By December 23, 1944, Biddle was serving in Europe as a
private first class in Company B of the 1st Battalion,
517th Parachute Infantry Regiment; which was attached to the
82nd Airborne Division at the time. On that day and the following day during the
Battle of the Bulge, near Soy, Belgium (now a
deelgemeente of
Érezée), he
reconnoitered the
German lines alone, killed three enemy
snipers, and silenced four hostile machine gun emplacements. A week later, he was wounded in the neck by shrapnel which just missed his
jugular vein. After recovering in England for several weeks, he headed back to his unit and on the way learned through an article in
Stars and Stripes that he would be awarded the Medal of Honor. For his actions during the battle near Soy, Biddle was awarded the Medal of Honor at the
White House on October 30, 1945, by President
Harry Truman. When presenting the medal to Biddle, Truman whispered "People don't believe me when I tell them that I'd rather have one of these than be President." Biddle was later promoted to
corporal. In addition to the Medal of Honor, he also received the
Bronze Star and
Purple Heart. == Later years and personal life ==