From the Imjin River to the Gloucester Valley Battle Monument

Discussion in 'Korea' started by Charley Fortnum, Apr 19, 2020.

  1. Charley Fortnum

    Charley Fortnum Dreaming of Red Eagles

    We made a last-minute plan to re-visit the Gloucester Valley Battle Monument today and managed a precursory exploration of the terrain from the Imjin River to the Glosters' final position on Hill 235, where the monument is located. We threw together a picnic, but the weather forecast deteriorated en route, and no sooner had we finished the last roll than the heavens opened. That said, the coming week is the sixty-ninth anniversary of the battle, so the photographs I took will be more or less correct in terms of foliage and atmospherics. Apologies for any errors: there was no planning and I was working only on my phone with photos of the maps from the official history.

    The first time we visited, a number of years ago, the site was simple, well-kept and small, but at some stage recently it has been expanded and renovated considerably; the original monument is now only one part of a larger memorial park that includes car-parking, a picnic area and commemorative sculptures; it really is most impressive, and, typically for South Korea, immaculately maintained. You can also tell that the veterans themselves have had some input, because the historical accounts on site are rather good in spite of their brevity (only one typo!). The engraved black marble bears some very fancy 'ghosted' photographs of the contemporary battalion, and every soldier who was present is listed by name and rank (see video). Unfortunately, they are too shiny to photograph well without repeated reflections of my groin, so I decided to spare you that dubious pleasure.

    Random note, but adjacent to the site is a sanctuary for injured birds of prey. It was closed, but from the steps of the memorial I could see an eagle stretching its wings.

    20200419_140709.jpg

    Here is an overview (not mine):


    Here are the details of the site in print:
    Gloucester Valley Battle Monument - Wikipedia

    And here is a sketch of the wider battle:
    Battle of the Imjin River - Wikipedia

    First the 'new' memorial park:

    20200419_140108.jpg 20200419_140120.jpg 20200419_140147.jpg 20200419_140206.jpg 20200419_140230.jpg 20200419_140343.jpg 20200419_141236.jpg 20200419_141246.jpg 20200419_141253.jpg 20200419_141310.jpg

    Now Gloster Bridge over the Seolmacheon (stream):

    20200419_140536.jpg 20200419_140448.jpg 20200419_141206.jpg

    The original memorial on the other side:

    20200419_140621.jpg 20200419_140639.jpg 20200419_140731.jpg 20200419_140724.jpg 20200419_140950.jpg 20200419_140812.jpg 20200419_140819.jpg 20200419_160104.jpg

    Finally, some sample of the terrain (hmm, ankles...):

    20200419_141011.jpg 20200419_141101.jpg


    Here's my best attempt at locating the Colonel Carne's dispositions at the start of the battle on a contemporary map (edit: subsequently learnt that both B & C-coys moved to these positions after fighting commenced). There is some lack of precision as the hills have been cut into and the roads have been straightened, widened and at some points re-routed. Each of these positions was evacuated, one by one and at considerable loss, as the battalion was concentrated on Hill 235 (shown below five days after the battle) beside the original HQ position. A-Coy's peak is sometimes referred to as 'Castle Hill', but it certainly was not a castle, it used to be a hill fort, which is more of a walled defensive position than a castle. I think B-Coy was subsequently brought in closer to D-Coy, and the location I've marked here is early on in the fighting, but I'll have to get to a book to check whether that's right and, if so, when. I had mistakenly assumed that C-Troop, 170th Independent Mortar Battery was located with HQ-Coy, but it seems that they were initially in the hills across the road from the HQ and I missed the opportunity to take a look up there.

    KakaoTalk_Photo_2020-04-19-17-22-57.jpeg

    Screenshot 2020-04-19 at 01.51.14.jpg

    This man is standing on the A-Coy position and pointing back towards Hill 235. The road is Route 5Y, which takes roughly the same course as the modern road. The slopes to the right of the road will, I think, be C-Coy's position, with D-Coy's initial positions out of sight to the left of this image.

    A-Coy.jpg

    I had particular difficulty locating the ford over which the lead elements of Chinese 187 Division actually crossed under fire from Second Lieutenant Temple's fifteen-man ambush at 2200 on 22/4/51. The photograph here is taken from the northern bank, looking at the modern bridge, but the ford, I think, is/was located to the right of the bridge's location (as seen from the north). For what it's worth, this picture gives the approximate depth and width for the correct time of the year.

    20200419_134638.jpg

    The road that now crosses the bridge (marked in red below) is new, but the original road leading north to the south river bank (marked in green) came through a cutting in the high bank that is now home to a military observation post (and hence inaccessible); it's also hard to photograph from the north bank. The green line across the river shows the exact point at which the water is the shallowest.

    KakaoTalk_Photo_2020-04-19-17-22-33.jpeg

    And, just for good measure, a few miles away we stopped at another much older memorial: a pavillion constructed for a scholar who left the government to write poetry and paint several hundred years ago. The shop, run by a veteran attendant, sells hard-tack, MREs and C-Rations to nostalgic hikers.

    There was also a heavy artillery 'battery' (a guess) a few hundred metres from the site. I counted eight guns, partially concealed in sheltered bunkers facing north. A number of the roads through the valleys in this area are also pre-rigged with explosives behind concrete supports at strategic points. Their detonation, would, presumably, block the route to tanks and heavy vehicles if the North should attack once more.

    20200419_132442.jpg

    20200419_132220.jpg
     
    Last edited: Jul 30, 2022
    CL1, Buteman, 4jonboy and 6 others like this.
  2. Charley Fortnum

    Charley Fortnum Dreaming of Red Eagles

    Somebody else has done an excellent job of recording the major sites here:

     
    Buteman and JimHerriot like this.
  3. bamboo43

    bamboo43 Very Senior Member

    Thanks for posting these images CF. A bit like when we were discussing the Falklands a while back, the Korean War is another area of reading I need to undertake. I have a set of medals to a soldier of the King's Regiment who served in Korea, but the war from a British point of view is of course dominated by the Glosters at Imjin.

    The King's (see photo below) were heavily involved at a position called The Hook I believe and attacking the enemy at the Warsaw Caves. As I say, I need to have a good read up.

    Korea Liverpools front copy.jpg
     
  4. Charley Fortnum

    Charley Fortnum Dreaming of Red Eagles

    I have only dipped into the second (first chronologically, but second to be published) of these two, but they've been excellently reviewed:

    https://www.amazon.co.uk/Last-Round-British-Stand-Imjin-ebook/dp/B007TV0QB6/ref=sr_1_1?dchild=1&qid=1587297692&refinements=p_lbr_books_authors_browse-bin:Andrew+Salmon&s=books&sr=1-1

    https://www.amazon.co.uk/Scorched-Earth-Black-Snow-Korean-ebook/dp/B0077FAXIU/ref=sr_1_2?dchild=1&qid=1587297692&refinements=p_lbr_books_authors_browse-bin:Andrew+Salmon&s=books&sr=1-2

    I have the impression that the first was a modest publishing success and did quite well financially, too.

    (Obviously you don't want the Kindle editions)
     
    CL1, JimHerriot and bamboo43 like this.
  5. bamboo43

    bamboo43 Very Senior Member

    Thanks, I will put these on my list, which thankfully is not as long as it once was.
     
    JimHerriot likes this.
  6. Tolbooth

    Tolbooth Patron Patron

    Thanks Charley, good to see - especially the ford over the Imjin. On Fri 20th April my dad (8th Hussars) got stuck there in his Daimler Dingo when the engine flooded. Here's his rendition of the event. Please note he kept his pipe lit ! As he put it "stuck in the middle of the Imjin with water in my injin"
    In the  Imjin.JPG
     
    CL1, Guy Hudson, Buteman and 5 others like this.
  7. Charley Fortnum

    Charley Fortnum Dreaming of Red Eagles

    A great clue, but to make use of it I need to know whether he was travelling headed South or North when he got stuck.

    Of course, South is more likely, but for all I know he could have crossed northwards and later returned.

    If he was headed South, that would suggest that the northern side of the ford was on the site of the current bridge and the southern side is by the cutting, where I have marked it.

    A better quality satellite image reveals that there was a cutting that led down to the water on both banks. Now marked in green. The route would, thus, be the same regardless of which way he was travelling.

    20200420_023334.jpg
     
    Last edited: Apr 20, 2020
    CL1 and Tolbooth like this.
  8. Charley Fortnum

    Charley Fortnum Dreaming of Red Eagles

    Request: does anybody here have copies of the Glosters' War Diaries for the battle (or any of their time in Korea)?

    With the National Archives being currently out of commission, I can't get them.

    I'm willing to offer the Royal Ulster Rifles diaries in exchange--they're quite good.

    As you can see from the simplified map above, they were positioned five miles east of the Glosters and also had a bloody time of things.
     
  9. Charley Fortnum

    Charley Fortnum Dreaming of Red Eagles

    Right!

    Consider this location fully documented. I have mosquito bites, a sunburnt nose and crossed the equivalent of an A-Road bridge on foot, but I've got the lot for Gloster Crossing, and most enjoyable it was, too!

    First, as I suspected and detailed above, the ford is slightly (several hundred yards) further downstream than the modern bridge. The photograph that I took last time was an equal distance upstream of the modern bridge.

    The line is very easily seen with the elevation offered by the modern bridge. The chinese crossed from roughly north to south (right to left in this picture).

    SmartSelect_20200614-185651_Gallery.jpg 20200614_190617.jpg

    Now you have the crossing point, you can follow it north to the Chinese entry point to the river (first below) and south to the Glosters ambush site on the south bank (second and third below, marked with '!'):

    SmartSelect_20200614-185602_Gallery.jpg
    SmartSelect_20200614-185725_Gallery.jpg
    20200614_191739.jpg

    This image of the local fishermen in waders gives a good idea of the depth:

    SmartSelect_20200614-185452_Gallery.jpg

    That was the easy part.

    The actual location of the Glosters is currently inaccessible as it is home to a modern army observation point, but with a bit of bushwhacking I got to a point with the same elevation on the other side of the cutting through the hillside. It is, therefore, a bit further away from the ford, but shows that a Bren firing down would be inundated with exposed targets. It's telling, perhaps, that the sixteen men from C-Coy who fought here withdrew without loss only when their ammunition ran out. Note the old white building on the north bank as a handy reference point when comparing photos. The cutting through the north riverbank, through which the Chinese would have descended to cross, is slightly to the east (right) of that building in all images.

    SmartSelect_20200614-184850_Gallery.jpg

    The next few shots show the old road down through the cutting in the (high) riverbank to the ford. It is closed whenever being used by the army, but fortunately open today. I'm not making any definite claims, but there were several couples in cars, parked up by the river, conspicuously not emerging on a stunningly beautiful day.

    SmartSelect_20200614-192929_Gallery.jpg

    Left of the road as the cutting ends (Glosters atop this):

    SmartSelect_20200614-185005_Gallery.jpg

    Right of the cutting at the same point:

    SmartSelect_20200614-185025_Gallery.jpg

    Both sides of the cutting are composed of this:

    SmartSelect_20200614-185422_Gallery.jpg

    I here turned 180⁰ to see what the Chinese who made the shore would have seen:

    SmartSelect_20200614-185043_Gallery.jpg

    The final track down to the water's edge (left for the ford, right for the modern bridge). It forks (just about visible?) You could run from here (left at the fork) to the ford's edge in c.60 seconds:

    SmartSelect_20200614-185058_Gallery.jpg

    A glance right at the fork (a reverse shot of the matching fourth and fifth images in this post):

    SmartSelect_20200614-185158_Gallery.jpg

    The ford itself. The ripples are made by largish rocks which almost reach the surface:

    SmartSelect_20200614-185141_Gallery.jpg

    Here's another 180⁰ to see the view of the high bank the Glosters were on from the riverbank. The modern army fortification is right of their position, I think.

    SmartSelect_20200614-195736_Gallery.jpg

    The north bank of the ford here:

    SmartSelect_20200614-185241_Gallery.jpg

    This version shows the broader and more shallow cutting that the Chinese must have used on the north bank:

    20200614_200355.jpg

    And this, for good measure, is the paddy field beside the road on the north bank that leads to the cutting. Here I startled a crane as big as an albatross.

    SmartSelect_20200614-185353_Gallery.jpg
     
    Last edited: Jun 30, 2021
    Buteman, stolpi, 4jonboy and 2 others like this.
  10. davidbfpo

    davidbfpo Patron Patron

    Charley,

    For this prose you deserve to be a diplomat:
    Then of course you could be in HM Diplomatic Service.
     
    CL1 likes this.
  11. Charley Fortnum

    Charley Fortnum Dreaming of Red Eagles

    And I was wandering around snapping away with a camera. They may well have been on edge!

    And here's the dramatic prose that inspired the three trips I've made to the sites now. It's from Farrah-Hockley's The Edge of the Sword. By this point he has explained how the original cart track through the cutting had been widened and strengthened by Sappers and the road surface had also been regraded and covered with steel-mesh matting. He estimates that the raised banks through which the cutting passed were between 20 and 40ft high, which sounds about right. Most seriously, the ford itself was indicated by a line of marker buoys (fifty gallon drums) which would inevitably be found.

    Colonel Carne and Henry (Intelligence Officer) and the author had spotted Chinese scouts on the north bank earlier in the day, called down mortar fire on them and requested an ambush party to be sent there from C-Coy after dark. 7 Platoon was selected.

    SmartSelect_20200614-215548_Gallery.jpg SmartSelect_20200614-215602_Gallery.jpg SmartSelect_20200614-215614_Gallery.jpg SmartSelect_20200614-215625_Gallery.jpg SmartSelect_20200614-215637_Gallery.jpg SmartSelect_20200614-215659_Gallery.jpg
     
    Last edited: Jun 15, 2020
  12. Charley Fortnum

    Charley Fortnum Dreaming of Red Eagles

    Wonderful: an interview with (then) Lieutenant Guy Temple, the officer in charge of the 7 Platoon ambush:

    Temple, Guy (Oral history)

    Plenty of new information:
    • Orders for the patrol were received at 16:30; patrol to be in position at 22:00
    • American Intelligence reported a patrol might cross and Colonel Carne hoped to capture a prisoner to gain more information.
    • Temple was originally ordered to withdraw if more than 30 enemy crossed. As the situation evolved, the objective clearly changed.
    • Temple had a hunch that he was going to encounter far more than a patrol and fortunately elected to go massively equipped for the task: 3 Brens with 4,000 rounds each, extra mortar ammunition and six grenades per man. And, recall, that they withdrew only when the ammunition had all but run out.
    • They arrived at the river by Oxford Carrier.
    • They found ROK slit trenches already dug on the bank and occupied them.
    • Despite it being a moonlit night, visibility was unsatisfactory and figures were not clear mid-crossing until para-illuminating flares were put up (the Verey light Temple tried was a dud). Throughout the engagement, the enemy could only be seen when flares were up.
    • 40 to 50 Chinese were seen in the water at first illumination. These withdrew in response to gunfire but were soon replaced at approximately 'battalion-strength'.
    • Defensive fire was requested and a single battery responded. The first shoot landed too far north, so the subsequent two were brought in 100 yds each until the third was spot on.
    • Temple estimated his own positions as being at a height of 20-25 ft, which means the artillery rounds were coming over awfully close in order to drop into the river.
    • The initial salvo of defensive fire sent the Chinese back, but they soon returned in approximately brigade strength (2,000 to 3,000 men).
    • This immediately prompted a second defensive fire request that brought in the whole 24 guns from 45 Field Regt (The code being 'Mike Target').
    • Ammunition expenditure was prodigious. The Bren gun tips were glowing pink in the night. Temple estimates casualties inflicted on the enemy as more than 200.
    • The final spur for withdrawal was when they could clearly hear approaching Chinese voices on their own south bank. They withdrew 'at the double', running the half mile back to A-Coy positions and then marched on to C-Coy positions, very near battalion HQ.
    • The actual engagement lasted only about 30 mins.
    • Two South Korean policemen were attached to the group.
    See also Temple's brief memoir attached.
     

    Attached Files:

    Last edited: Jul 7, 2020
  13. Charley Fortnum

    Charley Fortnum Dreaming of Red Eagles

    Completely unbeknownst to me, the Official History contains a contemporary photograph of Glosters returning back from the north bank to the south some days before the battle, and passing through 'the cutting' photographed above. This images depicts the left shoulder, from which the ambush was sprung--and I can't believe what a difference the defoliation makes! In addition, the gradient down to the river has clearly increased since 1951; what is now solid (grassy) land used to be ill-defined slush and mud. It's also clear that the shoulder has been partially rebuilt and secured since the war; from this picture, I would judge that it could be assaulted from the right flank if enough firepower (and likely grenades) could be brought to bear on the defenders--I'm not surprised that the Glosters didn't hang about when they heard voices on their own bank!

    I add a picture of Carne as it is the next in the book and I like his confident look.

    SmartSelect_20200708-014353_Gallery.jpg SmartSelect_20200708-014431_Gallery.jpg
     
    Last edited: Jul 8, 2020
    Buteman, Tolbooth and 4jonboy like this.
  14. Charley Fortnum

    Charley Fortnum Dreaming of Red Eagles

    Last edited: Jul 9, 2020
  15. Charley Fortnum

    Charley Fortnum Dreaming of Red Eagles

    Perhaps more helpful, I found this from an old Facebook post from the Royal Ulster Rifles Museum.

    I assume it's found in their war diaries. It isn't very large, but it's just about legible.

    30051615_1869474573084638_6409271290002112134_o.jpg
     
  16. Tolbooth

    Tolbooth Patron Patron

    Charley, thought you might be interested in these;

    From Korean Campaign supplement to "The Crossbelts", Journal of the VIII King's Royal Irish Hussars.

    page 1.JPG
    page 2.JPG page 3.JPG page 4.JPG page 5.JPG page 6.JPG page 7.JPG
    page 8.JPG page 9.JPG page 10.JPG page 11.JPG page 12.JPG

    And thought this quite amusing...

    Cartoon.JPG
     
    4jonboy and Charley Fortnum like this.
  17. davidbfpo

    davidbfpo Patron Patron

    Tolbooth likes this.
  18. Charley Fortnum

    Charley Fortnum Dreaming of Red Eagles

    Interesting.

    I can't perfectly line the camera up, but I'd say this was a match:

    Screenshot 2021-05-01 at 8.41.32 PM.png
    'View looking north west over the River Imjin from alternative SRAP position. 200m high in the Kansas line'
    [Image number: 96302]

    Screenshot 2021-05-01 at 8.54.16 PM.png
    Google Earth
     
  19. Charley Fortnum

    Charley Fortnum Dreaming of Red Eagles

    I need a second pair of eyes. The first picture is of the valley to the south of the Imjin River in 1951. The second and third show Kohima Camp, home to the Dorset Regiment c.1955.

    Simple question: do you think it's the same location?

    A-Coy.jpg Dorset Regiment Camp, Korea c.1955.jpg Dorset Regiment [Kohima] Camp under Snow, Korea c.1955.jpg
     
  20. Charley Fortnum

    Charley Fortnum Dreaming of Red Eagles

    I've been back out this way and have found my way up and around Hill 148 and 'Castle Site', where A-Coy was engaged on the night of April 22 and the morning of April 23. I've tried to add notes that will assist anybody making a similar visit, because there is no visitor information. It threatened to rain the whole time, but didn't. My daughter and I were the only people on the hill the entire time, and the only other people in the vicinity were a couple of friendly farmers.

    For reference, the Castle Site is location 2 on this map. The river on the left is the Imjin, which flows east to west.


    Screenshot 2021-06-26 at 1.01.13 AM.png

    Source (good book for the basics):
    https://www.amazon.co.uk/Imjin-Rive...1&keywords=osprey+imjin&qid=1624709347&sr=8-1

    The name of the fortress in Korean is 칠중성, and here is the location on Google Earth:

    Google Earth

    This photograph shows the site when it is conveniently bare after winter. The road has clearly not been maintained and is less defined than shown here:

    KakaoTalk_Photo_2021-06-26-23-02-17.jpeg

    The site is accessible from the modern road that replaced Route 5Y, the road the ran roughly south from the Imjin River. The old fortress site is signposted on the right, which means you are entering roughly from the east and facing west. The first thing you will see is the temple, which in a land of tens of thousands of temples, is a completely unremarkable one (and currently under repair). It's name in Korean is 적성향교.

    20210626_163406.jpg 20210626_163354.jpg 20210626_163329.jpg 20210626_163424.jpg 20210626_163451.jpg

    Here are Lieutenant Curtis and Terry Waters at the same location prior to the battle:

    Screenshot 2021-06-26 at 9.57.56 PM.png

    Although the road does cover the first part of the ascent, you'd best leave it at the carpark and continue on foot, as it quickly becomes a bit rough--and turning around again is going to be a significant challenge. After five or six minutes, the road devolves into this:

    20210626_155515.jpg

    About halfway up, you have the option of turning left (roughly south) onto one of the 'terraces' that used to be lined with the hill fortress wall. At this time of year (June), it's completely overgrown. It's far more intelligent to continue up the track as it curves around to the north and reaches the summit, but we were not that intelligent and have the insect bites to prove it.

    Facing south:

    20210626_155714.jpg 20210626_155726.jpg

    Facing East:

    20210626_155911.jpg 20210626_160104.jpg

    So on we pushed, through the undergrowth, turning to the north:

    20210626_160328.jpg 20210626_160538.jpg 20210626_160131.jpg 20210626_160936.jpg

    Found this burial site on the way (no inscriptions, so likely a local family):

    20210626_160632.jpg

    Finally reached the road again, having done a giant u-turn. Not sure about this structure, but I suspect it's for sheltering artillery pieces or storing supplies--we saw a host of larger ones on the road here.

    20210626_161131.jpg 20210626_161154.jpg

    Now we're on top:

    20210626_161242.jpg

    This is more or less the site at which Lieutenant Curtis 'won' the VC:

    Philip Curtis - Wikipedia

    It's impossible to be precisely certain as nowhere is marked, but those steps lead up to the highest point, which is said to be where the Chinese managed to set up a machine gun post. Curtis and his 'winkle' party were sent to silence it, and can only, I think, have approached from the south. Curtis was hit once and knocked down, but he rose to try again with only pistol and grenade; although he was killed quickly, his perfectly placed grenade destroyed the gun and killed its crew. This action was critical as the machine gun's field of fire divided 2 and 3 platoons on the north-facing slopes from their HQ in the south, which made resupply and casualty evacuation impossible.

    20210626_161230.jpg 20210626_161353.jpg

    Point 148 (facing north and the river--out of sight). Sign is wrong, it was A-Coy, not C-Coy:

    20210626_161456.jpg 20210626_161450.jpg 20210626_161621.jpg

    Facing east-ish (from which direction D-Coy's Vickers guns were supporting):

    20210626_161330.jpg

    Way back down to the temple (facing roughly east and north-east respectively):

    20210626_161025.jpg 20210626_163157.jpg

    -----------------------------------------------------------

    Had a bit of time, so I headed back down to Gloster Crossing. I found the river a little deeper and much faster flowing than it was at more or less the same time last year. I also found a good number of tents and caravans belonging to fishermen; few seemed to be landing anything, but many of them had cans of beer.

    The ambush location of Lieut. Guy Temple's 'fighting patrol' on the 'near' (south) bank:

    20210626_164947.jpg 20210626_164952.jpg

    Turning 'left' beneath the modern bridge to face west:

    20210626_170248.jpg

    Turning 'right' beneath the bridge to face east:

    20210626_170457.jpg 20210626_170459.jpg

    This is the fairly modern replacement for 'Teal Bridge', neither of which existed at the time of the battle--as you can see, water-level = fordable:

    20210626_170605.jpg 20210626_170723.jpg 20210626_170723.jpg
     
    Last edited: Jun 26, 2021
    CL1, Tolbooth and Owen like this.

Share This Page