Texas 2015 - 84th Regular

Texas Senate Bill SCR46 Latest Draft

Bill / Senate Committee Report Version Filed 02/02/2025

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                            By: Rodríguez S.C.R. No. 46
 (In the Senate - Filed May 12, 2015; May 12, 2015, read
 first time and referred to Committee on Veteran Affairs and
 Military Installations; May 15, 2015, reported favorably by the
 following vote:  Yeas 5, Nays 0; May 15, 2015, sent to printer.)
Click here to see the committee vote


 SENATE CONCURRENT RESOLUTION
 WHEREAS, The Texas Legislative Medal of Honor was established
 to recognize gallant and intrepid service by a member of the state
 or federal military forces, and United States Army Private
 Marcelino Serna proved himself a deserving recipient of this
 prestigious honor with his heroic actions during World War I; and
 WHEREAS, Born in Chihuahua, Mexico, in 1896, Mr. Serna came
 to the United States as a young man and spent time in Texas, Kansas,
 and Colorado; after the United States entered World War I in 1917,
 he enlisted in the United States Army at the age of 20, and after
 only three weeks of training, he was shipped overseas with the 355th
 Infantry, 89th Division; when his superior officers in France
 learned that he was not a United States citizen, they gave him the
 opportunity to return home, but Private Serna chose to stay and
 fight; and
 WHEREAS, Private Serna quickly established himself as a
 remarkable soldier, and on at least two occasions, he demonstrated
 exceptional resourcefulness and courage; during an engagement near
 the French town of Saint Mihiel, 12 members of his unit were hit by
 fire from an enemy machine gun, and Private Serna obtained
 permission from his lieutenant to scout out the gun emplacement on
 his own; moving through heavy fire, and surviving two rounds that
 were deflected by his helmet, he tossed four hand grenades into the
 machine gun nest, killing six of the enemy; he then took the eight
 survivors captive; and
 WHEREAS, Shortly thereafter, during the Meuse-Argonne
 campaign, Private Serna embarked on a second lone scouting mission;
 he began by wounding a German sniper with a shot from 200 yards,
 then followed the injured man into a trench; firing and hurling
 grenades in all directions to make it seem as if he were part of a
 larger force, he shot three German soldiers immediately, then
 attacked an enemy dugout, felling 26 more and capturing 24; he
 single-handedly held the prisoners at gunpoint until other members
 of his unit arrived; and
 WHEREAS, Private Serna continued to serve in combat until the
 end of the war, receiving a wound in each leg, and while he was
 recovering in a French hospital, he was presented with the
 Distinguished Service Cross from the American commander in France,
 General John J. Pershing; he also earned the World War I Victory
 Medal with five stars, the Victory Medal with three campaign bars,
 the Saint Mihiel Medal, the Verdun Medal, and two Purple Hearts; he
 was further decorated by the governments of France, Italy, and the
 United Kingdom, receiving two French Croix de Guerre with Palm
 Medals, the French Medaille Militaire, the French Commemorative
 Medal, the British Medal of Honor, and the Italian Cross of Merit;
 and
 WHEREAS, After returning to the United States, Mr. Serna
 became a United States citizen in 1924 and settled in El Paso, where
 he lived until his death in 1992; he was the most decorated Texas
 veteran of World War I, winning every major military award short of
 the Congressional Medal of Honor, and petitions have been put forth
 on several occasions to grant him that commendation as well; and
 WHEREAS, Marcelino Serna's courageous battlefield actions
 during World War I have been recognized with a host of illustrious
 commendations, and it is indeed appropriate that he be honored with
 the highest military award granted by the state in which he made his
 home; now, therefore, be it
 RESOLVED, That the 84th Legislature of the State of Texas
 hereby direct the governor of the State of Texas to posthumously
 award the Texas Legislative Medal of Honor to Marcelino Serna in
 recognition of his valiant efforts during World War I.
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