On the night of February 23, 1969, six and a half miles west of Da Nang, Republic of Vietnam, a small Marine observation post belonging to Company A, 1st Battalion, 7th Marines, 1st Marine Division stood on a low ridgeline overlooking rice paddies and scattered tree lines. The position—little more than a handful of fighting holes connected by shallow communication trenches—was one of several forward outposts designed to provide early warning of enemy movement toward the vital airbase and logistical complex at Da Nang.
Private First Class Oscar Palmer Austin, twenty-one years old, from Phoenix, Arizona, occupied one of those holes. He had arrived in-country in September 1968 as an assistant machine-gunner. Quiet, reliable, and quick to volunteer for extra duties, Austin was already well regarded by his squad. That night he carried an M16 rifle instead of the M60 he normally manned, sharing two-hour watches with the other Marines in the outpost.

The evening had been uneventful. A thin mist drifted across the paddies, muffling sound and reducing visibility. Distant artillery from friendly firebases provided a steady, almost comforting background thump. Most of the men tried to rest in their holes, boots still laced, weapons within arm’s reach. The air smelled of wet earth and gun oil.
At approximately 0215 hours the darkness erupted. A large North Vietnamese Army force—later estimated at battalion strength—initiated a coordinated assault. The attack opened with heavy automatic-weapons fire from multiple directions, followed within seconds by the distinctive crump of satchel charges and the metallic clatter of Chicom grenades. Green tracer rounds arced low across the ridgeline; explosions blossomed in quick succession, throwing dirt, sandbags, and fragments into the air.
The outpost was immediately enveloped. Enemy soldiers advanced in disciplined waves, using the terrain and darkness to mask their approach. Marines returned fire from their positions, but the volume of incoming rounds made sustained aimed shooting difficult. Smoke and dust clouded vision; the sharp smell of cordite stung every breath. Within the first minute several Marines were hit.
Austin remained in his hole, engaging targets with controlled bursts. He had already changed magazines twice when he noticed movement to his front-left. Sergeant James C. Davis lay motionless in a shallow depression about fifteen meters away. Davis had been struck by shrapnel and small-arms fire during the opening volley. He was unconscious, bleeding from multiple wounds, and completely exposed to the advancing enemy.
Austin understood the mathematics of the situation instantly. Left where he was, Davis would be killed by the next grenade or by the riflemen closing in. Without hesitation he rose from cover and sprinted across the fire-swept ground. Bullets snapped past his head; grenades detonated close enough to shower him with soil. He reached Davis, dropped to one knee, hooked his arms under the wounded man’s shoulders, and began dragging him backward toward the fighting holes.
As Austin neared his original position, a North Vietnamese soldier lobbed a fragmentation grenade that landed only a few feet away. The fuse sizzled visibly. There was no time to kick the grenade or throw it clear. In one motion Austin released Davis, pivoted, and threw his body over both the grenade and the unconscious Marine. The explosion detonated directly beneath him. Shrapnel tore through his legs, abdomen, and right side, opening deep, ragged wounds. Blood soaked his utilities almost instantly.

Despite catastrophic injuries, Austin remained conscious. He resumed dragging Davis, pulling with strength born of sheer will. He had covered only a few more feet when a North Vietnamese infantryman emerged from the smoke less than ten meters away. The soldier raised his AK-47 and aimed directly at the helpless Davis. Bleeding heavily and barely able to stand, Austin forced himself upright and deliberately placed his body between the rifle muzzle and his comrade.
The enemy soldier fired. Multiple rounds struck Austin in the chest and upper torso. He collapsed across Davis, still shielding him with his own broken body.
In the next moments Marines from adjacent positions rallied and delivered concentrated fire into the advancing enemy. The North Vietnamese soldier was killed, and the immediate threat to Davis ended. Several Marines rushed forward, dragged both men into cover, and began emergency first aid. Austin was still breathing—shallow, ragged breaths—when they reached him. He was evacuated by helicopter to the nearest surgical facility, but massive blood loss and extensive internal trauma proved fatal. He died before surgeons could stabilize him.
Sergeant Davis survived. The seconds Austin bought with his body allowed the small unit to regroup, call in artillery and gunship support, and eventually repel the assault. The observation post held, denying the enemy a dangerous penetration toward Da Nang.
On May 5, 1970, Secretary of the Navy John H. Chafee presented the Medal of Honor—posthumously—to Oscar P. Austin’s family during a White House ceremony. The citation concludes: “By his courage, inspiring leadership, and selfless devotion to duty in the face of certain death, Private First Class Austin upheld the highest traditions of the Marine Corps and of the United States Naval Service. He gallantly gave his life for his country.”
His name is inscribed on the Vietnam Veterans Memorial, Panel 31W, Line 070. He was twenty-one years old.
In the darkness west of Da Nang that February morning, a young Marine from Arizona made the ultimate choice without hesitation. He placed himself between a burning grenade and a wounded comrade, then between an enemy rifle and that same man, giving his life so another could live. That act of pure, unhesitating sacrifice remains one of the clearest embodiments of the Medal of Honor’s standard: conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of life above and beyond the call of duty.
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