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Casualty Info
Home Town Six Mile
Casualty Date Jun 04, 1953
Cause KIA-Died of Wounds
Reason Gun, Small Arms Fire
Location Korea
Conflict Korean War
Location of Interment Remains Not Recovered, Korea
Wall/Plot Coordinates Court of the Missing, Honolulu Memorial, Oahu
Korean War/Third Korean Winter (1952-53)/Battle of Pork Chop Hill
From Month/Year
March / 1953
To Month/Year
March / 1953
Description The Battle of Pork Chop Hill comprises a pair of related Korean War infantry battles during the spring and summer of 1953. These were fought while the U.S. and the Communist Chinese and Koreans negotiated an armistice. In the U.S., they were controversial because of the many soldiers killed for terrain of no strategic or tactical value, although the Chinese lost many times the number of US soldiers killed and wounded. The first battle was described in the eponymous history Pork Chop Hill: The American Fighting Man in Action, Korea, Spring 1953, by S.L.A. Marshall, from which the film Pork Chop Hill was drawn.
The United Nations, primarily supported by the United States, won the first battle when the Chinese broke contact and withdrew after two days of fighting. The second battle involved many more troops on both sides and was bitterly contested for five days before United Nations Command conceded the hill to the Chinese forces by withdrawing behind the main battle line.