Medal of Honor recipient Mitchell Stout dropped out of high school to serve in Vietnam War

Staff Photo by Robin Rudd / Sand bags and a rough window frame a video production about the Vietnam War.  The Charles H. Coolidge National Medal of Honor Heritage Center was photographed on February 13, 2020.
Staff Photo by Robin Rudd / Sand bags and a rough window frame a video production about the Vietnam War. The Charles H. Coolidge National Medal of Honor Heritage Center was photographed on February 13, 2020.

At age 17, Mitchell Stout dropped out of Lenoir City High School in North Carolina and enlisted in the Army. He successfully completed paratrooper school and received his wings before the Army discharged him after discovering his real age.

At that point, he had already turned 18, and he re-enlisted.

After basic training, Stout served a year in Germany and requested a tour in Vietnam. Wounded by shrapnel during from mortar round in 1969, he was awarded the Purple Heart and Bronze Star at 19.

At 20, Stout volunteered for a second tour of Vietnam. While guarding a demilitarized zone in Quang Tri Province, 400 North Vietnamese troops attacked the camp. Stout, trapped in a bunker, directed his men's fire.

When a grenade landed at his feet, Stout took it and ran out of the bunker as it exploded, saving four other men.

He died on his mother's birthday, which she never again celebrated until her death in 2009.

Stout is the only Army air defense artilleryman to be awarded the Medal of Honor. An I-75 bridge over the Tennessee River in his native Loudon County is named after him, but his Medal of Honor is accredited to North Carolina where he enlisted.

Sources: East Tennessee Veterans Memorial Association, Medal of Honor Convention

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