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Reblogged from flutterknife
flutterknife:

“I’ll Try, Sir!” Department of the Army Poster 21-73 (picture,  text)
During the fiercely opposed relief expedition to Peking in the Boxer  Rebellion in 1900, when two companies of the U.S. Army’s 14th Infantry  Regiment were pinned by heavy fire from the east wall of the Tartar City  and the Fox Tower between abutments of the Chinese City Wall near Tung  Pien Gate, volunteers were called for to attempt the first perilous  ascent of the wall.
Trumpeter Calvin P. Titus of E Company immediately  stepped forward saying, “I’ll try, sir!” Using jagged holes in the stone  wall, he succeeded in reaching the top. He was followed by the rest of  his company, who climbed unarmed, and hauled up their rifles and  ammunition belts by a rope made of rifle slings. As the troops ascended  the wall, artillery fire from Reilly’s battery set fire to the Fox Tower.  In the face of continued heavy Chinese fire, the colors broke out in  the August breeze as the sign that U.S. Army troops had achieved a major  step in the relief of the besieged Legations. For his courageous and  daring deed in being the first to climb the wall, Trumpeter Titus was  awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor.

flutterknife:

I’ll Try, Sir!” Department of the Army Poster 21-73 (picture, text)

During the fiercely opposed relief expedition to Peking in the Boxer Rebellion in 1900, when two companies of the U.S. Army’s 14th Infantry Regiment were pinned by heavy fire from the east wall of the Tartar City and the Fox Tower between abutments of the Chinese City Wall near Tung Pien Gate, volunteers were called for to attempt the first perilous ascent of the wall.
Trumpeter Calvin P. Titus of E Company immediately stepped forward saying, “I’ll try, sir!” Using jagged holes in the stone wall, he succeeded in reaching the top. He was followed by the rest of his company, who climbed unarmed, and hauled up their rifles and ammunition belts by a rope made of rifle slings. As the troops ascended the wall, artillery fire from Reilly’s battery set fire to the Fox Tower. In the face of continued heavy Chinese fire, the colors broke out in the August breeze as the sign that U.S. Army troops had achieved a major step in the relief of the besieged Legations. For his courageous and daring deed in being the first to climb the wall, Trumpeter Titus was awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor.

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