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Korean war tank battles
Korean war tank battles











korean war tank battles korean war tank battles

They struck up a conversation before he continued on. Simons made his way down the hill under fire and ran into another young officer, just arrived from Canada, waiting for a jeep. "It looked like the whole top of the hill exploded at once," said former lance corporal Gordon Bennett, who was with a company of soldiers that had just come off the hill and gone into reserve behind the lines. Other soldiers, speaking years after the battle, swore the Chinese bombardment was so intense it shaved a foot off the top of the summit. 'It looked like the whole top of the hill exploded' On his way back to headquarters, shells whistled overhead and pounded the hilltop, kicking up great gasps of dirt and dust, turning the hillside a chalky white. "During the day there was a heck of a lot of noise, but when the Chinese mortars landed, of course, not only was it noisy, but some of our boys were hurt and killed."

korean war tank battles

"We were firing artillery and mortars as well, and machine guns and so on. "It was noisy," Simons, 92, told CBC News in an interview from his home in North Vancouver. The moment from the Korean War that sticks with retired lieutenant-colonel Brian Simons happened at the beginning of the Battle of Hill 355 - a now largely forgotten struggle in an often overlooked war.Ī young signaller attached to the Royal Canadian Regiment, Simons - a newly minted lieutenant at the time - was up on the rocky hillside at a battalion outpost when Chinese artillery and mortars opened up with their first deafening barrage.













Korean war tank battles