Training in Pusan
Heroes Remember
Transcript
Eisenhower, no pardon me, MacArthur, he made a landing on Inchon
with quite a force and it cut off a big section of their army and
cuts off their supplies and that took the pressure off all the
landing like in Pusan for troops to come in and more equipment.
We were there roughly, say maybe a month. Pusan... not even a
month, no. Soon as we got organized together and get some
equipment we moved to, if I pronounce it right, Maryang.
It's a river where the commonwealth was going to start bringing
in troops, like New Zealand, Australia and that. We were in
there and this was a part of a training program too, to get us
into the hills and move with our equipment through the hills;
how to handle ourselves and people learned how to communicate
better because it was one mountain after another and after
a short stay in Seattle and flat land in Alberta and then the big
ship. I think it was a 23 day crossing. We still had sea-legs on
us, we were bouncing all over. You would think you were bouncing
as you walked. So this mountainous country we had to be trained
for it. The Americans wanted us in the lines right away but
Brigadier Rockingham, "No way, their not trained to go into the
hills". Somewhere along the river he said, "I don't
want another Hong Kong." Figured we weren't ready for it yet,
not for the mountainous country.
Interviewer: What was he referring to when he said he didn't
want another Hong Kong?
Well you figure out there when Canadian troops went to Hong Kong,
they didn't last too long. They didn't have proper weapons.
They didn't have ammunition or nothing. They couldn't do nothing.
They weren't trained for it. It's a different, uh,
different terrain, and that's what we were going into.
Interviewer: So the Canadian Brigade was training with
the other Commonwealth units?
Well once they all got together, yes. The "Patch" were over
there first. On every thing it's hard to, you know so many
years have gone by the R.C.R's and the Vandoos and the whatnot
were still in Seattle, so we were put with the British and that
and with Americans when we started to move up to the front.
Had all our equipment and that.
Interviewer: What month and year was it that the
PPCLI arrived in Korea?
It was December 1950, around the 16th, just before Christmas.
So they kind of gave us a Christmas bash and then shortly after
that we moved into our training area and at that time I'd say
maybe 20 miles from where we were. We were bivouaced in a school
It was rough there because they had a big barbed wire fence
around us and the civilian population... they were starving.
You'd see little kids, little kids there, they're out there and
they've got their hands out and they're starving.
Interviewer: That had an effect on you men, when you'd see this?
Oh yeah.
Interviewer: What could you do?
Well, I got my rations. I don't know how many times, nearly
everybody would go out and give them to the kids. You couldn't
eat there and see those little wee kids there, big bellies, were
just starving, skinny little arms on them. They just had nothing.
I was kind of glad to get out of there. It was hard to see.
You couldn't do nothing for them.
Thousands were pouring in from up north.
Interviewer: But you men did what you could.
Oh yeah, I think everybody was along there you know, when you got
your rations most of it went to the kids along there. They'd do
anything. Polish your boots, anything at all. You know, try and
get something off you, because they had nothing. They were
in rags. It was terrible. The whole area was terrible.
Description
Mr. Chrysler describes his arrival in Pusan, the initial mountain training and the horror of seeing hundred of starving children in the streets.
William Chrysler
William Chrysler was born on May 4, 1930 in Hamilton, Ontario. He vividly remembers the news reports of the events of the Second World War. As a teenager, he enlisted in the Canadian Militia with the Royal Hamilton Light Infantry. At the age of 20 years, he enlisted in the Canadian Army and was with the first group of volunteers sent to Korea in 1950.
Meta Data
- Medium:
- Video
- Owner:
- Veterans Affairs Canada
- Duration:
- 04:31
- Person Interviewed:
- William Chrysler
- War, Conflict or Mission:
- Korean War
- Branch:
- Army
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