| Medal of Honor |
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| All recipients |
| American Civil War |
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| Other wars and conflicts |
| By ethnic group |
| By other criteria |
Military chaplaincy in the United States traces its origins back to the American Revolutionary War, being formally established on July 29, 1775, two weeks after the founding of the Continental Army. [1] Created during the American Civil War (1861–1865), the Medal of Honor is the United States Armed Forces' highest military decoration and is awarded to service members who have distinguished themselves in combat situations by acts of valor. [2] [3] As of February 2026 [update] , it has been awarded to 3,529 people; [4] among the recipients are nine Army and Navy chaplains, as well as one chaplain assistant. [5] [6] Francis B. Hall of the 16th New York Volunteer Infantry Regiment was the first chaplain to receive the Medal of Honor, for actions at the Battle of Salem Church in 1863. [5] [7]
Four of the chaplains who received the award served in the Union army during the American Civil War, one in the Navy during World War II, one in the Army in the Korean War, and the remaining three in the Vietnam War: two in the Army, and one in the Navy. [8] All five chaplains awarded the honor since the Civil War have been Catholic priests, two of whom, Emil Kapaun and Vincent Capodanno, are in the process of canonization as saints. [9] [10] [11]
One chaplain, Charles Liteky, returned the award, leaving it at the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in an envelope addressed to Ronald Reagan. Liteky is believed to be the only recipient of the award to renounce it for political reasons. [12] [13]
The Four Chaplains' Medal, sometimes called the "Chaplain's Medal of Honor", was created in 1960 for George L. Fox, Alexander D. Goode, John P. Washington, and Clark V. Poling, who were nominated for the Medal of Honor but were ineligible as they had not made contact with the enemy. [14] [15]
† indicates the Medal of Honor was awarded posthumously
| Image | Name | Service | Unit | Religion | Place of action | Date of action | Notes/References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| | Francis B. Hall | Union army | 16th New York Infantry Regiment | Presbyterian | Battle of Salem Church | May 3, 1863 | Hall carried wounded men to the rear under heavy fire during the Battle of Salem Church. [7] [16] He refused pay during his time of service. [5] |
| | Milton L. Haney | Union army | 55th Illinois Infantry Regiment | Methodist | Battle of Atlanta | July 22, 1864 | Haney carried a musket during the Battle of Atlanta [a] and helped retake and hold a key position. [5] |
| | James Hill | Union army | 21st Iowa Infantry Regiment | Baptist | Battle of Champion Hill | May 16, 1863 | Hill served as a first lieutenant in his unit. He captured three enemy pickets during the Battle of Champion Hill. [18] [19] [5] He only became the regimental chaplain after receiving his medal. [8] |
| | John M. Whitehead | Union army | 15th Indiana Infantry Regiment | Baptist | Battle of Stones River | December 31, 1862 | Whitehead carried soldiers from the front lines to safety in the rear several times during the Battle of Stones River. [20] [5] |
| | Joseph T. O'Callahan | United States Navy | USS Franklin (CV-13) | Catholic | Near Kobe, Japan | March 19, 1945 | O'Callahan served aboard the USS Franklin (CV-13) when it was attacked by Japanese aircraft, and ministered to the wounded and dying amid smoke and explosions. He led damage control efforts, including jettisoning ammunition and flooding the magazine. [21] |
| | Emil Kapaun † | United States Army | 8th Cavalry Regiment | Catholic | Battle of Unsan | November 1–2, 1950 | Kapaun cared for the wounded during the Battle of Unsan, walking under enemy fire to minister to wounded men. He was captured and placed in a POW camp, where he died of pneumonia in May 1951. He was awarded the Medal of Honor by Barack Obama on April 11, 2013. [8] The Archdiocese for the Military Services, USA, opened a cause for his canonization in 1993, granting him the status "Servant of God". [22] Pope Francis gave him the title "Venerable" in 2025. [23] |
| | Vincent R. Capodanno † | United States Navy | 1st Marine Division | Catholic | Operation Swift | September 4, 1967 | Capodanno served with the Marine Corps and ministered under heavy fire during Operation Swift, disregarding his own injuries. He was killed while attempting to minister to a corpsman approximately 15 yards (14 m) from an enemy machine gun. [24] |
| | Charles J. Watters † | United States Army | 173rd Support Battalion | Catholic | Battle of Dak To | November 19, 1967 | Watters was on the front line under heavy fire during the Battle of Dak To, ministering to and rescuing soldiers with "complete disregard for his safety". [25] He was killed by friendly fire from an American bomber. [26] |
| | Charles Liteky | United States Army | 199th Infantry Brigade | Catholic | Near Phuoc-Lac, Biên Hòa province, Vietnam | December 6, 1967 | Liteky rescued 23 wounded men without protective gear during an ambush in 1967. He left the Catholic priesthood in 1975 and renounced his Medal of Honor in 1986, leaving it in an envelope addressed to Ronald Reagan, as an act of protest against American foreign policy. He is believed to be the only recipient to renounce the medal for political reasons. [12] |
| Image | Name | Service | Unit | Religion | Place of action | Date of action | Notes/References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| | Calvin Pearl Titus | United States Army | 14th Infantry Regiment | Wesleyan | Battle of Peking | August 14, 1900 | Titus was a bugler in the 14th Infantry Regiment. He provided music for religious services in the unit, and became the unofficial assistant to unit chaplain Leslie Groves Sr. He scaled a wall along the eastern side of Peking to lay down suppressing fire on the enemy from above. He commissioned as an officer in 1905 and became an ordained minister in 1909. Titus was unable to become a chaplain, however, due to his denomination not being recognized by the Army at the time. He became an official chaplain assistant in the year the position was introduced. [27] |