Champagne received
recruit training at
Parris Island, South Carolina, and then was stationed at
Camp Pendleton, California, for further training from June – August prior to being assigned to the 1st Marine Division, which was part of the
Eighth United States Army in Korea. He was assigned to A Company,
1st Battalion, 7th Marine Regiment. On August 25, 1951, the
7th Marines in Korea were ordered to relieve American and
South Korean Army troops in the
Punchbowl region of east-central Korea. On September 9, the 1st Battalion, 7th Marines were ordered to seize Hill 673. The hill was taken on September 12 with the help of the 2nd Battalion, 7th Marines. Afterwards the 7th Marines were in reserve. For the next six months the entire 1st Marine Division was in positional warfare. There were some local skirmishes and clashes but no real operation offensives were initiated. Champagne had deployed to Korea in October 1951. The 7th Marines were in division reserve after completing its redeployment from its positions in east-central Korea in March 1952 to relieve a South Korean Army division in western Korea. On May 11, the 7th Marines was moved out of reserve and replaced the
5th Marines at the front which was defending positions from enemy approaches to
Seoul, the capital of
South Korea. On May 26, A Company and C Company's Second Platoon, 1st Battalion, 7th Marines, were given a mission to take an enemy held hill to begin early in the morning under the cover of darkness on May 28. The C Company platoon was to be used as a diversionary force. On May 28, as A Company reached near the base of Hill 104, it was counterattacked by a Chinese platoon size force. Champagne, a
fire team leader, advanced with his fire team in the initial assaults on strongly fortified and heavily defended positions. He successfully led his four-man team through enemy grenade, small-arms, and machine gun fire to the crest of the hill. Although wounded in the encounter, he refused evacuation. The enemy counterattack intensified and an enemy grenade landed in the midst of his fire team. Without hesitation, Champagne seized the grenade and threw it at the enemy. It exploded as it left his hand and hurled him out of the trench. His action saved the lives of the other three members of his fire team in his platoon. While exposed to enemy mortar fire, he was mortally wounded and the fighting ended. C Company's platoon which was used as a diversionary force in support of A Company experienced
hand-to-hand fighting and was pinned down by heavy enemy fire as it assaulted towards their objective. "A" Company took control of the hill, but due to many casualties, both Marine units were called back to friendly lines. Cpl. Champagne and Pfc.
John D. Kelly of C Company, were both awarded the Medal of Honor posthumously for their actions that day. Champagne's Medal of Honor was presented to his 15-year-old brother, Reginald H. Champagne, by General
Reginald H. Ridgely Jr. during presentation ceremonies held at the Old Mountain Baseball Field in Wakefield, in July 1953. Champagne is buried in Saint Francis Catholic Cemetery in
Waterville, Maine. His parents and his brother were laid to rest alongside of him. == Medal of Honor Citation ==