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Chronology



List members,

Below is a sample of the Korean War Chronology I'm thinking about posting
on my Korean War web site (which is still off line at this time.)  Currently
I have broken the time frames down into 12 sections but may break it down
further for the Oct 51 to July 53 periods.  Suggestions and comments
appreciated.

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--------------------------------
                WITHDRAWAL TO THE PUSAN PERIMETER
                                         Jun 25 to Aug 3, 1950
                                    Compiled by Ed Evanhoe, June 2000


June 25, 1950

At approximately 4 a.m. (Korean Standard Time) on a rainy Sunday 
morning  Democratic People’s Republic of Korea Army (DPRK - North Korea) 
artillery and mortars open fire on Republic of Korea (ROK - South Korea) 
Army positions south of the 38th Parallel, the line then serving as the 
border between the two countries.  The opening barrage is followed shortly 
by tank/infantry attacks at all points along the Parallel.  At 11 a.m. 
North Korea announced a formal declaration of war and what is now know as 
“The Korean War” officially began.  In this announcement North Korea 
claimed ROK forces on the Ongjin Peninsula had attacked North Korea in the 
Haeju area (west) and their declaration of war was in response to this 
attack.  This claim was bogus.

U.S. President Harry S. Truman was notified of the invasion and returned 
from his home in Independence, Missouri, to Washington, D.C., arriving in 
the early afternoon. Meanwhile the U.N. Security Council passed a 
resolution calling for the immediate cessation of hostilities and the 
withdrawal of North Korean forces to north of the 38th Parallel.

June 26, 1950

Uijonbu falls to North Korean forces.  South Korean government – President 
Sygman Rhee and cabinet – leave Seoul for Taejon.

President Truman meets with State Department and Defense Department 
officials.  He authorizes
General Douglas MacArthur to: (1) send ammunition and equipment to prevent 
the loss of Seoul,
(2) provide ships and aircraft to evacuate American citizens, plus Air 
Force fighters and Navy ships to protect the evacuation, and (3) send a 
survey party to Korea to study the situation determine how best to help the 
ROK government and military.  Later in the day President Truman expanded 
his instructions by ordering General MacArthur to use Air Force aircraft 
and Navy ships against all North Korean military targets south the 38th 
Parallel.  General MacArthur issues an “alert order” telling all combat 
units in the Far East to prepare for possible deployment to Korea.

June 27, 1950

U.S. Ambassador Muccio & staff leave Seoul for Suwon.  ROK Army 
headquarters  leave Seoul for Sihung-ni (about 5 miles south of 
Yongdungp’o) without informing their U.S. advisors with
the Korean Military Advisory Group (KMAG.)   KMAG follows ROKA Hq to 
Sihung-ni shortly thereafter. After discussions, most of ROKA Hq and KMAG 
return to Seoul a few hours later.

During the late evening, the U.N. Security council passes a resolution 
calling for member nations to give military aid to South Korea.

Meanwhile, in compliance with President Truman’s order to provide help to 
South Korea and the use of U.S. air and naval forces south of the 38th 
Parallel, General MacArthur sent a fact finding group, headed by Brig. 
General Church, to Korea.  This group left Japan at approximately 4 a.m. 
and arriving at Suwon in the early afternoon where they set up a temporary 
headquarters.

June 28, 1950

ROKA engineers blow the Han River Bridge at approximately 2:15 a.m. 
trapping the bulk of 3 ROKA divisions fighting on the outskirts, plus ROKA 
Hq and KMAG personnel still in Seoul.  Somewhere between 500 and 800 people 
– civilian & military– are killed in the explosion. All KMAG  were able to 
escape across the Han River later in the day via still-operating ferries, 
arriving in Suwon late that afternoon, where KMAG senior personnel briefed 
Gen. Church.

North Korean force entered Seoul in the early afternoon and street fighting 
ensued but by midnight Seoul was in North Korean hands.

June 29, 1950

Detachment “X,” 33 officers and men from the 507th Antiaircraft Artillery 
Battalion, arrive at Suwon and set up their weapons.  During the day they 
engage 4 enemy planes, shooting down
one and damaging another.  These are the first American ground troops into 
Korea and theirs are the first shots fired by U.S. Army personnel arriving 
from Japan.

Gen. MacArthur flies to Suwon and confers with General Church and KMAG 
staff, then returns to Japan where he sends a message to the Joint Chiefs 
recommending introducing U.S. ground forces into battle. President Truman 
receives and approves the recommendation.

USS Juneau shells North Korean positions in the Samch’ok-Kangnung area 
(east coast.)

North Korean troops cross the Han River in the Kimpo area and take the air 
field.

June 30, 1950

Gen. MacArthur receives permission to employ U.S. ground support forces and 
to carry the war into North Korea and the waters offshore but to stay well 
clear of the Manchurian and Soviet borders.  Later in the day he receives 
permission to deploy one (1) Regimental Combat Team (RCT) to Korea to 
establish a defense line in Pusan area to assure retention of the port.  A 
few hours after this the order was expanded to 2 combat divisions and with 
permission to employ these forces against North Korean forces in the Suwon 
area.  The United States was now fully committed to the Korean War.

General Church goes to Osan (12 miles south of Suwon so he can communicate 
with Far East Command Headquarters via telephone. He  is told that if Suwon 
Air Field can be held, 2 U.S. infantry battalions will be flown in the next 
day.  While he is in Osan, ADSCOM personnel panic in the belief they about 
to be surrounded, destroy their documents and radios, then move to Suwon 
Air Field to set up a defense perimeter.  Once there, they decide to 
retreat south to Taejon and order AAA personnel to accompany them.  General 
Church meets the retreating Americans on the road and orders them back to 
Suwon but finding all communications equipment destroyed, orders all to 
fall back to Taejon.

In Japan, MacArthur orders the 24th Infantry Division, Maj. Gen. William F. 
Dean Commanding, to deploy to Korea.  At approximately 10:30 PM the 1st 
Battalion, 21st Infantry Regiment, 24th Division – less “A”& “D” companies, 
was ordered to proceed to Itazuke Air Base fro immediate deployment to 
Korea, thus forming the infantry element of what would become Task Force 
Smith (TFS.)

July 1, 1950

ADSCOM establishes a headquarters at Taejon.  Task Force Smith (“B” & “C” 
Companies, ½ 1st Battalion Headquarters Company, ½ a communications 
platoon, a composite platoon of 75mm recoilless rifle with of 4 guns, and 4 
4.2" mortars – 406 total)  troops destined to be flown into Suwon are flown 
into Pusan instead and were immediately put on a train for 
Taejon.  Remainder of 24th Division to follow.  Gen. Dean is also named to 
command all U.S. Army Forces in Korea (USAFIK.)

July 2, 1950

TFS officers and men arrive in Taejon at approximately 8 a.m.  That evening 
TFS is ordered north to the towns of P’yongtaek and Ansong, arriving after 
dark.  C Company dug in at P’yongtaek and B Company at Ansong.

USS Juneau and 2 British ships engage 4 NK torpedo boats escorting 10 small 
wooden freighters. 2 torpedo boats and 7 freighters destroyed.

34th Infantry Regiment, 24th Infantry Division, arrives at Pusan

July 3, 1950

General Dean arrives at Taejon and takes command of USAFIK.

Aircraft from the USS Valley Forge and HMS Triumph attack air fields in the 
P’yongyang-Chinnamp’o west coast area.

A Royal Australian Air Force F-51 mistakenly attacks an ammunition train 
stopped at the P’yongtaek Railroad station, causing it to 
explode.  Railroad station was destroyed.

Two USAF Tactical Air Control Parties (TAC) arrive at Taejon.

North Korean forces take Inch’on and Yongdungp’o.

July 4, 1950

Task Force Smith consolidated at P’yongtaek and was joined by part of the 
52nd Field Artillery Battalion.  This artillery contingent consisted of ½ 
of Headquarters and Service Batteries and all of “A” Battery with 6 105-mm 
howitzers, a total of 108 men and officers.  Task Force Smith ordered take 
up positions north of Osan.

2nd and 3rd Battalions, plus regimental support troops,  21st  Infantry 
Regiment arrive at Pusan.


July 5, 1950

Approximately 3 a.m. Task Force Smith reached the selected defense 
positions approximately 2-1/2 miles north of Osan and began digging 
in.  The 52nd Field Artillery guns dug in a mile and half or so to the 
south of TFS positions with one gun dug in a half mile or so to TFS’s 
rear.  This one gun had all the High-Explosive Anti-Tank (HEAT) rounds the 
artillery had brought with them – 7 rounds.

A little after 7 a.m. a North Korean tank column, with a few infantry 
riding, was spotted coming the road.  8:16 a.m. the 52nd Field fired the 
first artillery rounds by an American unit of the Korean War at the 
advancing T-34 tanks.  Artillery fire was accurate but ineffective against 
the tanks as was fire from the 75mm recoilless rifles and 2.36" Bazookas 
fired the tanks as they continued without stopping past Task Force Smith 
defenses and on south.  It did, however, kill or wound most of  the 
infantry on the tanks.   Two tanks were disabled but were pushed off the 
road.  In total, 33 T-34 tanks went through Task Force Smith infantry 
positions by 9 a.m and through the 52nd artillery positions by 10:15 a.m 
and continued on toward Osan.

Meanwhile a relative calm settled over TFS infantry positions.  At 
approximately 10 a.m. a column of trunks and infantry could be seen coming 
down the road.  Led by three tanks, this column was several miles long and 
arriving at point approximately 1000 yards north of TFS infantry 
positions.  At  approximately 11 a.m., TFS mortars and .50 caliber machineguns
opened fire on the column.  The fire was effective.  Trucks blew up and men 
were blown into the air. Everyone who could took cover in ditches and rice 
paddies but the three T-34 tanks continued to advance and took TFS infantry 
positions under fire.  Meanwhile North Korean infantry quickly reorganized 
and began a double envelopment of TFS’s flanks.  By 2:30 p.m. North Korean 
units were on Task Force Smith’s flanks while a huge North Korean reserve 
waited on the road so the order to pull out and fall back was 
given.  American forces in Korea had suffered their first defeat.  It was a 
costly one for Task Force Smith.  It lost approximately 150 infantrymen and 
officers killed, wounded or missing and 15 artillerymen and officers.

While the TFS fight was going on north of Osan, the 24th Division’s 34th 
Infantry Regiment arrived at Taejon and was deployed north to set up 
defenses at P’yongtaek and Ansong with regimental headquarters at 
Songhwan-ni, a town 6 miles south of P’yongtaek on the main highway and 
rail line.  The 1st Battalion established positions on both sides of the 
main highway and rail line north of P’yongtaek while the 3rd Battalion was 
ordered to Ansong.

USAF TAC parties deployed from Taejon to the 34th Infantry Regiment, one 
team going to the 1st Battalion at P’yongtaek, the other to the 3rd Battalion.

July 6, 1950

1st Battalion, 34th Infantry, blow the highway and railroad bridges north 
of their positions at approximately 3 a.m.   Enemy tanks and infantry 
arrive at the blown bridge at dawn.  The destroyed bridge stops the tanks 
but North Korean infantry wade the river both upstream and downstream.  1st 
Battalion opens fire on the tanks/infantry but without much success.  At 
this point the North Korean infantry begin a double-envelopment and the 1st 
Battalion begins withdrawing to prevent encirclement and south to Ch’onan 
where they take up new positions along with “A” & “D” Companies of the just 
arrived 1st Battalion, 21st Infantry Regiment, two miles south of the 
city.  Meanwhile the 3rd Battalion arrives from Ansong and takes up 
positions at Ch’onan.

July 7, 1950

3rd Battalion, 34th Infantry was ordered north up the road from Ch’onan and 
to advance until it contacted the enemy, then fight a delaying action while 
withdrawing back to its position at Ch’onan.  “L” Company, with the 
regimental I&R Platoon at point,  advanced to a point approximately 5 miles 
north of Ch’onan with the rest of the battalion following.  A general 
retreat began but instead of the 3rd Battalion taking up its positions 2 
miles north of Ch’onan, it continued south into the city, taking up 
positions at the north edge and railroad station at the west edge of the 
town.  Meanwhile a battery of the 63rd Field Artillery Battalion arrived at 
Ch’onan to support the 34th Infantry.

Remainder of the 21st Infantry Regiment arrives at Taejon and is ordered to 
continue on to Choch’iwon and support the 34th Infantry.  3rd takes up 
positions blocking the highway six miles northwest of Choch’iwon while “A” 
& “D” Companies, 1st Battalion, 21st Infantry are ordered to move south on 
the Ch’onan-Choch’iwon road and take up advance blocking positions at the 
town of Chonui.

July 8, 1950

Shortly before daybreak North Korean T-34 tanks entered Ch’onan from the 
east as did infantry units.  The tanks roamed back and forth shooting at 
every American vehicle and suspected American position while North Korean 
infantry began systematically to attack from the east and other North 
Korean infantry moved south of the town and cutting the escape route for 
the 3rd Battalion.  By afternoon Ch’onan was in North Korean hands and the 
3rd Battalion.  Only approximately 175 men and officers from the 3rd 
Battalion were able to escape from the town.

When notified of the loss of Ch’onan, Gen. Dean ordered what was left of 
the 34th Infantry Regiment to fight a delaying action as it moved south 
down the road leading to the Kum River and ordered the 21st Regt to delay 
the North Koreans north of Choch’iwon at least 4 days.  He augmented the 
21st Inf with one battery of 155mm howitzers from the 11th Field Artillery 
Battalion plus “A” Company, 78th Heavy Tank Battalion (misnomer since the 
battalion was equipped with M-24 light tanks, not M4E8 heavy tanks.)  At 
the same time the 3rd Engineer Combat Battalion was ordered to prepare 
roadblocks along the 34th Infantry’s withdrawal route Kongju and to prepare 
all bridges over the Kum River for demolition.

July 9, 1950

By dawn “A” & “D” Companies, 1st Bn, 21st Inf, were in forward blocking 
positions on a low ridge just southeast of Chonui while the 3rd Bn, 21st 
Inf, manned stronger defense position a mile to the south.  A USAF FAC team 
was with the forward blocking force as well artillery observers from the 
11th FA Bn..  In midafternoon 11 T-34 tanks, escorted by 200-300 infantry 
appeared on the road north of Chonui.  The AF FAC team called in air 
strikes while the artillery FO called in artillery.  By 4:30 p.m. five of 
the eleven tanks were burning and North Korean infantry retreated under 4.2 
mortar and artillery fire.  A short time later another air strike hit 
approximately 200 NK vehicles on the Choch’iwon-Chonui road destroying 
approximately 100.  After dark, NK patrols entered Chonui and began probing 
1st Bn blocking positions but were driven off with mortar and artillery 
fire, which set the village of Chonui on fire, lighting up the night.

July 10, 1950

Fog shrouded the ground when dawn broke at Chonui and with it North Korean 
soldiers.  Men of the 1st Bn, 21st Infantry could hear North Koreans on the 
northwest side of the road.  A few minutes later firing began coming from 
that direction, most in the direction of the platoon set up on small 
hill.  The platoon reported the firing was coming from a higher hill two or 
three hundred yards to their northwest.  Mortars from the 1st Bn. began 
firing pre-registered salvos at the area
between the two hills.  North Korean forces circled around the American 
held hill and attacked the mortars to the rear.  The mortar and 75mm 
recoilless rifle sections were overrun at approximately 7:15 a.m.  About 
the same time, North Korean tanks came out of Chonui, passed through 
American lines and down the road towards Choch’iwon.  The tanks could be 
heard but not seen because of the fog as they moved south.
(*)

MacArthur named Commander in Chief, United Nations Command, in addition to 
being Supreme Commander for the Allied Powers (SCAP,) Commander in Chief, 
Far East (CINCFE,) and Commanding General, U.S. Army Forces, Far East.




Ed Evanhoe, PO Box 916, Antlers, OK, 74523-0916
Member: American Society of Journalists and Authors
Life Member: Special Forces & Special Operations Associations
Co-List owner:  KOREAN-WAR-L (listproc@ukans.edu)
Web site:  http://www.korean-war.com