For Veterans Day, remembering one soldier’s strange journey from Illinois to Wales to the battlefields of Korea
The most dangerous place in the world on Aug. 15, 1950, was the Pusan Perimeter. On that day, Second Lieutenant Bob Evans arrived in-country, part of the under-strength, poorly equipped and illprepared 2nd Infantry Division, shipped directly from Ft. Lewis, Washington.
North Koreans had launched a massive surprise attack on June 25, and quickly overwhelmed the outgunned and outmanned South Korean Army, bottling up the remnants in the southeast corner of the country. The North Koreans’ goal? The bustling port city of Pusan, and complete dominance of the entire Korean peninsula.
Evans had taken a circuitous route to earn his lieutenant bars. Born in Springfield in 1930 to a Welsh coalmining executive, he returned to Wales with his family and grew up in the port city of Swansea. When the Nazis bombed the city in the early days of World War II, his parents made the momentous decision to ship Bob and his older sister to Canada for the duration of the war, where they came of age.
Bob returned to Wales in 1946, but a restless spirit led him to return to America in 1948. Landing in Chicago, he enrolled in the John Marshall Law School. He soon joined the army, in part to avoid the draft, and also to take advantage of the G.I. Bill.
So it was that Evans (a green infantry lieutenant) found himself in the Pusan Perimeter, discovering that “someone’s trying to kill me.” He did nothing to distinguish himself in that first firefight, but by November 1950, when his platoon was deep inside North Korea, they were seasoned combat veterans.
MacArthur was promising that the troops would be “home by Christmas,” ignoring the signs of a massive Chinese buildup. The day after Thanksgiving that illusion was smashed as hundreds of thousands of Chinese slammed into the UN lines. It sent Evans’ platoon reeling, along with the entire Eighth Army.
“I was thinking why, why!” recalled Evans during a recent oral history interview. “How could we have been so ignorant? How could we have been led into this?” During their
flight south, most of the 2nd Division ran a deadly Chinese gauntlet at
Kunu-Ri. Evans’ unit was spared that disaster only because his
regimental commander refused to comply and found a safer route south.
Thus started what the GIs derisively referred to as “the Big Bugout,”
during a bitter winter when Siberian winds were almost as deadly as the
relentless Chinese foe.
By
the time the UN line stabilized south of Seoul two months later, Evans’
regiment, the 23rd Infantry Regiment, was bloodied and depleted, but in
much better shape than the rest of the division.
By
February 1951, the 23rd had replaced its losses and was occupying the
crucial crossroads at the Twin Tunnels and Chipyong-Ni, in the center of
the UN line. This time, when the Chinese renewed their massive
offensive, the 23rd, aided by a French battalion, allowed themselves to
be surrounded. As far as General Matthew Ridgway was concerned, this was
the battle that he sought.
In
a valiant defense, first at the Twin Tunnels, then at Chipyong-Ni, the
Chinese attacked in waves, but Evans and his fellow defenders blunted
every assault. Resupplied by airdrop, the task force hung on tenaciously
while the Chinese hammered their positions, slowly exhausting
themselves. Evans vividly remembers an event near the climax of the
battle when Navy Corsair fighters, equipped with napalm belly tanks,
dropped their payload on advancing Chinese troops, then watched as the
Chinese were engulfed in flame.
“They
were coming up the side and we were on the ridge above waiting for
them,” recalled Evans. “I didn’t like it then [using napalm on the
Chinese], but I was grateful because we needed it. We were constantly in
danger of being overrun because of the numbers, just sheer numbers.”
That event is one of the images Evans, now 84, would be happy to forget, but cannot.
Historian David Halberstam wrote in his book The Coldest Winter (2007)
that Chipyong-Ni “was one of the decisive battles of the war, because
it was where the American forces finally learned to fight the Chinese.”
Indeed, historians today refer to that battle as the Gettysburg of the
Korean War.
Evans, despite his lingering memories of the battle, was proud to have been there.
Mark
DePue is the Director of Oral History at the Abraham Lincoln
Presidential Library and Museum. You can listen to Bob Evans’ entire
story and many others in the “Veterans Remember” section of the
program’s website.