Gladewater; and | 
      
        |  | WHEREAS, During a desperate situation in a time of war, | 
      
        |  | Master Sergeant Travis Watkins took command, bolstered the spirits | 
      
        |  | of his men, and repeatedly risked his life in their behalf, making | 
      
        |  | the ultimate sacrifice in order that they might survive; for this | 
      
        |  | selfless act of heroism, it is indeed appropriate that he be honored | 
      
        |  | with this state's supreme military commendation; now, therefore, be | 
      
        |  | it | 
      
        |  | RESOLVED, That the 85th Legislature of the State of Texas | 
      
        |  | hereby direct the governor of the State of Texas to posthumously | 
      
        |  | award the Texas Legislative Medal of Honor to Travis E. Watkins in | 
      
        |  | recognition of his valiant service during the Korean War. | 
      
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