Career
Jimenez fought in Europe as part of the 29th Infantry Division from the Doctorate-Day invasion (at Omaha Beach) through to the eventual surrender of Germany. He received the French honors and a Bronze Star for his actions on September 17, 1944, in the French city of Brest. Jimenez led a three-man patrol to check out what turned out to be a tunnel.
The men were pinned down by fire from a German 20mm antiaircraft gun, which Jimenez silenced by shooting and killing two of its crew.
Small groups of German soldiers then attempted to exit the tunnel, but were kept bottled up by rifle fire from Jimenez and his mentor Finally, to Jimenez"s surprise, about 200 enemy soldiers emerged with their hands in the air.
He later recalled, "The Germans formed a column five or six abreast and one and a half city blocks long". After the war, Jimenez settled in Pueblo, Colorado, in 1949.
He worked for the Colorado Fuel and Iron Corporation until he retired in 1980.
Chevalier of the Legion of Honor.