If you knew or served with this Soldier and have additional information or photos to support this Page, please leave a message for the Page Administrator(s) HERE.
Contact Info
Home Town Evansville
Date of Passing Feb 11, 2019
Location of Interment Saint Joseph Catholic Cemetery - Evansville, Vanderburgh Co., Indiana
My Homepages: Turn on your sound, several pages.
http://webspace.webring.com/people/ws/sweettater33/bobsplace.html
My Tribute Pages,Turn on your sound, there are 3 pages.
http://webspace.webring.com/people/ws/sweettater33/mytribute.html
My Army Site: army.togetherweserved.com/army/servlet/tws.webapp.WebApp
My Tribute Page for Lt Col Henry Hampton:
�
Was in the home and apartment construction business for 50 years. I have been retired since 2003 along with "The Light of my Life" (my wife of 64 years).
I spend a great deal of my time working around my house and yard. My Kids kept telling to get a computer but I said I lived without a computer for almost 70 years, But I finally gave in and bought one. WOW!!!, I wish I had bought one years ago.
I am on it a good deal of time each day (especially in the winter). I am getting involved in a lot of things going on in the world, Government, and Ancient Roman and Greek history, EBay, etc. It has sure been a way of keeping my mind active.
I received thirteen weeks of Basic Training with Company C, 13th Armored Infantry Battalion, Combat Command A, 3rd Armored Division at Fort Knox, Kentucky. Then, I got 30 days leave at home. Then, I traveled to Seattle for shipment overseas.
On a side note, there was three of us who boarded the train in Evansville to Seattle. One was another buddy from Evansville (Bob Willett) and one from Oakland City, and one just up the road (Ralph Jenkins). We were traveling on Military Vouchers. We had to change trains in St. Louis. When we got there, another trainee from Fort Jackson South Carolina. joined us. The only thing available was a 4 person suite on the Streamline train named "The City of St Louis" and the conductor let us have it. WOW!!! We had a steward in the car that we called back to order ham sandwiches. When we gave him a tip of $5 (back in those days a great tip), he really took care of us for the entire trip. We got to Seattle two days early, and we were pretty well broke. We didn't want to go to the base early as we wanted to see some of Seattle. So, we got our pennies together, and had enough for me to call home and have my Mom wire us some money to Western Union in Seattle. We reported in base on time.
I shipped out on the USNS General Patrick for Yokohama, Japan. We could tell two days out of Japan that we were close, because of the smell it was awful. Since, I had joined the Army with Armored Cavalry as my preference, I thought I would be assigned to the 1st Cavalry Division. I was sent by train to Sendai, Japan. I remember pulling into the station where men were urinating in outside urinals, and thought, "Oh boy, what have I got into?" In Japan, at that time, they used human waste to fertilize the rice paddies, and transported it in what American's called a' honey bucket' cart so the old saying if you drove a vehicle of any kind was, "Go off the road, drive into a ditch or hit a tree before you crash into a Honey Cart" .
I was assigned to the 7th Infantry Division G-3 (Operations). When the Korean War broke out, we were moved to Gotemba at the base of Mount Fuji for maneuvers and amphibious landing training. The 7th Division had been stripped of a lot of officer and NCOs to augment the Divisions already in Korea. We were augmented with Republic of Korea troops. At the time, they were not worth much. When we boarded the troop ship to head to Korea we were assigned threemen to a bunk, that's how crowded it was. When I got down to my rack there were two ROK soldiers sitting on it eating dried squid which stunk to high heaven. I managed to get it to them that they were not going to use my rack and they had to sleep on deck. I noticed later that one of them left his Japanese made Kodak camera on the bunk. I never did find him and still have the camera to this day. We made an amphibious landing with the 1st Marine Division at Inchon, early in September 1950. But, that is another story. In Korea, I participated in the following: �
Amphibious Landing at Inchon
1st taking of Seoul
Amphibious landing at Iwon
United Nations Summer Offensive
Chosen Reservoir campaign (drive to the Yalu)
Thank God I was not caught in that trap. I made it down the main supply route (MSR) before the Chinese cut it off and encircled the troops at Chosen Reservoir.
From what I recently saw in the news and read online, it appears VP Joe Biden on his way home recently from his trip to China, made a stop in Hawaii. While there he made a speech to some of our Military troops, in which he claimed the present US military forces were the best that ever served this country. It seems the Vice President, when speaking, has a hard time keeping his foot out of his mouth.
As a Korean War Veteran, I have always supported our military to the fullest extent, and I think our men and women in the military today are doing a fantastic job under very difficult circumstances. But, to say they are the best ever is a bit much. Albeit they are probably the best trained, best eqipped, the best supported by the people than any other War since WWII. Ie, armored vehicles, armored vests, sophisticated high tech weaponry on the ground/air/sea, etc, and are an all volenteer force.
The troops in the Korean War (The Forgotten War), didn't have the above and fought in horrendous conditions in the mountains of North Korea, In less than 3 years they took casualties, (KIA, WIA, MIA, almost 8000 that have never been accounted for), that would dwarf the numbers lost in 10 years of the Iraq & Afghanistan wars put together.
The War in Vietnam was longer than the Korean War but the same applies to the troops that fought there. Yet, they were spit upon, vilified, and called baby killers, by the people, when they came home. Which will always be one of the greatest acts of shame the people ever administered to the Armed Forces of this country. At least when we came home from Korea we were not spit on, vilified, or called names, instead we were just forgotten, because it was the first time the US Armed Forces were not allowed (by the Politicians), to win a war in the history of this country.
Having said all this, I still give great credit and honor to my brothers and sisters, and their families who are equitting themselves with courage, skill, and honor, in the wars of Iraq & Afghanistan, plus all the other little places the American people don't know about.
�
Other Comments:
Notes: I served in the U.S. Air Force reserves from 1955-1968, as 1st Sergeant (E-7) with the 71st Troop Carrier Squadron for 13 years.
On 23 June 1951 Jacob Malik, Deputy Foreign Minister of the U.S.S.R., made a statement in a recorded broadcast in New York implying Chinese and North Korean willingness to discuss armistice terms to end the Korean War. When Communist China indicated that it also desired peace, President Truman authorized General Ridgway to arrange for an armistice conference with the North Korean commander. Both aides agreed to begin negotiations at Kaesong on 10 July 1951. The chief delegate for the U.N. at the conference was Vice Admiral C. Turner Joy. The enemy delegation was led by Lt. Gen. Nam Il.
It was agreed at the first meeting that military operations would continue until an armistice agreement was signed. However, neither aide was willing to start any large-scale offensive while peace talks were in progress. U.N. military action in this period was limited to combat patrolling, artillery and air bombardment, and the repulsing of enemy attacks.
In August of 1951 the strength of all U.N. ground forces under Eighth Army command totaled 549,224. This included 248,320 U.S. ground troops, Army and Marines, 268,320 in the ROK Army, and 32,874 in the ground units of the seventeen other United Nations.
Truce negotiations were broken off by the Communists on 22 August. Van Fleet then launched a series of limited-objective attacks to improve the Eighth Army's defensive positions. The U.S. X and ROK I Corps in east-central Korea fought for terrain objectives five to seven miles above Line KANSAS, among them Bloody and Heartbreak Ridges, to drive enemy forces from positions that favored an attack on Line KANSAS. By the last week in October these objectives had been secured.
Along the western portion of the front, action in September was characterized by local attacks, counterattacks, and combat patrols. By 12 October five divisions of the I Corps had advanced the front three to four miles to a new Line JAMESTOWN to protect the Ch'orwon-Seoul railroad. The IX Corps followed with aggressive patrolling toward Kumsong. On 21 October it seized the commanding heights just south of the city.
On 25 October armistice negotiations were resumed at the new site of Panmunjom.