Language selection


Search veterans.gc.ca

Village of Dead Koreans

Heroes Remember

Village of Dead Koreans

Transcript
They’re talking about the truce and we started to dig in good bunkers get wood, what wood we could and settle down more or less and just send out patrols. I ‘d gone on a few patrols with my half track. Cause we’d be in a position where there’s be a big valley so the enemy’s on the other side of the valley. And this one time I went out it brings bad memories. I had gone out. I had one man on the 50 one man on the 30. Interviewer: Caliber? Machine guns? Yes. We went out and there was a small village it was sort of a semi-circle. I noticed, figured I'd go check that out you know. Felt pretty safe with armour plating and 2 machine gunners. So I drove into the center of the village. Nobody there, of course didn’t expect them, not the uh, not civilians anyway. And it just seemed very strange to me. Straw all through the center. I drove in and I just felt something’s wrong. I stopped and I got out. The 2 guys on the machine guns of course they’re they’re watching. You don’t know who’s going to pop out anywhere. I kicked the straw aside. I didn’t like what I’d seen at all. Bones. I never reported it or said nothing. I just got in the vehicle and said “We’re getting out of here” and I backed out. I followed the tracks that I went in. To me it looked like the villagers been wiped out.Slaughtered. I just felt so... I put the straw back over them. All I could see, the one I kicked off of there, just see is bones, the spine and it wasn’t animal neither. The whole area covered that way. This is the first time I’ve mentioned it to anybody. I didn’t even report it. I don’t I don’t know I just froze up something like that. Knowing that I had gone over those bodies too eh. I just, we went back, no sightings whatsoever. I don’t know I think uh I don’t know if it was the same position or another one I took a mortar crew out and we had to go out and test the enemy. See what their strength is cause, again, we’re in a valley eh. Some of those valleys were pretty wide and it was best to send out a half track instead of infantry walking out. They had along way to go. We could drive out. We were pretty well covered by our own troops cause we were high in the hills. We went out. We’d figure we were in a half decent area, so south of the border. Let’s lace those hills. 50 caliber, 30 caliber, they go a long distance too. Oh, we stirred up a hornets nest alright. And see this was the idea. Get them worked up and try to find out their strength on the other side of the valley. I know, we had lots of incoming mail coming in. Time to get out of there and I move quite fast. We strapped everything on and I know I took off and the half tracks are, they’re heavy vehicles. I forget how many tons they weigh loaded. I’m talking say maybe 30 tons, heavy plate and those roads are no springs in them to speak of and I’m belting it out of there because we’d brought them out alright. Pretty soon I notice this fire coming out from under the hood. I guess the oil splashing and all that on top of there, the engine caught fire. Well, there was a little creek just off the road and I told the crew I’m going into it, try and get this fire out. It worked. Off the side I go there. I go down through it. I got enough water on top of it. It killed the fire, but it didn’t kill the engine. We got back to our own lines and being the driver, I’m responsible for the equipment on there. The base plate was strapped on the back. I was too anxious. I didn’t check the tightening on it which normally a driver is suppose to do. Even here you’re responsible when you’re driving a truck eh. The base plate was missing. I was in hot water. Here we had a mortar without a base plate. “Take the jeep and go and find it.” Oh boy. “Sir, get out there and get that base plate. You’re responsible, you find it.” Out I went. I got to a little knoll where I figured they couldn’t see me. I sat there. I wasn’t going out there. I returned back, “Sorry Sir, I couldn’t find it anywhere.” I wasn’t going all the way back out where we were, where all the rough roads were. Charlie was out there probably there waiting for us to come back. So I took some bad talk more or less. Got hell for it, which I deserved of course, but they had another base plate brought in. Points like that it’s comical. Those parts I like. It makes me grin and laugh at different times and tell stories like that. Cause, you get your good and the bad. Interviewer: This type of patrolling did it continue for the balance of your time in Korea? Oh we still, no we were still advancing off and on. The idea in Korea was the high hills. You gotta take the high point. You got the high point you control the whole area. So it was either the Chinese will try and take it, we gotta move back. If we take it, they gotta move back. With the truce talks going on, the allies were positioning themselves, trying to straighten the line out more or less and take all the high points. That way we control everything and see what’s going on down there. Interviewer: A tour of duty in Korea was how long? Well I was on Special Forces so that’s 18 months, 6 months training and a year over in Korea. You’re in Korea and after getting there in December, so I shared 2 winters more or less. (inaudible) It was pretty rough in those hills. It’s damn cold and then you have your monsoons in the spring and you get washed off those mountains. I think it was on that spring there we were moving forward and the... we were down in the river bed. Tanks were down there and all and the rains hit. The tanks were damn near under. We had to hit dry ground. There was one, there was a trailer with a big radio set in it. The rains come so fast over the hills, that river bed filled up just like that. Man, off he goes. He’s in the trailer with the radio set. It’s floating away. A bunch scurrying to grab it and get a rope on him or something and get him back into shore. Because who knows where the hell he’s going to end up. But all the word came out - keep your ammo dry. Well, everybody did anyway. We figured they’re all the Chinese, we’re in this position and they’re in the same way. They’re going to keep their ammo dry too. So nobody’s going to attack then and we’re not going to attack them either way because the monsoons were bad and those rains they’d fill up real bad. All that mountain country. Those rains really came. Interviewer: While the peace talks were going on, there were still offensive operations? Oh yes. Not as much. I remember once there, I’d gone out patrol with, I don’t remember who they were. I’d volunteer to go with this patrol and being a driver eh I’m suppose to stay with my vehicle, but it was static positions there. I wanted to get out. So we went out. I don’t know what company I went with out and pretty soon there, way down in the valley, you could see the enemy. They had a patrol out too and I guess the officer down in there had got on the radio eh and got to our officer in charge and wanted to know if they should have a little peace talk. “We got a table here. Do you got any whiskey? We’ll drink over some whiskey and make our own peace talks.” Things like that were comical. We never made contact with them. We knew they knew. Talks were going on so there was no clash there and no whiskey drinking. It was comical. Just happens off and on.
Description

Mr. Chrysler tells of coming across the bones of a village of dead Koreans. The village appeared to have been wiped out by the North Korean and Chinese military. He also relates several other experiences that were, at times, humorous and, at other times, frightening.

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:
09:29
Person Interviewed:
William Chrysler
War, Conflict or Mission:
Korean War
Branch:
Army

Copyright / Permission to Reproduce

Related Videos

Date modified: