Turner was educated at
Wentworth Military Academy in
Lexington, Missouri. In 1918, he left Wentworth at 19 years old to fight in the
First World War in the U.S. Marine Corps, but the war ended before he was able to go overseas to join in the fighting. With the mass drawdown in force by the U.S. military at the war's end, Turner was soon discharged. During the 1920s he moved to
California, where he worked as a legal secretary for a law office. When the U.S. entered the Second World War, Turner volunteered once again to defend his country. He joined the Army from
Los Angeles in October 1942, and was assigned to C Battery of the 499th Armored Field Artillery Battalion,
14th Armored Division. For his actions on January 3, 1945, he received the
Medal of Honor from President Harry S. Truman on August 23, 1945. Turner was 46 years old at the time he received the award. Turner is the sole second former student of
Wentworth Military Academy and College to receive the Medal of Honor, and the sole recipient of the medal for the 14th Armored Division. Turner left the U.S. Army after World War II ended. He returned to California and lived out the rest of his life there, dying in 1963. He was buried at Arlington National Cemetery, at Section 41, Site 589. ==Awards==