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2RHPZ
07-05-2004, 07:09 PM
Last battle for Pork Chop Hill: from July 6-11, 1953, the 17th and 32nd regiments of the 7th Infantry Division waged a deadly struggle against the Chinese - Korean War

At 10:25 p.m. on July 6, 1953, during a heavy monsoon rainstorm, a thunderous artillery and mortar barrage began falling all across the 7th Infantry Division's Main Line of Resistance (MLR). A reinforced battalion of more than 700 soldiers from the Chinese Communist Forces (CCF) 200th Regt., 67th Div., moved quietly toward Pork Chop Hill.

The small, one-company outpost, 500 yards north of the MLR, initially received no incoming rounds, but CCF batteries soon expanded their bombardment to the hill. On outpost duty facing the CCF battalion was A Co., 1st Bn., 17th Inf. Regt.

As the attack unfolded, A Company's Pvt. Angelo Palermo said, "It looked like ... a moving carpet of yelling, howling men--whistles and bugles blowing, their officers screaming like women driving their men uphill."

Located beneath the hill's crest in a bunker near the company command post (CP), Cpl. Dale W. Cain heard his radio suddenly come alive with traffic. From outguards manning listening posts in front of The Chop came reports of "enemy in large numbers." An ambush patrol from B Company called from beyond the listening posts, "We're coming in!"

In another bunker near the company CP, the sound of artillery slamming into the hills and valleys south of Pork Chop jolted Pvt. Robert E. Miller to sleepy confusion. "All hell's broken loose," he thought. He left his sleeping bunker and entered the covered trench heading toward his fighting position wondering what was going on. "Go get your rifle!" someone yelled.

The assault triggered five days of savage fighting. Before the battle ended, the 7th Division's 17th and 32nd Infantry regiments committed 12 additional companies, plus combat engineers and a weapons company machine gun platoon to hold Pork Chop. Integral to each company were 20 to 25 English-speaking South Korean soldiers.

Grinding Stalemate

Defenders counted nine enemy assaults the night of July 6-7. While suffering heavy casualties, A Company gave ground grudgingly. It fell back to an alternate CP on the hill's south slope and was forced to give up 35 of its 65 fighting positions, yet held in the face of overwhelming odds.

In spite of two reinforcing American companies, the next morning the enemy held the north, west and most of the east slopes, and the crest of the hill. The CCF's hold on communication trenches between the east and west sectors nearly cut the perimeter in half.

Defenders held most of the outpost's rear, including the covered main trench and Pork Chop's lifeline--the access road running from the 7th Division's rear, through the MLR, to the armored personnel carrier (APC) landing at the main trench rear entrance.

The first night's fighting set the pattern of shattering artillery and mortar fire, attack and counterattack, and grinding stalemate, with friendly and enemy-held bunkers intermingled. In the succeeding days, neither side was able to drive the other from the outpost.

Valiant Defense

In Pork Chop's final, hellish nightmare, American soldiers performed extraordinary feats of devotion to duty, courage and sacrifice.

A Company's soldiers saw Master Sgt. Howard C. Hovey fiercely fight his last battle the night of July 6-7. At age 42, the highly respected "old man," who, in WWII, participated in the liberation of Nazi death camps, expected to retire when he returned from Korea.

He died defending the main trench and company CP against enemy assaults. This bought time and lives for the CP's relocation to an alternate bunker on the outpost's south slope. He posthumously received the Distinguished Service Cross (DSC).

The swarming enemy isolated A Company's Pvt. Bob Miller, a South Korean soldier and several other members of Cpl. Charlie Brooks' squad, in their bunker. An enemy grenade tore off Miller's right leg below the knee and shattered his left. Another squad member, Paul Sanchez, saved his life with a tourniquet and bandages.

Late in the afternoon of July 7, still trapped and nearly out of ammo, Brooks faced an agonizing decision. "Can you hold on?" he asked Miller. They would carry Miller into the covered trench outside their bunker where he could sit against the wall, alone, with a box of grenades next to him, and see or hear approaching enemy. The rest would crawl through the firing aperture, make their way around the hill to the medics, and tell them Miller's location.

He did hold on through the next night. Every time he heard voices approaching, speaking Chinese, he threw a grenade in their direction. The voices ceased after each explosion.

On the morning of July 8, he heard a flame thrower behind him, around the corner toward the company CP. He yelled, "What the hell are you doing? Cut that damn thing off!" He breathed a sigh of relief when he heard an American voice say, "He's one of us." Miller soon left Pork Chop by APC, and later received the Silver Star.

Cpl. Robert Northcutt was a squad leader and machine gunner in G Co., 17th Regt., when it counterattacked into a hail of enemy fire at 3:40 p.m., July 8. Northcutt recalls, "I lost contact with my company, had two men killed and others wounded. We ran low on ammunition, and gathered weapons and ammunition from the dead."

Early on July 9, the 17th's K and I companies counterattacked, passing through the small defense perimeter set up on the hill's east shoulder by Northcutt and other G Company soldiers. An enemy sniper opened fire, stalling the assault. Northcutt responded.

His men saw him become the sniper's bait, fleetingly presenting himself as a target. The sniper gave himself away. Northcutt immediately charged, killing him with rapid-fired rounds from his pistol. This and other heroic acts prompted award of the DSC to Northcutt--another powerful example of Pork Chop's valiant defenders.

Eight more DSCs--three posthumous--and hundreds more decorations for valor were awarded to the men of Pork Chop Hill. Cpl. Dan D. Schoonover, A Co., 13th Eng. Combat Bn., and 1st Lt. Richard T. Shea, Jr., A Co., 17th Inf. Regt., received posthumous Medals of Honor.

Shea, a former enlisted man who graduated from West Point in 1952, entered the Army during WWII at age 17. He was a much-admired, record-setting captain of Army's track team, and could have pursued Olympic glory if he chose. He didn't, and on Pork Chop, as A Company's executive officer, he fought in every sector of the hill, leading numerous localized counterattacks those first two days.

A and B companies were ordered to withdraw July 8, replaced by counterattacking E and G companies. Covered by rifle fire from Lt. Col. "Rocky" Read, the 1st Battalion commander, Shea dashed along the access road to the east shoulder of Pork Chop. He was making contact with A Company's 2nd Platoon to bring them off the hill via APCs.

When he saw G Company decimated by intense fire, and another enemy battalion approaching the defensive perimeter, he gathered a group of G Company soldiers and launched another series of localized counterattacks. He was last seen in furious hand-to-hand fighting.

On Hallowed Ground

On orders issued at 11:45 a.m., July 11, the 7th Division abandoned the outpost by 7:20 p.m. Americans suffered 243 KIA, 916 WIA and at least nine POWs. South Koreans lost 15 KIA, 129 WIA and 17 MIA in the month of July, nearly all on Pork Chop. The Chinese sustained an estimated 6,050 casualties.

Ralph K. Kramer remembered the carnage years later. "I was fortunate I never had to kill anyone. But when I came off the hill, I was blood from top to bottom. I was soaked in human blood," the E Company medic said. Only 15 riflemen and two medics of that company did not become casualties.

Several factors accounted for U.S. casualties not being even higher. Body armor was one. Use of APCs also helped. APCs included the older, open top M-39, as well as newer, fully enclosed T-18s. The latter was invaluable in protecting wounded and safely transporting troops back and forth to The Chop. Finally, a record 115,000 rounds of artillery were fired in defending the outpost, keeping the enemy at bay.

In Korea's long-hostile DMZ, Pork Chop Hill now stands in silent tribute to hundreds from both sides who still sleep on its hallowed ground.

BILL McWILLIAMS, an Air Force Vietnam veteran, is author of the forthcoming On Hallowed Ground: The Last Battle for Pork Chop Hill (Naval Institute Press).

2RHPZ
07-05-2004, 07:15 PM
A couple months ago ...


Combat on `the chop': as truce talks at Panmunjom dragged on "with all the speed of a stiff concrete mix" in April 1953, two 7th Infantry Division regiments waged a vicious struggle to hold, and then retake, a 255-yard hill in west-central Korea. After 45 hours and brutal losses, GIs finally declared victory - Korean War - battle of Pork Chop Hill, Korean War

By mid-April 1953, the Korean War had been reduced to a series of sporadic, fiercely violent fights for non-descript hills near the 38th Parallel. Strategy was aimed at grabbing land to bolster negotiating positions during armistice talks at Panmunjom. Winning the war--for either side--was no longer an option.

As talks wore on, Chinese Communist Forces (CCF) eyed Hill 255, better known as Pork Chop Hill.

S.L.A. Marshall, in his 1956 classic Pork Chop Hill, described it: "A solidly revetted rifle trench encircled it at the military crest, providing wall and some roof cover, which served for defense in any direction. Sandbagged and heavily timbered, fire-slotted bunkers were tied into the trench line at approximately 30yard intervals. They gave troops protection while affording observation and command of the slope."

Defending the hill were 96 GIs comprising the 1st and 3rd platoons, E Co., 2nd Bn., 31st Regt. Shortly after 7:30 p.m. on April 16, the 3rd Platoon sent out 20 soldiers to man 10 "listening posts" in trenches and foxholes on the north slope of Pork Chop Hill.

At 10:50 p.m., the CCF opened up a 10-minute artillery attack as two of its infantry companies crept up the slopes.

"When the barrage lifted, they were already there, on top of everybody," said Charles Brooks, a squad leader with E Co. "We looked out and saw Chinese all over the hill. It was eleven o'clock at night but everything was all lit up [by flares, artillery, mortars and searchlights]. It was as bright out there as a football stadium at night."

By midnight, the CCF had overrun the summit, which left isolated pockets of U.S. troops scattered on the hill. Most of E Company's 1st Platoon had been wiped out. Chaos and confusion, as well as lack of water, ammunition and communication, bedeviled the defenders.

"We fired until we ran out of ammo or the barrels of our weapons melted," said Sgt. 1st Class Jerl Wooddell of the 1st Plt., E Co., 31st Inf. "The Chinks overran our positions, and we got into hand-to-hand combat in the trenches."

U.S. Infantry Counterattacks

At 2 a.m. on April 17, a platoon from L Co., 31st Inf. Regt., made an attempt to reach E Co.'s command post on the hill.

"They were hit by the Chinese," said Sgt. Samuel K. Maxwell, a medic with 1st Plt., K Co., 31st Inf. Regt. "I remember retrieving three bodies the day after the battle."

Two hours later, 135 men of K Co. [led by Lt. Joe Clemons, who was portrayed by Gregory Peck in the 1959 film Pork Chop Hill] and two platoons (62 men) from L Co. ascended Pork Chop. The GIs fought their way to E Co.'s command post by 8 a.m. They joined the five GIs there, but paid a high cost: L Co. had only 10 of its original 62 men and K Co. had 18 killed and 71 wounded. In the meantime, the CCF added three more companies to the fight.

At around 8:30 a.m., G Co., 17th Regt., started up Pork Chop. By 3 p.m., the unit had lost half its men and left the hill. At this point in the battle, U.S. 8th Army commanders had decided the hill was too important to abandon, which would have given the Chinese a victory to tout at the armistice talks. More GIs were committed to the fight.

"Our mission was to construct field fortifications on the hill and to dig out the collapsed trench system," said Master Sgt. Richard J. Astrup, A Co., 13th Engineer Bn., 17th Inf. Regt. "During the course of the battle we were relieved as engineers and reverted to infantry. In fact, just about every unit in the 7th Division was reassigned as infantry."

At 9:30 p.m., F Co., 17th Regt., began moving up the hill and were almost immediately hit by CCF artillery. U.S. artillery retaliated, scattering CCF reinforcements. The CCF responded with yet another infantry company.

Artillery Barrages a Record

At 1 a.m. on April 18, with U.S. troops holding only 5% of the hill, E Co., 17th Regt., advanced, trying to drive the Chinese away from the 25 beleaguered GIs still defending E Co., 31st Regiment's command post.

"The Chinese broke into the command post at 0200 hours, firing Tommy guns and grenades" Korean War vet William Hothan said. "They were killed, but all our men in the command post were wounded. At 0230, Chinese artillery hit and caved in the command post and their infantry began closing in on us."

For the next 15 hours, U.S. and Chinese forces fought each other. The battle swung as each side added reinforcements (the CCF called in a company at around 4:30 a.m., while A Co., 17th Regt., joined the fight about 6 a.m.). Finally, at around 6 p.m., the GIs drove the CCF off the hill for good.

One characteristic of the battle was the huge amount of artillery barrages--from both sides--that pummeled Pork Chop. On the U.S. side, nine artillery battalions from the 2nd and 7th divisions fired 115,004 rounds on the hill, which many military historians believe is a record for such a small front. The barrages pinned down soldiers, preventing either side from advancing successfully.

"Pork Chop was a reinforced platoon forward position," Astrup said. "It was not meant to harbor a company of infantry, much less a battalion plus support units. The hill was literally covered with parts of bodies"

Though a costly battle, the struggle for Pork Chop Hill was not finished. The Americans reinforced their positions, and the CCF attacked again in July. But all through May and June, Chinese units continually tried to regain a foothold.

On June 4, an 11-man patrol from K Co., 17th Regt., spotted a Chinese platoon trying to dig in on Pork Chop's north slope, and a firefight erupted. The U.S. patrol soon ran low on ammunition, and the patrol leader signaled to pull back. The Chinese rushed forward, but Pvt. Charles H. Barker refused to let them advance.

"He rose to one knee, triggering bursts from his BAR into the charging enemy," Edward F. Murphy wrote in Korean War Heroes. "When the patrol members last saw Barker he was grappling hand-to-hand with an enemy soldier. Because of Barker's willing self-sacrifice, the rest of the patrol safely returned to their outpost."

Barker was posthumously awarded the Medal of Honor. Pork Chop Hill would be the scene of an even more brutal battle three months later in July.