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Special Features

  • A Korean War Timeline

    A Korean War Timeline

    The Korean War timeline contains over 200 entries summarising the key events of the war and its aftermath. Each entry contains a flag indicating which country or organisation the entry refers to. Go to the timeline ...

  • Animated Battle Maps

    Animated battle maps

    Click here for maps of the most important battles fought by Australians during the Korean War. See detailed animated explanations of the battles of Kapyong, Maryang San and other Australian land, air and sea operations. Access the maps ...

  • Charlie Green

    Charles Green's story

    Lt Colonel Charles Green was the first commander of an Australian infantry battalion in battle since the formation of the nation’s regular army in 1949. A veteran of WWII, he led 3rd Battalion Royal Australian Regiment in Korea until he died of wounds received at Chongju on 1 November 1950. Read Charles Green's story ...

  • The Cold War

    What was the Cold War?

    During the Cold War, China, led by Mao Zedong, and the Soviet Union, led by Joseph Stalin, joined forces to assist North Korea in its invasion of South Korea. Find out more about the Cold War ...

  • War at Sea

    Royal Australian Navy in the Korean War

    The Korean Peninsula is bounded by the Yellow Sea in the west, the Korea Strait to the south and the Sea of Japan in the east. The Royal Australian Navy was among the first of the United Nations forces to respond to the Korean War. From 1950 to 1953 eleven Royal Australian Navy ships patrolled the seas around Korea, escorting supplies, supporting landings and bombarding the enemy coast. Read more about the RAN in Korea ...

  • Captain Reg Saunders

    Reg Saunders' story

    Reg Saunders was the first Australian Aboriginal army officer. He led C Company 3rd Battalion Royal Australian Regiment during the Korean War. Reg's father and uncle fought in World War I, and his brother Harry was killed in action in New Guinea. Reg began his military career with the AIF during WWII. Read the Reg Saunders story ...

  • The Battle of Kapyong

    Battle of Kapyong

    In late April 1951 the 3rd Battalion of the newly formed Australian Regular Army won a battle honour and a United States Presidential Citation for its defence of Kapyong. In a day and night of fierce fighting the Australians suffered 94 casualties and halted the communist advance. Find out more about the Battle of Kapyong ...

  • War in the Air

    Royal Australian Airforce in the Korean War

    Flying the P51D Mustang fighter, and later the Meteor, 77 Squadron Royal Australian Air Force was in action within days of the North Korean invasion of South Korea. The Australians flew ground attack missions and made a significant contribution to slowing the communist advance. Read more about the role of the RAAF in Korea ...

  • Australian Nurses

    Australian nurses in the Korean War

    With the outbreak of the Korean War, Australia became responsible for the air evacuation of British Commonwealth casualties from Korea to the hospital in Iwakuni, Japan. RAAF nurses, based at Iwakuni, served on RAAF casualty evacuation aircraft and at the casualty staging section in Seoul. Read more about the nurses ...

China Intervenes in the Korean War

Overview of the Chinese intervention

Few armies of the 20th century suffered such a rapid reversal of fortune as the United Nations Command (UNC) when China intervened in the Korean War...

Painting of Hill 317 - Maryang San
Show caption
Photograph of Chinese patriotic cigarette packet

Chinese patriotic cigarette packet taken from an injured female Chinese soldier: Private D H Wilson, 2 Battalion, Royal Australian Regiment. Flattened paper Chinese cigarette packet featuring a coloured drawing of a pair of heroic Chinese soldiers on one side. In the lower right-hand corner is a tiny caricature of General Douglas MacArthur carrying a bomb. The reverse features Chinese script in red. [AWM REL31328] ... Enlarge the photo of the cigarette packet

By October 1950 the UNC had more than recovered from its series of defeats in the first two months of the war. The UNC had all but destroyed the North Korean army (KPA) and was pursuing it deep into its homeland. Advanced elements of the UNC were dispersed and overconfident, nearing the Yalu River.

In October 1950 the Chinese People’s Volunteers (CPV) secretly moved across the Yalu into the central mountains of North Korea. In the first of five offensives the Chinese halted the UNC advance. Then in December they drove the UNC out of North Korea, inflicting several severe defeats, including at the Chosin Reservoir where the United States Marines were almost overwhelmed. The UNC on the east coast was cut off and evacuated by sea at Hungnam and Wonsan.

In later attacks the Chinese recaptured Seoul. By the time the CPV halted exhausted in January 1951, they had driven the UNC 400 kilometres south down the length of the peninsula to 70 kilometres beyond Seoul. The UNC recovered and was able to advance north again, but in April came the last ‘Fifth Phase’ Chinese offensive. The 3rd Battalion Royal Australian Regiment (3RAR) played a vital part in halting the advance on Seoul at Kapyong. In a final brief period of open war in October 1951, during Operation Commando, 3RAR took the key height of Maryang San from the CPV.

Outdoors group portrait of 1 Platoon, A Company, 3RAR

Outdoors group portrait of the members of 1 Platoon, A Company, 3rd Battalion, the Royal Australian Regiment (3RAR), gathered at a rest area in a rice paddy field, about four weeks before the Battle of Kapyong. Photographer Ian Robertson. [AWM P01813.700] ... Enlarge this group portrait of 1 Platoon, A Company, 3RAR

While the North Koreans -increasing weaponry to their communist allies, from the Chinese intervention China became militarily and politically the main enemy of the UNC in Korea. The effect of the intervention was to recover most of North Korea and maintain Kim Il-sung’s communist government there. Both sides now saw they could not win the war outright and began two years of peace talks while the war continued.

Korean War Teaching Aids

Teaching and learning activities for the classroom

Battle of Kapyong: Empathy exercises/class talk

Imagine that you are a veteran of the Battle of Kapyong. You are now more than 80 years old. You have been asked to come to the class to tell them of your experiences. You decide to bring some of your mementos of the battle. You will show them to the students and tell them something about each one.

Use your imagination. Think about what things an old soldier would keep in his box of souvenirs from the war. Which ones would he think the students would be interested in? He might bring his medals, the diary he kept in 1951, an old photograph of his best mate, a mud-stained map, a letter from his mother, a bullet, or a button from his uniform.

You can make the mementos, at least five of them, with cardboard, paper, coloured pencils, glue and whatever else you can think of.

You should talk to the class for three minutes. Think about how a 80-year-old veteran might talk. Start by telling the students who you are and where you come from. Then tell them about your strongest memory of the Battle of Kapyong. Then, one at a time, show the class your mementos. Make up a very short story about each one. After you have finished, ask if the students have any questions and try to answer them as a war veteran might.

Links:

China intervenes in the Korean War: The Battle of Kapyong
The Australian veterans' accounts: Stanley Connolly: Battle of Kapyong