
Doss remarried on July 1, 1993, to Frances May Duman. Dorothy died on November 17, 1991, in a car accident, while being driven to the hospital by Desmond. ĭoss married Dorothy Pauline Schutte on August 17, 1942, and they had one child, Desmond "Tommy" Doss Jr., born in 1946. Despite the severity of his injuries, Doss managed to raise a family on a small farm in Rising Fawn, Georgia. ĭoss continued to receive treatment from the military, but after an overdose of antibiotics rendered him completely deaf in 1976, he was given 100% disability he was able to regain his hearing after receiving a cochlear implant in 1988. He underwent treatment for five and a half years – losing a lung and five ribs – before being discharged from the hospital in August 1951 with 90% disability. In 1946, Doss was diagnosed with tuberculosis, which he had contracted on Leyte. Post-war life Īfter the war, Doss initially planned to continue his career in carpentry, but extensive damage to his left arm made him unable to do so. He was awarded the Medal of Honor for his actions in Okinawa. Doss suffered a left arm fracture from a sniper's bullet while being carried back to Allied lines and at one point had seventeen pieces of shrapnel embedded in his body after attempting to kick a grenade away from him and his men. Doss was wounded four times in Okinawa, and was evacuated on May 21, 1945, aboard the USS Mercy. During the Battle of Okinawa, he saved the lives of 50–100 wounded infantrymen atop the area known by the 96th Division as the Maeda Escarpment or Hacksaw Ridge. While serving with his platoon in 1944 in Guam and the Philippines, he was awarded two Bronze Star Medals with a "V" device, for exceptional valor in aiding wounded soldiers under fire. He consequently became a medic assigned to the 2nd Platoon, Company B, 1st Battalion, 307th Infantry, 77th Infantry Division. ĭoss refused to carry a weapon into combat because of his personal beliefs as a Seventh-day Adventist against killing. Meanwhile, his brother Harold served aboard the USS Lindsey.

He was sent to Fort Jackson in South Carolina for training with the reactivated 77th Infantry Division. He chose military service, despite being offered a deferment because of his shipyard work, on April 1, 1942, at Camp Lee, Virginia. World War II service ĭoss on top of the Maeda Escarpment, May 4, 1945īefore the outbreak of World War II, Doss was employed as a joiner at a shipyard in Newport News, Virginia. ĭoss attended the Park Avenue Seventh-day Adventist Church school until the eighth grade, and subsequently found a job at the Lynchburg Lumber Company to support his family during the Great Depression. He grew up in the Fairview Heights area of Lynchburg, Virginia, alongside his older sister Audrey and younger brother Harold. His mother raised him as a devout Seventh-day Adventist and instilled Sabbath-keeping, nonviolence, and a vegetarian lifestyle in his upbringing. His life has been the subject of books, the 2004 documentary The Conscientious Objector, and the 2016 Oscar-nominated film Hacksaw Ridge, where he was portrayed by Andrew Garfield.ĭesmond Doss was born in Lynchburg, Virginia, to William Thomas Doss (1893–1989), a carpenter, and Bertha Edward Doss (née Oliver) (1899–1983), a homemaker and shoe factory worker. Doss further distinguished himself in the Battle of Okinawa by saving an estimated 75 men, acting on his own, becoming the only conscientious objector to receive the Medal of Honor for this and other actions.

He was twice awarded the Bronze Star Medal for actions on Guam and in the Philippines. Desmond Thomas Doss (February 7, 1919 – March 23, 2006) was a United States Army corporal who served as a combat medic with an infantry company in World War II.
