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Colonel James B. Lyle
May
25, 1914 - August 6, 1992
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Colonel James B. Lyle is inducted into the Ranger Hall of
Fame for bravery and decisive leadership as a Company Commander
in the 1st Ranger Battalion of World War II, and for continually
displaying extraordinary courage in four campaigns and in the
three invasions of North Africa, Sicily, and Italy, twice
earning the right to wear the Distinguished Unit Citation. Lyle
was noted for quick and accurate assessments under fire and for
aggressive leadership to achieve the mission, doing so with
minimal casualties. During the crisis at Kasserine Pass, General
Terry Allen made an urgent request to Lt. Col. Darby to send him
a “reinforced Ranger Company with a hairy chested Company
Commander with big _ _ _ _ .”
Captain Lyle’s C Company was sent.
In March 1943, Captain Lyle displayed daring bravery in
Tunisia at El Guettar when, during a massive German assault, a
unit of the 18th Infantry Regiment was being overrun.
Lyle’s Company rescued it by attacking the enemy flank with
cannon, stalling the enemy attack. In the Sicily invasion in
July 1943, Captain Lyle led two Ranger Companies ashore to
destroy enemy coastal guns before the main Allied force landed,
for which he was awarded the Silver Star.
Valor was not uncommon for Lyle. In postwar Germany, he
risked his life to save two people from drowning, an act of
heroism for which he was awarded the Soldier’s Medal. In the
Korean conflict, in October 1950, as the Executive Officer of
the 2/187th, Major Lyle was seriously injured,
smashing both legs and hips in a combat parachute and was
declared Missing in Action. After a long medical recovery,
during which Lt. Col. Lyle demonstrated unimaginable courage, he
commanded the 52nd Armored Infantry in Italy in
1957, and in 1961, he served as Senior Advisor to the 7th
Republic of Korea Infantry Division. Lt Col. Lyle was the 35th
officer inducted into the OCS Hall of Fame, the only officer
from the original 1st Ranger Battalion to be so
honored.
Photo
and story courtesy Ranger Hall of Fame
posted
at the request of his nephew, David Williams
September 2003
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