Conflict at Chosin Reservoir
30 Days of Compromise in Korea

Robyn Alexis Young,  Individual Website,  Junior Division

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In October, 1950, it appeared that the Korean Conflict was near its end. United Nation forces had driven the invading North Korean Army north towards China at the Manchurian border. General MacArthur issued a call for the North Koreans to surrender, but China secretly decided to attack and try to defeat the UN forces in Korea. By late November the 1st Marine Division advanced north to the Chosin Reservoir. Over the next 30 days, the Marines were exposed to freezing weather, hunger, isolation, and death. The compromises the Marines experienced resulted in freedom for approximately 100,000 Korean refugees. 





"Imagine fighting a war in a place so inhospitable that the weather and terrain are every bit as hostile as the enemy. Imagine fighting a war amid towering, snow-clad mountains, deep in enemy territory at the end of a narrow, winding, icy road that is the sole link to your base of supplies more than 70 miles distant. Imagine fighting a war where the thermometer sinks to 35 degrees below zero and a wailing wind drives howling blizzards straight from the polar icecap. Imagine all these things, and you have the situation confronting the First Marine Division in late 1950."
 Allan Bevilacqua, Major



Marine_walking_in_snow