Chapter
8 - Combat Infantry Duty with 40th
Division, March, 1952
A big event occurred when Betty
Hutton arrived at the Division rear area for a USO (United Service
Organization) show. E Company sent 20
men back to enjoy the show. The officers
had to remain at our post, but one man in my platoon, a machine gunner named Tettro, had been a holdover from the 24th
Division and had been here since December 9th, and I sent him back for the USO
show.
One of our main missions was to
support the artillery forward observer, Lieutenant Gene Aldrich from Oklahoma
City, who would direct the fire of most of the
division artillery. He would sit in his
OP watching the Chinese walking down a trail some 3,000 yards away, would zero
his artillery to where he estimated they were going to be in the next 10
minutes, and arrange an artillery barrage timed on the spot just as they
arrived. He had been on the Hill (400)
45 days and had been very effective in breaking up Chinese work parties and
patrols and killing a lot of Chinese. He
told me that one day he was looking out with his binoculars and saw a Chinese
soldier looking back at him with binoculars.
He waved but the Chinaman did not wave back, so he fired a few rounds at
him, which was not very courteous but this was war.
My platoon had so many
Mexican-Americans that I acquired an accent.
My platoon CP (command post) always had Pedro or Ferrarro
Gonzales, Pedro Venturo, or Modesto Muerrittio sitting around talking about the “good old days”
in Southern California.
They were good soldiers and I got along well with them. One day the Gonzales brothers were stringing
trip wires for white phosphorous grenade booby traps when I heard the burst and
saw the fiery cascade of a white phosphorous grenade exploding. I ran out the trail to where the brothers
were, expecting to find one or both of them writhing in pain with white
phosphorous burns over their entire body, only to find them rolling on the
ground whooping in laughter. It seems
they had accidentally tripped one of the grenades and when they heard the fuse
ignite, they ran as fast as they could until it exploded, and one dove on top
of the other to protect him from the white phosphorous particles. Fortunately, they had on so many heavy winter
clothes that the searing white phosphorous burned through three or four layers
of clothing, but died out before it touched their bodies. They were both howling with laughter and
thought this was one of the funniest things that ever happened to them. I was not as amused, but was relieved they
were not injured.
A great deal of time was spent
speculating about the truce talks in progress at Panmunjom. The status of the truce talks had a direct
bearing on the demeanor of the Chinese forces.
If the truce talks were proceeding according to the Communist plan,
there would be very little activity at the front unless we started an attack or
major artillery barrage. If, however,
the talks were not going well, the Chinese would stage battalion-sized attacks
on likely positions not expecting to hold them, but merely to inflict
casualties and inflict havoc in our lines.
This created an intense interest among the troops in the progress of the
peace talks. What happened in Panmunjom affected our lives and we anxiously
read The Stars and Stripes, the Army
newspaper, and listened to Armed Forces Radio on short-wave receivers in order
to pick up the latest news.
On March 11th, we were
out blasting new trenches in the frozen ground, which was finally beginning to
thaw out. It was a funny war when you
could stand out in plain view of a vast array of Chinese positions, containing
hundreds of concealed Chinese soldiers, and they would never fire back, but if
we fired one round in their direction they answered us with a fusillade of fire. Our artillery fired over the main line into
the rear areas all day and all night, and no matter what we seemed to destroy
with the artillery fire, in a few days time the Chinese had rebuilt it and it
seemed like no damage was ever inflicted.
They were much more industrious in their entrenching than the American
forces.
One of our platoon sergeants
invented a weapon he deployed as a massive sniper weapon. He took a 50-caliber machine gun and built a
special tripod, and mounted a 20-power artillery observer’s telescope on the
gun. He modified the action so it only
fired a single shot. A 50-caliber
machine gun bullet will travel over two miles, and he had mounted this sniper
device in the Company OP where he was attempting to pick off Chinese soldiers. To my knowledge, he never made a direct hit
but he broke up a lot of work parties with his fire.
I made my first patrol into
Chinese territory when we took the 3rd Platoon about 1,000 yards in front of
the Hill to set up an ambush for Chinese patrols that had been coming close