On the 2nd of Dec. the 1st BCT
left their position at Sachang-ni, and proceeded to
fight their way back to our position at Huksu-ri. There were hundreds of CCF following close
behind all the way back and “B” Company had their hands full fighting the rear guard. The road was out in four places, (one the
bridge where we lost our truck), and Lt. Col. Besson,
our Battalion Commander, dispatched our 10th Engineer people with a small
escort up the road to help make repairs to speed up the 1st BCT withdrawal.
When they finally reached our
position, they were loaded onto waiting trucks and taken to the rear area. “B” Company was still locked in a running
battle and could not break contact with the advancing enemy forces. Col. Besson moved
his people to high ground around Huksu-ri and “B”
Company, fighting off over 1600 CCF troops in their rear guard action, finally
made it to our line.
Jake Grauman
was with “F” Company of the 2nd BCT and was one of the men sent to the high
ground that day. That night, 3rd Dec., the
2nd BCT was hit with overwhelming force by the CCF. Jake was one of the many that did not make
it. The tales told to us later by those
guys up on that mountain top, were of horror, being over run by the enemy, and
sustaining very heavy losses.
We knew it was bad because of our
fire missions through the night. Our
minimum range was 565 yards and that night we rewrote the book for 4.2
mortars. The troops around us were requesting
us to drop rounds almost on top of them.
In order to do this we disconnected the standards that held up the
barrels of our mortars, and held them up with our hands and eye balled the
angle of the barrels. We were firing
much less than 565 yards and the line troops were calling for more! It was a hell of a night with heavy losses on
both sides, and no one had time to think about how bitterly cold it was. And yes, we did hear those bugles blow, and
their eerie echoes through the valley.
I believe it was later that Day,
DEC 3rd, that we proceeded with our withdrawal. The Engineers blew the bridges behind us, and
we started fighting our way out of that trap on the one and only road out. It was icy and snow covered, and would have
been a treacherous trip down out of those mountains even it we hadn’t had to
fight our way out. The road was clogged
with vehicles and the progress was very slow.
If a truck stalled and caused a backup, it was shoved over the side
where it would roll down the embankment, sometimes hundreds of feet.
At one place I saw a tank slowly
sliding sideways toward the edge of a cliff, when our forward progress stopped
for a few minutes. The crew came
scrambling out of it, as it went over the side.
I remember seeing a wounded Officer sitting on the back of a jeep
trailer loaded with bodies. His legs
were hanging down, and his body was leaning out, so the blood coming off his
jaw would run onto the ground instead of his clothes. It was there I shot an enemy soldier with my
M1, and saw him fall next to the road.
The one and only time I took aim, pulled the trigger, and actually saw
my target fall.
One of my Korean men climbed over
me, and got into the rear of our truck.
After getting in he turned around behind me to face front, and
immediately caught a bullet in the middle of his back. He pitched forward landing on top of me. If he hadn’t been standing in back of me, I
believe I would have caught that bullet.
He was taken by the medics to be attended to and we never saw him again. I don’t know if he made it or not.
We finally did make it down out
of those mountains to the valley below.
We began to work our way back to Hungnam, on the shore, where we
were finally to be evacuated. At one
place we stayed for a short time, my Koreans came to me and said, “Sahgee, you come see.”
I went to see what they had
found. There were two Korean women
crying in a hut nearby. There was also a
young child, dead, wrapped in some cloth, laying on
the floor. The child had been dead for
some time, but the women had no way to bury it.
I had my guys chip out a shallow
grave in the frozen ground, and then we took the little body from those wailing
women and placed it in the ground. It
was a sad experience for us all. The
human suffering I witnessed during my time in Korea,
is something that has haunted me ever since.
The feeling is difficult for me to put into words, but is like being
eternally sad deep inside somewhere.