COUNTER-ATTACKS, STALEMATE, THE OUTPOST WAR
Truce Tent and Fighting Front - Walter G. Hermes
Army Overview of this phase
China's Third Phase Campaign: Dec.31, 1950 - Jan. 8, 1951
China Invades South Korea - The Fatal Step
Chinese Third Phase Campaign: CCF Captures Seoul, January 4, 1951
China's Third Phase Campaign: Dec.31, 1950 - Jan. 8, 1951
CCF Crosses the Han River
Operation Thunderbolt: 25-31 January, 1951
Close Air Support for 7th Cavalry near Ich'on, January 26
Reconnaissance in Force
Thunderbolt Continued: 1-11 February, 1951
5th RCT Advance toward the Han, February 5, 1951
Reconnaissance in Force
Advance to the Han
CCF XIII Army Group Attacks Hoengsong
Destroys ROK 8th Division, February 12, 1951
Battle For Hoengsong
Restoring The Balance
Defending the Wonju Line, 13-18 February 1951
CCF 39th, 40th and 42nd Armies stopped at Chipyong-ni
Chipyong-ni
Korean War Tanks and Fighting Vehicles
Captured M46 heavy tank
Operation Killer: February 20 - March 6, 1951
Chinese dead, and prisoners captured by men of 1st Cavalry Division
Operation Ripper: March 6-31, 1951
25th Infantry Division Tanks re-cross the Han, March 7, 1951
Seoul Retaken
ROK 1st Division re-enters Seoul, March 15
South Korean civilians begin returning shortly afterwards
Operation RIPPER
Operation Rugged : April 1-22, 1951
Advance to the 38th Parallel
Airborne 187th RCT, March 24, 1951
Assault at East Munson-ni
CCF Fifth Phase Campaign: April 22 - June 10, 1951
Moving up for the attack
40th Corps tries to encircle US 24th Infantry Division, April 24, 1951
British 29th Infantry Brigade Resting After Retreat From Imjin, 4/26/51
Probably either Royal Ulster Rifles or Northumberland Fusiliers
U.K., Canadian, Australian and Belgian units of the British 29th Brigade at parade rest as the Presidential Unit Citation is awarded to the British Gloucestershire Battalion.
General Van Fleet pins the PUC award on Glosters Sgt. Major Blackford
B26 Air Support
Flying at low level in the face of intense ground fire, 3rd Bomb Wing B26 makes pin-point napalm drop on dominating enemy hill-top positions.
The CCF and NK armies fought their fifth phase campaign with ferocity, determination and skill but they had suffered terrible casualties from massive artillery barrages, defensive tank and infantry fire, and B26 bomber attacks as they deployed forward in their attacks.
Squadrons of B26 Invaders pounded the exposed CCF when they deployed in the open in their attacks.
This B26 had its hydraulic system jammed by ground fire and is making a successful belly-landing.
CCF and NK ground fire developed to a maximum in late 1952, but was extremely accurate all through the war. Here, Lt. Col. Gordon Blood, commander of 49th Fighter-Bomber group smiles at the huge hole in the right wing of his F-84 Thunder jet, apparently hit during a bombing run over North Korea in 1952.
He could smile at it then, but he didn't smile much at the time he was hit. It was a little like being in a train wreck.
Below The Soyang: 16-20 May, 1951
CCF forces cross the Chau-ni River under heavy artillery fire
Air-to-ground support
Savagely effective air-to-ground support was available to 1stMarDiv and other UN forces from Corsairs on the Aircraft Carrier Sicily.
Counter Attack: May 20 - July 1, 1951
7th Infantry near Chunchon, May 24
7th Infantry Division 75-mm recoilless rifle gunner grimaces as he fires in support of infantry units directly across the valley. An observer (standing, with field glasses) will note effectiveness of their fire while the crew reloads the next round.
Cpl. Ron Cashman, Korea 1951 - 53.
Military Medal, Wounded in action on three occasions.
C.S.M. of B Coy. 3 RAR WOII Wing Kee, 1952
Outside entrance to his foxhole.
3rd Infantry Division, July 3, 1951
Advancing in the Iron Triangle Sobang Hills
The Punchbowl, 1951
Center of eastern MLR
5th Marines Sniper, Punchbowl area 1951
Using M1903A3/Unertl
Second Division troops on Bloody Ridge, September 1951
North Korean troops had fought bitterly
CCF Island Hopping, with air-ground support
November, 1951
Of tactical interest, these were the first Chinese assaults where they used air-ground support, presumably with Stormovik piston aircraft. Another Chinese photo claims to be of one such plane and pilot which they say shot down one jet and damaged three others.
In Chinese trench at 'The Hinge'
Just north of 317, October 1951
POWs from British Commonwealth Division, November 1951
Captured during Hill 317 (Maryang San) action
William Speakman
Private, Later Sergeant
The King's Own Scottish Borderers
British Commonwealth Forces in Korea Commonwealth troops serving in Korea included British, Canadian, Australian, New Zealander, and South African contingents.
CCF Supply Train, '51 or '52
Underground Wall Of China
China's Main Line Of Resistance
Marine PFC pulls a shell fragment from his armored vest
Above: Hit by Mortar shell war-head
Right: Grenade exploded inches away.
Armored vests saved these Marines lives
Bosun's Chair
Oooops! Don't let me feet get wet
Prompt medical attention saves lives.
Wounded 3/23/2id scout given aid as wounded ROK helped up the hill by other scouts
Some UN Members helped in Korean War with medical aid
13th May 1953, patrol from 3RAR mounting out from "Little Gibraltar"
The patrol would suffer tragic loss in assaulting "Cloncurry"
CCF Unit Leader getting instructions for assault
Note the canvas carrying pouches for the stick grenades used in assault
Sixa platoon gearing up for patrol
Flak jackets were key for some of us getting home again
Air Strike North of Punchbowl, 1953
Run by Gus Breen while on line
AD-5 and AD-6 in formation
MiG Killers
4th Fighter Interceptor Group - the MiG Killers. Major James Jabara, left, the world's first jet ace, shakes hands with Captain Manuel "Pete" Fernandez minutes after the Captain destroyed two MiGs over MiG Alley. Jabara ended the war with the second highest kill claim record of 15, and Fernandez was right behind with 14.5.
Death in the night . Credit for the first jet night kill went to this Marine flying team, Major William Stratton, Jr. (pointing) and Sergeant Hans Hoglind. Flying a Douglas "Skylight" they shot down a YAK-15.
YAK-15
F-86
CCF T34 dug into hilltop and camouflaged
Used as support artillery very effectively when battle movement was still fluid. In the static phase, tanks in emplacements were mostly just targets.
CCF Multibarreled Rockets
An eerie set of calling cards for UN recipients
CCF MiGs
Pilot and crew chief talking over aircraft performance
Although China had only 500 fighters of all kinds in July, 1951, within a year they had built up to 1500 MiG fighters, based in sanctuaries in Manchuria, which UN pilots were forbidden to attack
Sniper Zhang Taofang, top CCF Sniper
Australian Invented Napham Rockets
First combat firing
Never made it back home
77 Squadron P-51 Mustang
8-in Howitzer and Crew
White Horse Hill (Hill 395), October 1952
ROK 9th Division fights off CCF assaults, October 3-12 1952
Winter, '52-'53 - Chinese Bunker
Triangle Hill Complex, on the forward slope of Sniper Ridge
Capt. Tom Crawford, March 1953, attacking Papa-San, Central Korea
Pyok Tong, North Korea POW Camp
Graveyard for many UN prisoners
This lovely close-up is of a POW camp at Pyok Tong North Korea. The not so lovely part is that over 2000 UN prisoners are buried behind the camp.
Many UK prisoners from the Imjim battles ended up in that camp. Most of the Glosters were marched for 6 weeks to that place, then the officers and NCOs were separated from the men in case they influenced them.
Marines make a different "Amphibious" Landing
Jamestown Line, 1953
The Last Winter, '52-'53 - 25id Bunkers
A Marine with disassembled M20 3.5in Rocket Launcher, after after a patrol in the Nevada Cities area, 1953
Marine combat outposts named Reno, Carson and Vegas, called the Nevada Cities, were north of Seoul on three strategic crests near Panmunjom.
Talks Begin
Kaesong, July 8, 1951
Kaesong, the old capitol of Korea
Koje-do POW Camp
Prisoners in a compound of the Koje-do POW camp, ca early 1952
The village in background was later evacuated and burned to prevent exchange of information between prisoners and villagers
In June, General Boatner used infantrymen supported by tanks to regain control of the Koje-do compounds, dragging communist leader Col. Lee out of the compound by the seat of his pants. 31 prisoners were killed and scores wounded, but order was finally restored.
Below are some of the weapons seized in compound 76.
Clark Signs Armistice, Panmunjom, July 27, 1953
After over two years of posturing and frustrations, at the price of about half the total military casualties of the Korean War, an Armistice was finally signed and the butchery stopped at last.
The Armistice Building at Panmunjom
Bloody Ridge
(National Archives)
Heartbreak Ridge
(National Archives)
P'anmunjom truce tents
(National Archives)
Winter in Korea
(National Archives)
Repatriation screening of Communist POWs. 1952
(National Archives)
Soldiers of Battery C, 936th Field Artillery Batt
Artillery may have dominated the battlefield, but ultimately it was infantry that captured and held ground.
Here, Company F, 9th Infantry, advances in central Korea.
(National Archives)
A soldier from the 180th Infantry mans a machine gun from inside a bunker;
Below, living quarters inside a "hootchie."
(National Archives)
7th Infantry Division trenches, July 1953
(National Archives)
Lt. Gen. William K. Harrison, Jr., U.S. Army and Lt. Gen. Nam Il, North Korean People's Army, sign the armistice agreement on 27 July 1953.
(National Archives)