On Dec. 6, 1946, President Harry S Truman pinned seven medals on the chest of Army Sgt. Llewellyn M. “Al” Chilson. Conspicuously absent was the nation’s highest award, the Medal of Honor. Perhaps that explains why Truman said, for all those attending the White House ceremony to hear: “This is the most remarkable list of citations I have ever seen. For any one of them, this young man is entitled to all the country has to offer. These ought to be worth a Medal of Honor – that’s what I think about it.
But the Army apparently didn’t. Although he is one of the most decorated American soldiers of the twentieth century, Al Chilson never received the highest award. “He was recommended for the Medal of Honor by two separate officers for two separate events,” said his daughter Marilyn Chilson in a 2005 interview. “He deserved it and they neglected him.”
http://www.defensemedianetwork.com/stories/llewellyn-chilson-americas-neglected-warrior/