[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 80 (Thursday, May 31, 2012)]
[House]
[Pages H3269-H3270]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HILL 303, KOREA--AUGUST 17, 1950
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Texas (Mr. Poe) for 5 minutes.
Mr. POE of Texas. Mr. Speaker, when the world is in trouble, when
peoples throughout history are in need of help because of oppression,
and they need freedom and liberty, those nations always call 911.
And who answers on the other end of that call? Throughout the history
of this great Nation, America answers. We always answer the call when
somebody is in trouble and they need help. And such an occurrence
occurred in 1950.
In 1950, World War II was over with. The United States had downsized
its military. Basically, we were unprepared for another war. But war
picks its own opportunities.
What occurred in 1950 was that in the Korean Peninsula, North Korea,
with the aid of the Chinese, invaded our ally South Korea. They went
into the heartland of South Korea and, of course, South Korea called
911.
America answered. They called it a U.N. operation, but history shows
that U.N. operations basically are American operations, where Americans
go and fight those battles.
Our country also called it a conflict. Our own President, at that
time, referred to it as a police action, but it was neither of those.
It was a war. It was a war where Americans went and fought.
I want to tell you about one such action that occurred in the Korean
War, Mr. Speaker. You may or may not have ever heard of Hill 303 in
South Korea. The Americans, under the control and operation of the 2nd
Battalion, 5th Cavalry Regiment of the 1st Cavalry Division, had the
high ground on Hill 303. Approaching them were a superior number of
North Korean communists coming to take that hill. The Americans were
pushed off that hill, except for a small group of Americans who refused
to leave.
Company G, a mortar company, and Company H stayed on the hill.
Approaching troops--at first the Americans thought that these
approaching troops were South Koreans coming to help them. But it
turned out, of course, they were North Koreans. But they held their
ground anyway, and they were overrun by the North Koreans.
And here's what happened after the Americans retook the hill. As they
retook the hill, they found out that those members of Mortar Company G
and Company H, those that had been captured, had their hands tied
behind their backs, that they were put in a gully there in South Korea,
unknown to anybody, and they were machine-gunned down. Forty of the 45
were murdered. The other five were able to survive, and some escaped.
This weekend, this Nation honored our war dead for all wars. And I
want to thank a school in my district, Creekwood Middle School in
Kingwood, Texas, for honoring and remembering those 40 Americans that
were murdered on Hill 303 in 1950 when the Americans held that ground
and were overrun by the North Koreans.
Creekwood Middle School has a history of honoring American history,
especially in our wars. They did a history project not too many years
ago on World War I. But with this project that they had on Saturday of
last weekend, they honored these men, as they should have, that were
murdered on Hill 303. They have a memorial there at Creekwood Middle
School for them, probably the only memorial in the United States that
honors those men at Hill 303 in Korea. There is one in South Korea,
however.
One of the people that was present then and also present Monday on
Memorial Day at the Houston National Cemetery was Donald Foisie. Donald
Foisie, of Atascocita, Texas, is 80 years old. He got the Purple Heart
that day because he was able to survive that onslaught of the North
Koreans.
At this time, Mr. Speaker, I want to mention the names of the 40
members of the Army that were captured and murdered that day by the
North Korean communists.
Pvt Leroy Abott; Pvt Leo W. Jacques; Pfc Leroy Bone; Pfc
Richard Janhnke; Pvt Arthur W. Borst; Pfc Raymond J.
Karaiseky; Sgt. Ray A. Briley; Pvt Herbert R. McKenzie; Pfc
Benjamin Bristow; Pvt Milton J. Mlaskac.
Pvt Billie J. Causey; Pvt Houston Monfort; Pvt John W.
Collins; Pvt Melvin W. Morden; Pvt Johnny K. Dooley; 2Lt
Cecil Newman, Jr.; Pvt Cecil C. Edwards; Pvt Robert J.
[[Page H3270]]
O'Brien; Pfc Harlon Feltner; Pfc Brook T. Powell.
Pvt Richard T. Finnigan; Pvt Bruce A. Reams; Pvt Kenneth G.
Fletke; Cpl Ernest Regney, Jr.; Pvt Arthur S. Garcia; Pfc
Walter Schuman; Pvt Charles Hastings; Pvt George Semosky,
Jr.; Pfc Antonio Hernandez; Pfc John W. Simmons.
Pvt Joseph M. Herndon; Cpl Glen L. Tangman; Pvt John J.
Hilgerson, Jr.; Pfc Tony Tavares; Pvt Billy R. Hogan; Pvt
William D. Trammel; Pvt Glenn E. Huffman; Cpl William M.
Williams; Sgt Robert A. Humes; Cpl Siegfried S. Zimniuch.
Thirty-seven thousand Americans died in Korea. When the war was over,
it just ended. There was no peace treaty. It just stopped. It's a
cease-fire. We still have Americans at the 38th Parallel guarding that
border.
When those troops came home 60 years ago, they were ignored. Unlike
Vietnam--those veterans were abused. Those troops that came home from
Korea were just basically ignored. America was more interested in
Marilyn Monroe marrying the great baseball player, Joe DiMaggio, and
this new rock star, Elvis Presley, than it was in honoring our Korean
veterans and our war dead.
It's important that America always honor those that served and did
not return, and those that served and returned, those that served and
returned with the wounds of war. For, Mr. Speaker, the worst casualty
of war is to be forgotten.
And that's just the way it is.
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