Appleman, Roy Edgar
East of Chosin entrapment and breakout in Korea. by Roy E. Appleman - Texas Tx A&M Univ Press 1987 - 361 p.
Includes Index and Bibliography
The war in Korea, November, 1950 --
Army troops assemble at Chosin Reservoir --
The Army occupies the Marines' forward position --
The enemy at Chosin : what was known--
the unknown --
The first night, November 27-28 --
The next day, November 28 --
The second night, November 28-29 --
The 31st Regimental Combat Team consolidates at the Inlet --
Captain Drake's second tank attack, November 29 --
The 2nd Battalion, 31st Infantry, fails to arrive --
MacArthur calls a conference, November 28 --
The third night--
Task Force Faith at the Inlet --
Withdrawal from Hudong-ni to Hagaru-ri --
The fourth night at the Inlet, November 30-December 1 --
Breakout from the Inlet Perimeter, December 1 --
The first blown bridge --
The Chinese block at Hill 1221 --
The Chinese destroy the convoy --
Those who escaped to Hagaru-ri --
The question of a relief force --
American and enemy losses --
Could Task Force Faith have been saved? --
Epilogue.
Roy Appleman's East of Chosin, first published in 1987, won acclaim from reviewers, readers, and veterans and their families. For the first time, there was one complete and accessible record of what happened to the army troops trapped east of the Chosin Reservoir during the first wintry blast of the Korean War. Based heavily on the author's interviews and correspondence with the survivors, East of Chosin provided some of those men with their first clue to the fate of fellow soldiers. In November of 1950, U.S. forces had pushed deep into North Korea. Unknown to them, Chinese troops well equipped for below zero temperatures and blizzard conditions were pushing south. With the 1st Marine Division on the west side of the frozen Chosin reservoir, the army's hastily assembled 31st Regimental Combat Team, 3,000 strong, advanced up the east side of the reservoir. Task Force Faith in the extreme northern position caught the surprise Chinese attack. With rifles and vehicles often immobilized in the cold and snow, the task force struggled to retreat through a tortuous mountain gauntlet of enemy fire. With truckloads of dead and wounded trapped along on the road, a few of the 385 survivors trudged across the frozen reservoir to alert the marines to their plight. ON THE US ARMY CHIEF OF STAFF'S PROFESSIONAL READING LIST.
57273
Korean War, Campaigns --Changjin Reservoir--Korea (North) --1950-1953
United States. Army. Regimental Combat Team, 31st.
951.9042 App 15
East of Chosin entrapment and breakout in Korea. by Roy E. Appleman - Texas Tx A&M Univ Press 1987 - 361 p.
Includes Index and Bibliography
The war in Korea, November, 1950 --
Army troops assemble at Chosin Reservoir --
The Army occupies the Marines' forward position --
The enemy at Chosin : what was known--
the unknown --
The first night, November 27-28 --
The next day, November 28 --
The second night, November 28-29 --
The 31st Regimental Combat Team consolidates at the Inlet --
Captain Drake's second tank attack, November 29 --
The 2nd Battalion, 31st Infantry, fails to arrive --
MacArthur calls a conference, November 28 --
The third night--
Task Force Faith at the Inlet --
Withdrawal from Hudong-ni to Hagaru-ri --
The fourth night at the Inlet, November 30-December 1 --
Breakout from the Inlet Perimeter, December 1 --
The first blown bridge --
The Chinese block at Hill 1221 --
The Chinese destroy the convoy --
Those who escaped to Hagaru-ri --
The question of a relief force --
American and enemy losses --
Could Task Force Faith have been saved? --
Epilogue.
Roy Appleman's East of Chosin, first published in 1987, won acclaim from reviewers, readers, and veterans and their families. For the first time, there was one complete and accessible record of what happened to the army troops trapped east of the Chosin Reservoir during the first wintry blast of the Korean War. Based heavily on the author's interviews and correspondence with the survivors, East of Chosin provided some of those men with their first clue to the fate of fellow soldiers. In November of 1950, U.S. forces had pushed deep into North Korea. Unknown to them, Chinese troops well equipped for below zero temperatures and blizzard conditions were pushing south. With the 1st Marine Division on the west side of the frozen Chosin reservoir, the army's hastily assembled 31st Regimental Combat Team, 3,000 strong, advanced up the east side of the reservoir. Task Force Faith in the extreme northern position caught the surprise Chinese attack. With rifles and vehicles often immobilized in the cold and snow, the task force struggled to retreat through a tortuous mountain gauntlet of enemy fire. With truckloads of dead and wounded trapped along on the road, a few of the 385 survivors trudged across the frozen reservoir to alert the marines to their plight. ON THE US ARMY CHIEF OF STAFF'S PROFESSIONAL READING LIST.
57273
Korean War, Campaigns --Changjin Reservoir--Korea (North) --1950-1953
United States. Army. Regimental Combat Team, 31st.
951.9042 App 15